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Search results for: Itinera Spiritualia in All Content

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CLAUDIUS II AND HIS COGNOMEN GOTHICUS MAXIMUS

CLAUDIUS II AND HIS COGNOMEN GOTHICUS MAXIMUS

KLAUDIUSZ II I TYTUŁ GOTHICUS MAXIMUS

Author(s): Robert Suski / Language(s): Polish / Issue: X/2011

Keywords: KALUDIUSZ II; HISTORIA; MAXIMUS

The History of the Roman Empire at the time of the crisis of the 3rd century is not known well. The historicity of the Battle of Naissus is controversial. One of the most important arguments put forward in its favour is the assumption of the title Gothicus Maximus by Claudius II. It is the earliest attestation of this title in the Roman propaganda. In my article I analyse the assumption of the new cognomina ex virtute in the 3rd and 4th centuries (Carpicus Maximus, Gothicus Maximus, Alammanicus Maximus, Franciscus Maximus, Persicus Maximus). Emperors did not need a great undeniable victory to introduce new cognomina ex virtute. The assumption of a new title served to express the significance of the cognomen given to the ruler, not the scale of his success. The title Gothicus Maximus cannot be regarded as a proof of a spectacular success of Claudius II at Naissus, but only of his victory over the Gothi.

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From the studies on the court of queen Zofia Holszańska

From the studies on the court of queen Zofia Holszańska

Z badań nad dworem królowej Zofii Holszańskiej

Author(s): Bożena Czwojdrak / Language(s): Polish / Issue: 6/2010

The very article is devoted to a description of the court of queen Zofia Holszańska, the fourth and the last wife of Władysław Jagiełło. In contrast to the courts of his remaining three wives, it differed in both the personnel and the way of nominating the clerks. Zofia outlived her husband and did not get married again, which gave her respect in the society other queens had not been given so far, and, above all, the power others had not had. During her sons’ ruling, first in the period of their minority, and later, at the time of interregnum, after the death of Władysław, her first son, it was her who shaped politics in the country to a large extent. Different principles of nominating court positions (particular clerks were often rotated depending on functions ascribed, their competences were not precisely specified either) and a political situation also influenced the functioning of the court. The article shows how the court of the queen functioned in a clash of two realities — during the life of her husband Władysław Jagiełło and after his death, when she became the queen and widow.

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The Alans and the Beginning of the Romanian State
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The Alans and the Beginning of the Romanian State

Les alans et le commencement des états roumains

Author(s): Virgil Ciocîltan / Language(s): French / Issue: 01+02/2000

Keywords: linkage of Alans and the foundation of Romanian principalities;

The article deals with the difficult problem of the linkage of Alans and the foundation of Romanian principalities, especially Moldavia. The author tries to collect all reliable facts, from linguistics, archaeology, topography and early chronicles, in order to obtain a relevant map of contacts. The question of an Alan county is strictly considered, and it is showed the importance of Tatar-Alan-Moldavian or Eţcu-Dragoş relationships in early 14th century. For the medieval Moldavia, the analysis show how important is to manage not only the autochthonous sources, but also the oriental ones – in this case the Mongol, Tartar and Alan history, Moldavia being in 13th-14th century a land of massive interference between Romanian and Oriental civilization, as proved by the Moldavian chroniclers.

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First Discoveries of Cucuteni Vestigies in Bucovina

First Discoveries of Cucuteni Vestigies in Bucovina

Primele descoperiri de vestigii cucuteniene din Bucovina

Author(s): Bogdan-Petru Niculică / Language(s): Romanian / Issue: 13/2015

Keywords: Eneolithic; Cucuteni civilization; Bucovina; history of archaeology; Society of the Museum of Siret; Romanian Archaeological Society of Chernivtsi; Museum of the Country of Bucovina; eneolitic;civil activities;

This study aims to put emphasis for the first time on a chapter in the long and fascinating history of Cucuteni culture in Bucovina. This historic region that existed for 143 years (1775-1918), administered at first by the Habsburg Empire, followed by the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, draws special interest. Here, in a small and remote Austrian province, remarkable finds surfaced, being part of both Romanian and Austrian archaeology and of European historiographic landscape. The exceptional value of the prehistoric sites and artefacts from Bucovina ascribed to Cucuteni civilization drew the interest of Vienna authorities that, following the early practices, sent their best specialists to catalogue, research and publish the finds. The catalysts were “The Central Commission for the research and conservation of the historical and artistic monuments”/„Zentralkommission für Erforschung und Erhaltung der Kunst-und historischen Denkmale” and “The Anthropology Society”/„Anthropologische Gessellschaft”, through their professionals and prestigious publications („Jahrbuch” and „Mittheilungen”). The publication in Vienna in 1899 of the impressive monography “Die österreichisch-ungarische Monarchie in Wort und Bild. Bukowina” where Josef Szombathy published a documented chapter entitled “Vorgeschichte”, amply presenting the prehistoric finds in Bucovina, crowns researches of both Austrian specialists and Romanian cultural figures in Bucovina over several years. Karl A. Romstorfer, Raimund F. Kaindl and Josef Szombathy carried out meritorious work of recovery and publication of the unearthed archaeological material, therefore we may consider them real pioneers of Cucuteni culture research. Thanks to them and to some warm-hearted Romanian or Austrian researchers born in Bucovina, of whom we selectively mention Dionisie Olinescu, Constantin Morariu, Vasile Tomiuc, Vasile Arici, Emanuel de Costin, Otto Petrino, Josef von Gutter, Heinrich Klauser, Cucuteni vestiges of impressively beautiful shapes and painted motifs were unearthed, drawn, restored and exhibited in the museums of Vienna and Chernivtsi. The foundation of the two archaeological societies in Bucovina – Society of the Museum of Siret and the Romanian Archaeological Society of Chernivtsi – along with the set up in 1875 of “Franz Joseph” University of Chernivtsi (1875) and of the “Museum of the Country of Bucovina” (1893) had a major impact not only on prehistoric research, but also on the conservation, display and publication of the discovered archaeological materials. All these data, synthetically presented in this study, are part of the pioneering phase of archaeology, the phase of recovery of the first vestiges of Cucuteni culture in Bucovina. Although at that time (second half of the 19th century) their discoverers did not know its “real” name, the value of the information transmitted to present times is extraordinary.

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Nordic Pilgrims to the Croatian Littoral (14th – 17th Centuries)

Nordic Pilgrims to the Croatian Littoral (14th – 17th Centuries)

Nordijski hodočasnici u hrvatskim primorskim krajevima (14. – 17. stoljeće)

Author(s): Krešimir Kužić / Language(s): Croatian / Issue: 49/2015

Keywords: Denmark; Sweden; Iceland; Finland; pilgrims; Holy Land; Croatia; Adriatic

Even though the Nordic countries were a periphery in the eyes of the Mediterranean population during the late medieval period, Scandinavian rulers and their subjects participated in important political and religious events, including the Crusades and pilgrimages to the Holy Land. Their interest in visiting Jerusalem is evident in itineraries written in Icelandic and Danish, dating from the period between the 12th and 15th centuries. As for the motivation behind them, pilgrimages can be classified as votive – supplicatory or thanksgiving – and penitential. They could also result from court verdicts, as well as contracts or testaments. In this paper, we have focused on the last will of Queen Margaret I from 1411 and a votive pledge of Queen Dorothea from 1488. Several examples testify of the wish to commemorate a performed pilgrimage, such as tombstones and especially written travelogues. However, the religious motive declined with time and was substituted through the wish to undertake a scholarly or research adventure. A particularly interesting aspect is the efforts invested by the nobility in order to gain the title of the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre. A decline in the number of pilgrimages is recorded from the mid-16th century, when the Nordic countries embraced Protestantism. The pilgrims travelled over the North Sea and Baltic harbours and further through the German lands in order to reach Venice. There they signed transportation contracts with Venetian shipmen and embarked on a journey descending the Adriatic. During the early period, they travelled on galleys, and later on various types of sailing ships, which allowed them to become acquainted with Croatian cities and regions. The most frequented ports included Poreč, Rovinj, Zadar, Hvar, Korčula, and Dubrovnik (Fig. 1). Among the 58 pilgrims mentioned by name, several deserve special attention. One is the pilgrimage of King Eric VII in 1424, which was also undertaken by Ivan VI Frankopan. The travelogue of Danish nobleman Holger Gregersen Ulfstand (Fig. 2) (1487 – 1542), who embarked on his journey in 1518, tells us not only about his piety, but also about the Croatian coast: for example, about the religious customs in case of plague. Indirectly, travelogues also tell us about some visits to the relics of St Euphemia in Rovinj, St Simon in Zadar, and St Blasius in Dubrovnik. Jakob Jakobsen Bonn, a canon from the then Danish, now Swedish city of Lund, died in 1496, exhausted by the journey, and was buried on the island of Arkanđel near Trogir (Fig. 1). His fate was shared by several other Nordic pilgrims, who lost their lives in various places. Beside illness, they were threatened by fierce weather and Turkish pirates, the latter especially present in the 16th and 17th centuries. Apart from the fact that Nordic pilgrims were few in number, their ignorance of the local language was the main reason for the lack of personal contact, as well as the local mentions of pilgrims from Scandinavian countries.

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Central Europe and Miroslav Krleža’s Illyricum Sacrum

Central Europe and Miroslav Krleža’s Illyricum Sacrum

»Lebenskräfte in dem brodelnden Völkerchaos«

Author(s): Moritz Csáky / Language(s): German / Issue: 24/2015

Keywords: Krleža; Illyricum Sacrum; cultural difference;

»Illyricum sacrum« (1944) is Miroslav Krleža’s retrospection on the genesis of a cultural region marked by difference and crises. Since it is one of Krleža’s less-known texts, it has so far received only marginal critical acclaim. Nevertheless, it is an essay worth of a thorough analysis. As a part of Central Europe and due precisely to its cultural heterogeneity, ›Illyricum‹ proves to function as a microcosm within the macrocosm of the superordinate region. In the context of contemporary cultural studies, complex diachronic and synchronic socio-cultural processes shaping this microcosm correspond to the notion of a permanent border experience, which results in cultural hybridism and ambiguity.

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Sublime (in) history. The sublime as a tool and object of research

Sublime (in) history. The sublime as a tool and object of research

Sublime (w) historii. Wzniosłość jako narzędzie i przedmiot badań

Author(s): Iwona Kościesza / Language(s): Polish / Issue: 2/2012

Keywords: historical narration; sublime; experience; emotions

The relation between a historian and the past can be described in terms of nostalgia and searching, therefore the Sublime in history is connected with the longing for a presence that evokes fascination and fear at the same time. When analyzing historical writing, one ought to take into account both the linguistic aspects of the sublime and the related philosophical and aesthetical reflection. As a result, this category, referred to as one of the so-called fundamental myths (after Jerzy Topolski), might lead to using this reflection on the sublime to better understand historiography as a record of experiencing the world. As an analysis category, it allows for showing that historians can experience the same events in variousways, and the differences are visible at the level of creating images of the past. The Sublime category is a form of the initial referencing of humans to the past, but it also one of the most important elements of criticism of traditional history. The ruminations on the sublime are connected with the interest of postmodernists in the style and rhetoric of historical narration that influences emotions. The rhetoric of the sublime is an immanent element of persuasion. It is mainly about convincing and persuading emotions. As a result, it is a significant element of historical narration. Transferring the sublime from the aesthetics dimension (which we perceive trans-historically) to the area of historiography resulted from,among others, noticing the rhetoric dimension of a historical work understood asa construction in which the dimension of human moral experiences is reflected. Rhetoric understood as a method of text construction that is at the same time a method of reality construction, plays an important role in historical writing. It formulates the bases in relation to history, it makes us aware that the historical perspective is not fixed. As a result, the sublime, transferred to the dimension of historiography, becomes an issue of historical optics. The construction of the works of historians can be analysed in terms of the construction of the sublime both in particular scenes and in the entire work. In historiography, especially in programme and scientistic historiography, the sublime usually is not an end in itself, but a means of reaching a goal. It is connected with the conceptual meaning of the works. In reference to such historiography, the sublime as an aesthetical category not only performs the persuasive function, but will also be transformed into an epistemological category.

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The 16th–18th century religious monuments in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania: documentary evidence, functions and spread

The 16th–18th century religious monuments in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania: documentary evidence, functions and spread

XVI–XVIII a. religiniai paminklai LDK: dokumentų liudijimai, paminklų funkcijos ir paplitimas

Author(s): Gabija Surdokaitė / Language(s): Lithuanian / Issue: 1/2015

Keywords: cross crafting; cemetery crosses; church crosses; churchyard crosses; homestead crosses; wayside crosses; commemorative crosses; plague crosses; mission crosses; landmark; wayside shrine;

The phenomenon of building crosses in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 16th–18th centuries was characteristic of the entire Catholic world. One can assert that already in the 16th century, crosses were built at waysides and homesteads in the entire territory of Lithuania. They were important landmarks of local topography and were used to mark the land boundaries.In the 16th century, the majority of crosses were mentioned as the landmarks of domains. In the 16th–17th centuries, the boundary between crosses as landmarks in towns and crosses at waysides were very delicate. Therefore, strict differentiation of functions and typology of crosses is not possible, except where crosses were built on piles of ground as landmarks in fields. Detailed descriptions of churches of the 16th century have not survived (or have not been found yet). Therefore, final conclusions cannot be drawn about erection or not erection of crosses in the cemeteries and churchyards which belong exclusively to the activity field of the parson of the parish church.In the first half of the 17th century, the spread of crosses in the landscape of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was related with the teaching of the Post-Trent Church. In that period, crosses began to be erected in large numbers at churchyards, cemeteries, homesteads, waysides as tokens of memory and on other occasions. In the second half of the 17th century, a cross became a customary attribute in a place of residence or on a trip. Today, we can already speak about the piety to the redemptive suffering of Christ that was established in the religious consciousness of all believers (Catholics). Like in the entire Catholic world, in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania crosses at cemeteries, homesteads, and waysides as well as commemorative, plague, and mission crosses began to be erected in the 16th–18th centuries.Sparse schematic markings of crosses on the maps of land domains and more extensive descriptions allow us to state that sacral monuments of different forms existed already in the 17th–18th century. Roofed pillar-type crosses (stogastulpiai), roofed crosses, shrines on the pillars, columns with statues of saints, and small wayside shrines (koplytėlės) in trees, etc. were built, but there are no data about the spread and distribution of concrete types of religious monuments. In the 18th century, crosses with sculptures of the Crucified with attached shrines containing figures of other holy persons were built in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. According to the 18th century descriptions from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, there was a widespread custom to build wayside shrines on the ground.A description of Samogitian crosses published by Aubrey de la Motraye in 1732 allows us to draw a conclusion about a deep-rooted folk piety. According to analogies of the 19th century, small wayside shrines and statues of saints mentioned by this Frenchman could be attributed to the sacral folk sculpture, about the existence of which we do not have any more reliable and comprehensive sources. The majority of the traditions related to the building, functions, and intentions of crosses formed and took root in the 17th century. The role and meaning of the custom of keeping crosses and images of holy persons in the daily living environment, recorded by ethnographers, ethnologists and researchers of folk art in the first half of the 20th century and even in the early 21st century, formed as early as in the 17th century and hardly changed in later times. From the first half of the 17th century, sculptures in churches of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania started to be dressed with fabric clothes. In the first half of the 18th century, this tradition took deep root in the folk culture. In the 18th century, a tradition characteristic of the catholic world to decorate the crosses with flowers and other plants became widely spread in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

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Work of Raimund Llull in North Africa (13th and 14th centuries). Beginnings of Christian-Moslem dialogue

Work of Raimund Llull in North Africa (13th and 14th centuries). Beginnings of Christian-Moslem dialogue

Działalność Rajmunda Llulla w Afryce Północnej (XIII i XIV wiek). Początki dialogu chrześcijańsko-muzułmańskiego

Author(s): Rafał Hryszko / Language(s): Polish / Issue: 2/2015

Keywords: Raimund Llull (Raimundus Lullus); missions; Moslems; interreligious dialogue; the history of the Church of the 13th and 14th centuries

The article is focusing on the circumstances of three missionary trips of Raimund Llull to Africa (to Tunisia in the years 1292-1293, Bejaia in 1307 and again to Tunisia between 1314 and 1315). In the first part of the article, after a brief presentation of the life and achievements of Raimund Llull, the background of mutual relations between Aragon and the North-African state ruled by the Hafsids, which became an area of missionary activity in that part of the world, was presented. Pursuant to the selected writings of the scholar, motives were presented, on which he based his missionary activity. Some special focus is directed on the activity among the Moslems and the methods he suggested in that type of work according to the mission-theological thought of the 13th century. The article also shows the influence of the events connected with his subsequent travels to Africa on the modification of the reflection on the problem of converting the Moslems on the basis of a dialogue. Llull, resorting to the reason and using philosophical arguments, referred to the common elements of the both religions as the common ground for agreement and mutual understanding. In this way he pointed to some new principles of acting on the meeting point of the western Christian world and the Islam domain.

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Jesus Christ’s Chinese Faces. An Overview of Issues and Iconographic Impressions

Jesus Christ’s Chinese Faces. An Overview of Issues and Iconographic Impressions

Chińskie Oblicza Jezusa Chrystusa. Przegląd problematyki i impresje ikonograficzne

Author(s): Roman Malek / Language(s): Polish / Issue: 1/2014

Keywords: evangelisation of China; local church; inculturation; Christology; iconography

The question about Jesus Christ is without a doubt a crucial one to the meaning of Christianity itself and its revelation. Who is Jesus of Nazareth? Who is Jesus Christ? These questions are posed from the beginning of Christianity and still we have varying answers to them. They are also found in China and are the subject of the submitted article. Who do the Chinese take Jesus for? On the background of the Chinese history of missions, in the article first there are shown various, conditioned historically and contextually, faces of Jesus Christ. What is worth remembering, it is not pure iconographic representation of Jesus that is important here – it is also about understanding Jesus by the Chinese, both the converts as well as the opponents. The question concerns then the origin and reception of these faces in different periods of Chinese history (since the times of Tang till the 7th century AD).After the process of translating the Good News of the Saviour Jesus Christ was executed in the Chinese context, the present author discusses the individual eras of the history of missions in China, separating the specificity of the face of Jesus created by each of them. The interpretation of this diversified picture of Jesus – made by R. Malek together with a group of specialists from around the world – was published in a five-volume work The Chinese Face of Jesus (Sankt Augustin-Nettetal 2002-2007). Numerous “Chinese faces of Jesus” – especially in the iconographic interpretation – constitute a great challenge for our western understanding of Jesus.

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Voluntary assignment in the international private law
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Voluntary assignment in the international private law

Cesiunea voluntară în dreptul internaţional privat

Author(s): Dan Andrei Popescu / Language(s): Romanian / Issue: 03/2017

Keywords: international transfers; international assignments; applicable law to voluntary assignments; Rome I Regulations;

This study aims to provide an in-depth review of voluntary assignments from the standpoint of private international law. The study commences with observations on modernity, its features and core elements in today’s globalized world, and in the backdrop the role of assignments. In addition, Rome I Regulation is scrutinized in terms of its enforcement over time. Article 14 of the Regulation, focusing on voluntary assignments and personal subrogation is comparatively reviewed in contrast with the relevant provisions under article 12 of the Rome Convention 1980. The study contains wide ranging comments on the scope of application of article 14 of Rome I Regulations, the author leaning to a more liberal standpoint, a wider interpretation of article 14, making of such regulation a common law of assignments, regardless of the origin of the assigned claim, irrespective of the nature and onerous non-onerous character of the assignment, also applicable in the case of complex transactions, such as factoring, all the more so that in connection to other instruments (such as Rome II Regulation, for instance) one cannot find a provision on assignment. We should therefore, distinguish between the contractual or non-contractual character of the source of the claim that is subject to assignment, on one side, and the contractual or non-contractual character of the assignment itself, on the other side. If, in regard to the first aspect, it is irrelevant whether the right or claim is born or not out of a contractual relationship, in exchange, from the standpoint of the nature of the instrument that the assignment from assignor to assignee is concerned, this must be a contractual one to warrant application of article 14 of the Regulation. Therefore, the provisions of the Regulation will also apply to assignments of claims originating in civil offences, deriving from unjust enrichment or mismanagement. What counts is that the underlying assignment have a contractual nature, and not necessarily be the source generating the claim. Therefore, this article does not cover unilateral assignments or the involuntary ones. In addition, it is irrelevant whether the claim is assigned free of charge or for consideration, though the typical form that is considered is that of onerous assignments.

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Imperial Decrees and Role of the Roman Emperors in Justice

Imperial Decrees and Role of the Roman Emperors in Justice

Императорските декрети и ролята на императора в правораздаването

Author(s): Malina Novkirishka- Stoyanova / Language(s): Bulgarian / Issue: 2/2013

Keywords: Princeps; Imperator (Emperor); Constitutio principis (Imperial Constitution); Jurisdictio (Jurisdiction); Justice; Precedent

The article is dedicated to a less known type of constitutions, the so-called decrees, which were issued by the Roman Emperors. In Roman law decrees, however, especially in the age of the Empire, is a certain type of imperial constitution. The article examines the etymology of the term and the legal nature of the imperial act. The imperial decrees constitute decisions to specific cases submitted for decision to the Roman Emperor as sole or appellate court. They were bound not only the parties themselves, but were precedents erga omnes. These decrees are predecessors of modern case-law. Through the above-mentioned decrees the Roman Em-peror played considerable role in the law-making and deliverying justice in the Age of Antiquity.

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Picture and Without Image in the Carpathian Basin 6-10 Century

KÉP ÉS KÉPNÉLKÜLISÉG A KÁRPÁT-MEDENCÉBEN A 6–10. SZÁZADBAN

Author(s): Ádám Bollók / Language(s): Hungarian / Issue: 1/2013

Keywords: image; aniconic visual arts; ornamental arts; early medieval Carpathian Basin; adoption; adaptation;

The study analyses a peculiar feature of the archaeological material known from the 6th–10th-century Carpathian Basin, i.e. the mostly aniconic nature of the visual arts during the Avar and Hungarian Conquest periods. The author attempts to explain the generally rare appearance of human depictions and anthropomorphic ornaments. Thus he seeks to investigate the main reasons for employing visual ornaments and proposes some probable reasons that may lie in the background of the increase of human depictions in the Late Avar period.

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Warangian factor in the creation of Kievan state structure
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Warangian factor in the creation of Kievan state structure

Варяжский фактор в структурообразовании Киевского княжества

Author(s): Oleg M. Lugowy / Language(s): Russian / Issue: 6/2002

Author of this article is trying to solve two problems. The first is the essence of the term «warang» in the IX cent. Eastern Europe and the place of warangs in newly created power structures. According to contemporary sources and retrospective analysis «warangs» are deprived of their ethnical meaning, and turn out to be a social (professional) group of different origin, able to establish (or to support establishing) new power, defending their economical interests.Second plot is dedicated to survey of contemporary writings, testifying appearing of new power in the Dnieper basin from the 830-s, id est before «warang vocation».

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AUGUSTUS` MARRIAGE LEGISLATION

AUGUSTUS` MARRIAGE LEGISLATION

ОПИТЪТ ЗА НРАВСТВЕНА РЕФОРМА НА РИМСКОТО ОБЩЕСТВО С АВГУСТОВОТО БРАЧНО ЗАКОНОДАТЕЛСТВО

Author(s): Stoyan P. Ivanov / Language(s): Bulgarian / Issue: 1/2015

Keywords: Emperor Octavianus Augustus; marriage legislation; exempla maiorum; Romanitas; Lex Iulia dе maritandis ordinibus; Lex Papia Poppaea; Lex Iulia dе adulteriis coercendis

The marriage legislation was part of Augustus` program to restore the res publica shaken by more than a century of political and social disorder. For Augustus and for men like Livy, Horace and Virgil the solution of the troubles which had befallen the Roman lay in the past, in the values and customs and of an earlier age (exempla maiorum) – family life, the chastity of Lucretia, the moral probity of Cato the Elder, in a word, Romanitas. The political settlement imposed by the principate was not enough without propagation of the Italian stock and of its prisca virtus, which, unadulterated by the attitudes and beliefs of the opulent and decadent east, had won Rome an empire. Ironically, the methods of Augustus of implementing this archaizing social policy, was itself a radical innovation – pervasive intervention by the state in the private lives of roman citizens passing three according to some of the contemporaries severe laws – Lex Iulia de maritandis ordinibus, lex Papia Poppaea and Lex Iulia de adulteriis coercendis, which response is obviously visible centuries after the death of their glorious creator – the reformator emperor Octavianus Augustus.

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The Archaeology of Attrition Warfare: The Galilean War of Vespasian and Titus (May–November, 67 A.D.)
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The Archaeology of Attrition Warfare: The Galilean War of Vespasian and Titus (May–November, 67 A.D.)

ARCHEOLOGIA WOJNY NA WYNISZCZENIE. Wojna galilejska Wespazjana i Tytusa (maj-listopad 67 roku naszej ery)

Author(s): Ireneusz Łuć / Language(s): Polish / Issue: 2/2018

Keywords: First Jewish Revolt; Nero’s personnel policy; Vespasian’s promotion; Roman strategy and military tactics during the Galilean War

In order to effectively pacify the land of Galilee, the Romans made very careful preparations for their military campaign. The forms of Roman military activity follow a certain pattern. Vespasian did not begin such a campaign without receiving the information about the location and the military potential of the Jewish rebels. Having entered Galilee, the Romans used their traditional tactics of the so-called ‘marching camps,’ not to mention taking over some of the towns as permanent military bases. During the main campaign in Galilee—and certainly since the winter break from 67 to 68 AD—following Vespasian’s orders, soldiers from his army began to deploy military garrisons in designated Jewish towns and villages. In turn, the Romans deployed units of up to one hundred soldiers (centuries) commanded by centurions. The Romans deployed civilians of the Jewish land in other occupied towns, especially after the second phase of operations in Galilee (August–November 67 AD). It is possible that from the moment of the Roman invasion of Galilee, the duty of soldiers from the expeditionary army/ force of Vespasian was not only to requisition of all movable goods, but also to confiscate the buildings and take over the Jewish land. The Galilean campaign is an example of the so-called attrition warfare. By treating the inhabitants of Galilee so cruelly, the Romans wanted to punish them for supporting the Jewish rebels. In order to effectively break their resistance, Vespasian sent off the soldiers of several formations who used various types of weapons in combat. The exhausting fights were felt by the Romans themselves. Vespasian and his soldiers also had to relieve stress tension after what they had witnessed. The loss of people on the Roman side could also be significant, although Josephus Flavius mentioned it very generally. Therefore, before the commencement of the summer–autumn operation in Galilee (August 67 AD) in Caesarea Philippi, Titus’s father ordered a twenty-day rest for his subordinates. He himself indulged in feasting and offered thanksgiving sacrifices to ‘God’ for the achieved success, which was recorded by Josephus Flavius. Taking control of Galilee was the first step that opened the way for an attack on Jerusalem itself.

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The Swiss Reception of Hungarian Refugees in 1956

The Swiss Reception of Hungarian Refugees in 1956

Az 1956-os magyar menekültek svájci befogadása

Author(s): D. Gusztáv Kecskés / Language(s): Hungarian / Issue: 01/2016

Keywords: Hungarian Refugees; 1956; Switzerland; history;

After the suppression of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution by the Soviets, some two hundred thousand Hungarian refugees came to the West. In proportion to its territory and population, Switzerland hosted the greatest number among them. The study summarizes what the Swiss authorities did in order to secure the reception of the refugees, the ways in which the local society reacted to the crisis, and the results that were yielded by the efforts. The conclusion of the author is that while the Swiss response perfectly fits into the general policies of the West, some local characteristics can also be grasped. He regards as the chief feature of success Cold War opposition and the determined governmental will which derived therefrom. Alongside the results of international, Swiss and Hungarian scholarship, the study is mostly based on archival documents from the archives of the UN and those of Switzerland, Hungary, France and Great Britain. The results of oral history research are also put to use.

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The Cumans’ Bishopric. Evolution Coordinates

The Cumans’ Bishopric. Evolution Coordinates

Episcopia cumanilor. Coordonate evolutive

Author(s): Victor Spinei / Language(s): Romanian,French / Issue: 1/2007

Keywords: Cumans Bishopric; Catholic diocese; the Teutonic Knights; Andrei II, king of Hungary; Transylvania; 13th century;

Le problème de la genèse et l’évolution de l’Évêché des Coumans a fréquemment retenu l’attention des spécialistes, faisant l’objet, le long des années, autant des études spéciales, que de chapitres ou paragraphes dans certains amples volumes de synthèse. Sur ce diocèse catholique il y a des références dans les sources narratives et dans les actes de chancellerie de provenance diverse, sans cependant que leur nombre soit trop grand. Quoique durant les dernières décennies on n’ait plus fait ressortir de nouveaux textes médiévaux relatifs à cet évêché, les médiévistes ont continué constamment à s’occuper de son histoire, qu’ils ont essayé à expliquer par l’évocation des phénomènes de nature ecclésiastique ou politique déroulés dans les régions avoisinantes. En ce qui nous concerne, nous avons eu, de même, en vue les connexions avec l’espace environnant, faisant pourtant appel non seulement aux sources écrites, mais aussi à celles archéologiques.

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Imago Vitae Monasticae / A Picture of Monastic Life.

Imago Vitae Monasticae / Obraz mníšskeho života

Author(s): Joannikij Juraj Bazilovič / Language(s): Slovak / Issue: 04/2020

Keywords: Byzantine-Slavic tradition; Byzantine-Slavic Culture; Eparchy of Mukachevo; Slovak-Latin relations; Neo-Latin literature; Basilian monastic tradition;

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The Liturgical Spirituality – a Hidden Postulate of the Vaticanum II

The Liturgical Spirituality – a Hidden Postulate of the Vaticanum II

Duchowość liturgiczna – ukryty postulat Vaticanum II

Author(s): Adelajda Sielepin / Language(s): Polish / Issue: 5/2021

Keywords: liturgy; spirituality; sacramental mysticism; council; postulate

The article refers to a rare liturgical and theological issue, which points to spirituality, yet it fully employs the reality of liturgy. By this we do not mean a simple conjunction of the two theological fields or aspects of the Church's life and the more we do not intend to make a methodological mixture, but rather we wish to look at the liturgy in a spiritual way as well as to understand, that true Christian spirituality finds the inevitable and genuine source in the liturgy. The reason is simply the presence of Christ and His Mystery of redemption and sanctification. The topic signalled in the title is the liturgical spirituality. In a brief study the author presents current efforts of coping with the issue of the mystical aspect of liturgy, starting from the postulates of the II Vatican Council along several attempts at defining liturgical spirituality. Even in these few approaches at the subjectmatter we discover the importance of the history and predominating perception of spirituality, liturgy and the Church in particular periods. Hence the need of studies and formation arises with the keen appreciation of the apparently hidden inspirations ofthe conciliar teaching, which by short expressions may direct our attention towards the main profile of renewal.

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