Pecia: a blog on manuscripts
Anyone who can read French and who is interested in medieval manuscripts might want to go by the blog Pecia and have a look.
Labels: manuscripts, medieval history, medieval resources
Ancient, medieval, Islamic and world history -- comments, resources and discussion.
Labels: manuscripts, medieval history, medieval resources
Labels: A Senate Journal, Advise and Consent, Allen Drury, books, FDR, history of democracy, space exploration, United States
Labels: ancient history, historical re-creation, medieval history, the sea, the Sea Stalliion, Vikings, war and peace
Labels: ancient history, comparative history, United States
Update: See the students speak.Students Against Torture
The Associated Press reports: "President Bush was presented with a letter Monday signed by 50 high school seniors in the Presidential Scholars program urging a halt to 'violations of the human rights' of terror suspects held by the United States.
"The White House said Bush had not expected the letter but took a moment to read it and talk with a young woman who handed it to him. . . .
"The students had been invited to the East Room to hear the president speak about his effort to win congressional reauthorization of his education law known as No Child Left Behind.
"The handwritten letter said the students 'believe we have a responsibility to voice our convictions.'
"'We do not want America to represent torture. We urge you to do all in your power to stop violations of the human rights of detainees, to cease illegal renditions, and to apply the Geneva Convention to all detainees, including those designated enemy combatants,' the letter said."
Labels: history of democracy, United States
Labels: Bogota, Colombia, comparative history, world history
March 25, 1945....Out of the minds of 8 men...has come the most fantastic, fascistic bill ever proposed in America. It is a strange commentary on the times that it is expected to have no trouble in the House, and perhaps not too much in the Senate. By so tenuous a thread does our democracy hang, and here in the Congress, by [a list of admirable senators], the thread is about to be cut.
March 27, 1945....So it has come about, just as the dark Cassandras said it would --- the last great battle for democracy has not come on a foreign field. It has come here, at home, on the Hill. Almost unnoticed out in the country save in the intemperate editorials that have consistently misrepresented the case and begged with masochistic eagerness for the very dictatorship the press is theoretically so dead-set against, it has gathered in the House and in the Senate over the past two months. And now it has been lost in the House and only the Senate remains. It may now be the hysteria of the moment, and perhaps time will prove it to have all been a harmless thing -- yet it seems no exaggeration at this moment, here where the thing is taking placed, to say that the vote the Senate will cast sometime in the next few days is the most important it has cast. Everything which is America is at stake; and the frightful knowledge about it is that men on the other side of the Capitol, men just as patriotic and just as sincere and just as freedom-loving, have just voted calmly and matter-of-factly, and as though this were no less routine than an appropriations bill, to throw it away.
Labels: A Senate Journal, Allen Drury, books, history of democracy, United States
Labels: living in the future
Labels: Christianity, visual arts
Labels: Canada, Mexico, United States, world history
If nothing else, the Middle Ages show us how the intellectual path we’re on isn’t the only one available. In 1095, 100,000 people thought that violence could bring peace. In 2007, Seung Cho believed the same and the world cried out in horror. Cho took one path from 1095 and the vast majority took the other. In and of itself, and in the middle of all this sadness, this is a reason for hope.
Labels: Crusades, medieval history, medieval resources, Song of Roland, war and peace
Labels: A Senate Journal, Allen Drury
Labels: ancient history, living in the future, medieval history
Labels: comparative history, Middle East, United States
Labels: A Senate Journal, Allen Drury, books, history of democracy, United States
Labels: comparative history, history resources, maps, world history
Labels: medieval history, movies, Vikings
Labels: English Russia, war and peace, world history
Labels: Christianity, church history, comparative history, current events, history of democracy, Islam, science fiction
Labels: Aragon, books, Charny, medieval history, piracy, slavery, war and peace
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Labels: medieval history, medieval resources, Roland
Labels: Israel/Palestine, Middle East, war and peace