Showing posts with label Roman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roman. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

From Greek and Roman times to the present day: A brief history of the English Rose

York Minster, south transept rose window, 16th-century Tudor Roses white on red (left) and Lancastrian Roses red. The Tudor Rose became known as “the flower of England” and is today the country’s national flower. (Angelo Hornak/Alamy Stock Photo)



Updated
Updated today 20/05/2020

From Greek and Roman times to the present day, the rose has been a timeless symbol of beauty, transience and love. The rose’s romantic connections are thought to originate from Egypt, where Cleopatra famously carpeted the floor of her boudoir with mounds of rose petals to seduce Mark Antony.

In courtly love, for example, the rose was the iconic symbol of the beloved lady – or of the prize of her love itself – a personification that found its most exquisite representation in the 13th-century French epic poem Le Roman de La Rose, a medieval illustrated allegory that documents the art of chivalric love and its many facets. Written by Guillaume de Lorris, it was completed 40 years later by Jean de Meun.

The characters Mirth and Gladness lead a dance, in a miniature image from a manuscript of The Romance of the Rose in the Bodleian Library (MS Douce 364, folio 8r). wikipedia
Genius of love, Meister des Rosenromans, 1420-1430 - wikipedia


The Virgin Mary

In medieval devotional verse (religious verse devoted to subjects such as Jesus Christ), the Virgin Mary is often referred to as a “rose without thorns”, since she was free of original sin. In fact, the five petals of the wild rose are often equated with the five joys of Mary (the five key moments that gave Mary joy, which were the Annunciation, the Nativity, the Resurrection, the Ascension and the Assumption) and the five letters in her full name, Maria. At this time, the rose as the queen of flowers was a privileged symbol for Mary, as seen in this lyric dated 1420:



There is no rose of such virtue
As is the rose that bare Jesu;
Alleluia.

For in this rose contained was
Heaven and earth in little space;
Res Miranda.


Medieval art often depicts the Virgin Mary in an enclosed rose garden – a representation of Eden, but also a place where courtly lovers could retire. The Christmas rose – a hardy white flower with five petals that blooms at Christmas time – is a symbol of the Nativity and appears in medieval carols and seasonal hymns to the Virgin.

Glenbeigh St. James' Church Nave  Centre light of the triple window in the north-west gable, depicting the Immaculata. Photo: wikipedia.org
The Madonna of the Rose Garden’ (Madonna del Roseto) by Michelino da Besozzo, c1425. Found in the collection of Musei Civici, Verona. (Photo by Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

It is said that the rose’s thorny stems were twined around Christ’s head during his Passion, and its red flowers are a symbol both of worldly love and of martyrdom, which is possibly why they have, over time, become associated with St Valentine’s Day.

Madonna of the Rose Garden - Wikipedia

From the 12th century, rose imagery exploded across Europe with the spread of religious devotion to Mary. The medieval rose, laden with Christian symbolism of love and sacrifice, was now such a strong religious idea that it bloomed into architecture and became incorporated into the building of Gothic churches in the form of rose windows.

Madonna of the Rosegarden (Madonna del Roseto) by BOTTICELLI
The rose continued to be revered into the 13th century, where we have the major appearance of the rosary (Latin: rosarium), a set of prayer beads created as a garland of roses.


The Christian tradition took the rose as representative of the Virgin, and secular literature celebrated the rose as a symbol of earthly love and beauty, so it is little surprise that the canny queen Elizabeth I – fully aware of the rose’s associations with virginity – took this flower as her emblem. In so doing she tied the strands of courtly love and holy virginity together in her own queenly identity.

The "Darnley Portrait" of Elizabeth I of England. It was named after a previous owner. Probably painted from life, this portrait is the source of the face pattern called "The Mask of Youth" which would be used for authorized portraits of Elizabeth for decades to come. Recent research has shown the colours have faded. The oranges and browns would have been crimson red in Elizabeth's time. Photo: wikipedia.org

In portraits of Elizabeth I we sometimes also see the white eglantine, known as the queen’s rose. This was used to symbolise the queen’s chastity and make associations between the queen of England and the queen of heaven (the Virgin Mary).

Kings and queens

The rose is also part of the heraldic imagery of the kings and queens of England. The liveries of the houses of York and Lancaster, for example, were represented by white and red roses respectively, and the civil war that broke out between these two houses between 1455 and 1485 was later termed the Wars of the Roses.

In Henry VI Part I Act II Scene IV, Shakespeare depicts a small gathering of lords plucking different coloured roses from the Temple-garden as a way of choosing sides in the upcoming conflict. The Earl of Warwick, who chooses a white rose, remarks:

And here I prophesy: this brawl today,
Grown to this faction in the Temple garden,
Shall send, between the Red Rose and the White,
A thousand souls to death and deadly night.

Interestingly, the term ‘the Wars of the Roses’ was only used after 1829 when Sir Walter Scott referred to that conflict as such in his novel, Anne of Geierstein.

The Wars of the Roses ended with the clever and strategic Henry VII being crowned king of England. In marrying Elizabeth of York in 1486 he combined two dynasties and two roses, giving birth to the famous Tudor Rose, which was both white and red. This became known as “the flower of England”, and is today the country’s national flower.

The ancient world

Further back in time, we find the same veneration and symbolism surrounding the rose, with a strong emphasis on its powers of seduction and associations with mortality.

The scent of roses permeated the ancient world, where petals were scattered across the floor, the bed or the dinner table. Rose oil was distilled for use as a perfume, breath sweetener or medicine, and rose water was popular for cosmetic use and in food. The Romans offered roses to statues of the gods and used roses to wreathe tombs.

The rose was sacred to Venus, the Roman goddess of love, and to her Greek equivalent, Aphrodite. Botticelli’s famous 15th-century painting The Birth of Venus shows the goddess on her scallop shell, blown in by Zephyrus, being showered in pale pink roses.

The Birth of Venus' 1486. (Photo by Universal History Archive/Getty Images)
The Greek poet Sappho, meanwhile, praises the flower in a poem entitled Song of the Rose, which has been attributed to her:

If Zeus chose us a King of the flowers in his mirth,
He would call to the rose, and would royally crown it;
For the rose, ho, the rose! is the grace of the earth,
Is the light of the plants that are growing upon it!

The rose had other more complex symbolism for the Romans, however. The Rosalia was a Roman feast to remember the dead in which roses played a significant part, and the Roman custom of hanging a rose overhead (or painting or carving one on the ceiling) in confidential meetings was a reminder that nothing that was discussed could be repeated outside the room where the meeting had taken place. The term sub rosa is today used to describe such meetings and means ‘under the rose’. Henry VIII made this practice more widespread, and the carving of roses into ceilings is a design which we still see today.

Across the centuries the rose retained its privileged position as queen of flowers, gaining new varieties and meanings through the centuries. We find the Cavalier poet Richard Lovelace (1617–57) calling upon the rose to adorn his lover’s chamber in much the way that Cleopatra adorned hers many centuries earlier:

Rosie is her Bower,
Her floore is all this Flower;
Her Bed a Rosie nest,
By a Bed of Roses prest.

Adored by the Romantics and particularly by the Victorians, who created a complex language of flowers, new symbolism attached itself in ever more layers to the different colours and styles of roses. It was the red rose, however, that pushed ahead of the rest to become a towering symbol of beauty, transience and sexual love. One of the nation’s best-loved and most-quoted poems is A Red, Red Rose by the Scottish poet Robert Burns (1759–96), written in 1794:

O, my luve is like a red, red rose,
That’s newly sprung in June.

Robert Burns, c1785. Original artwork is a drawing by Skirving. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Another of the most famous rose poems in the English language, Go, Lovely Rose, was written by the rather unwholesome poet and politician Edmund Waller (1606–87) and later set to music by composer Roger Quilter. It was written in a frenzy of unrequited longing for Lady Dorothy Sidney, a beautiful and very clever young woman of 18.

Waller was the originator of the failed Waller’s Plot of 1643 – to seize London for Charles I – in which he was shown to be a coward after betraying his friends and brother-in-law to save his own neck. After the death of his first wife, Waller became romantically obsessed with Lady Dorothy Sidney. She rejected his advances and in 1639 married Henry Spencer, later to become the Earl of Sunderland. This struck such a blow to Waller’s heart that he went insane for a short period of time. Go, Lovely Rose was most likely addressed to Lady Dorothy during this period of infatuation on one of numerous visits to her house, when she would probably have refused to see him. Much later in life Waller visited Lady Dorothy again, and she asked him: “When, Mr Waller, will you write such fine verses upon me again?” And he replied: “O Madam, when your ladyship is as young again.”

Waller’s poem uses the idea of the rose as a love messenger. The poet speaks directly to it, as if to a person, and commands the flower to go to his beloved, speak to her and then die in her hands, thus reminding her of how fragile beauty is, how brief life is, and that beauty unseen is worthless. It is a most elegant version of the ‘gather ye rosebuds while ye may’ theme, meaning live life for now and live it to the full, which comes from a line in the poem To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time by Cavalier poet Robert Herrick (1591–1674). The stylishly romantic understatement in Go, Lovely Rose would have appealed greatly to Quilter’s musical sensibility, resulting in one of the most beautiful songs ever to be written in English. Indeed, Quilter’s masterpiece is arguably as iconic as Waller’s verse.

Roger Quilter (1877–1953) was a composer much taken with roses, and one who was drawn to the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods in his choice of poetry adaptations. He was a great fan of Shakespeare’s songs, for example, and set all of the words he chose with exquisite care.

Roger Quilter. (Chronicle/Alamy Stock Photo)
At heart a romantic, Quilter set to music at least five poems that reference the rose: the renowned Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal, a poem by Tennyson from The Princess, A Medley (1847); A Last Year’s Rose (William Henley 1849–1903); The Time of Roses (Thomas Hood 1799–1845); Damask Roses (a lovely conceit on lips and roses written by an anonymous Elizabethan poet); and arguably the composer’s most famous song, Go, Lovely Rose:

Go, lovely Rose –
Tell her that wastes her time and me,
That now she knows,
When I resemble her to thee,
How sweet and fair she seems to be.
Tell her that’s young,
And shuns to have her graces spied,
That hadst thou sprung,
In deserts, where no men abide,
Thou must have uncommended died.

Small is the worth,
Of beauty from the light retired:
Bid her come forth,
Suffer herself to be desired,
And not blush so to be admired.

Then die – that she,
The common fate of all things rare,
May read in thee;
How small a part of time they share,
That are so wondrous sweet and fair!


Today the red rose has become an emblem of romantic love to the point of cliché, while we still see the white rose, along with the lily, as a symbol of innocence, grace and purity. Yet, coiled within the lovely, scented petals of this adored flower are centuries of fascinating meaning. For, even in the cynical 21st century, roses continue to delight our senses whenever we come across them – in poetry, art, song, or twined around a trellis in the garden.

Author and Oxford University lecturer Nicola Harrison specialises in the interpretation of song. Her new series of books, The Wordsmith’s Guide to English Song (Compton, 2016), explores the literary, historical, mythological and artistic background to the poetry set to music by two British composers, Roger Quilter and Ivor Gurney.








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The above post is reprinted from materials provided by HistoryExtra. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Jules Verne, the writer who saw the future. two centuries ago including ( electric submarines, trains, news broadcasts, Solar Sails, Lunar Module, Helicopter and much more )

Jules Verne photo: pinterest
Many authors of science fiction novels have provided some invention or how time will change our society. Few, however, were visionaries such as Jules Verne, the writer who has brightened our childhood with his novels of adventure, but we can now reread with new eyes, to see how he foresaw the evolution of technology and science.

In the nineteenth century, a French writer still unknown to the true value described in detail astronaut moon landing, which was to take place over nearly a century.

Similarly, in the novel "2000 Leagues Under the Sea", the young Jules Verne, passionate about science and an exuberant imagination, he wrote about submarines and about technology (now still in experiment) through which water was transformed into fuel enigmatic Captain Nemo outcast scientist.

Carefully observing the world around, Jules Verne foresaw in an incredible cities of the future will look like.

"Paris in the twentieth century" book written in 1863, describes in detail the beautiful capital of France, full of skyscrapers, and its inhabitants, that go with trains similar to those now called Maglev and use computers connected to the Internet .

Born in 1828, Jules Verne career followed his father, taking his doctorate in law in 1851, but also the frequency with pleasure Parisian literary salons.

Thus, in 1849 he was known here on the famous Alexandre Dumas and was friends with his son, who in turn would become a writer.

Poster promoting novel series "extraordinary journeys", published by Hetzel photo: pinterest



I showed his new friend the manuscript of a comedy, "Straw Ripped," which succeeded then a mount on the stage of a theater in Paris, it can be considered his literary debut. For 20 years, he continued to work in theater experience which has helped a lot in narrative construction of his novels, which are particularly captivating.

Success would come later, because the publisher Pierre-Jules Hetzel, whom he met in 1862 and which presented the manuscript of the novel originally entitled "Journey bubble".

Hetzel, who had already published famous authors such as Honoré de Balzac, George Sand and Victor Hugo, was delighted by the style of Jules Verne's novel because he wanted to launch a magazine that combines entertainment with science.

Under his coordination would appear the series' extraordinary journeys ", which will include 44 science fiction novels and adventure signed by Jules Verne.

These will include: "Five Weeks in a Balloon" (1863), "2,000 Leagues Under the Sea" (1869), "Journey to the Center of the Earth" (1864), "From the Earth to the Moon" (1865), "Children captain Grant "(1867)," around the Moon "(1870)," around the World in 80 days "(1873)," Mysterious Island "(1874).

Jules Verne died in 1905 from complications arising from diabetes, leaving behind a prolific literary work and a vision that would change the world.


From this point of view, it is difficult to say whether he foresaw what would be in the future, which would become technological progress, or if his imagination is that which he has influenced other inventors and made this development possible.

Free to speculate in this regard, we should mention that Edwin Hubble scientists like Jacques Cousteau and Hermann Oberth were fascinated by Jules Verne's novels and acknowledged that these writings were full of fantasy for them a source of inspiration.

Inventions came to life as imagined by Jules Verne?



1. electric submarines. One of the most famous novels, "2,000 Leagues Under the Sea" (1869) presents Captain Nemo crossing oceans aboard a giant electric submarine, Nautilus.

Electric submarine Alvin photo: pinterest















Submarine have luxurious rooms and was supplied with electricity. In 1964 it was built the submarine Alvin, which, although much smaller and can only accommodate 3 people, works on a similar principle, being battery powered.

2. News broadcasts. In 1889, Jules Verne wrote an article entitled "In 2889", which described the media future. Instead of the classic newspaper subscribers watching a program in which reporters talk to scientists and politicians about the major events of the day.

The first TV news program was broadcast only in 1920, so after 30 years from the time that the author described this form of mass communication.

3. Solar Sails. In 1865, the novel "From the Earth to the Moon" Jules Verne wrote about a spaceship powered light. Today there is something similar - solar sails.


On May 21, 2010, the Ikaros mission, Japan successfully launched a sail like this, to investigate the planets in our approach. Vela, a width of 14 meters, powered by solar energy

The project was first proposed in 1920 and aimed sails propel the space shuttle using solar radiation, without the need for additional fuel.

4. Lunar Module. Jules Verne described throughout the novel "From the Earth to the Moon" "projectiles" that were used to transport passengers to the moon.


They were attached to the "huge cannons" that they were drawn helped "projectile" to overcome the force of gravity, using the writer usually quite detailed descriptions of the technology imagined in his books.

Lunar module used in Apollo 11 mission photo: wikipedia.org
Now there are monthly modules, which NASA managed to reach the moon. These capsules are the crew members are attached to rockets that propel them and transporting them to the destination, exactly as he had imagined Writers French almost 200 years ago.

5. The ads written in the sky. Keen observer of the world around him, Verne foresaw and promising future of advertising, and the article "In the year 2889", he described a new method of advertising like writing in the sky.

"All these announcements have noticed huge clouds reflected, were so large they could be seen by the population of entire cities or even an entire country," wrote Jules Verne.

These insights are all the more impressive amazing as the writer does not have a background in engineering or physics. It is true that he had friends passion for science and invention, and it is likely that many ideas to come out of these discussions.

Sky writing was first used in 1930 by Skywriting Corporation in the United States, and among the first customers were counted Pepsi-Cola.

For such a project requires five planes flying in formation and each issue a special smoke over 3 km altitude, so the message is visible from a great distance.

6. Videoconferencing. Also in the article "In 2889" Jules Verne described "fonotelefotul", a precursor to technology that now allows the organization videoconferencing system makes it possible to connect to people at large distance from each other.

Here's how the writer imagined this technology, which has become a reality much sooner than he imagined: "Fonotelefotul transmit sensitive images through mirrors connected with wires".

7. Helicopter. It is true that the French novelist's passion for technology is not limited to discussions with friends. He always read magazines he found in clubs frequented and even take notes of these publications in their

In 1862, he became secretary of the Society of Aviation, which aimed "to encourage air transport machines heavier than air" as enouncing its founders.

The company soon attracted other members of the French intellectual elite, including George Sand, Alexandre Dumas, Jules Verne good friends.

The writer was one of the most ardent supporters of a project designed by Felix Tournachon, a journalist and avid photographer inventions, known under the pseudonym of Nadar, founder member of the Society of Aviation.


Nadar invented the helicopter. At least on paper. He imagined a device virtually fly using wings that rotate.

Cover novel "Robur the Conqueror" with drawing Albatros aircraft
Excited about the project that worked, Jules Verne wrote about in his books Aviation Society and Nadar's name even appears in the novel "From the Earth to the Moon" where amateur inventor is listed under the name Ardan.

The huge flying machine imagined by Jules Verne and his friends came to life in the novel "Robur the Conqueror" (1886), called Albatros, as the brilliant invention Robur.


The novel was illustrated by Leon Bennett after Jules Verne's clear instructions so that today we can see how he imagined this first aircraft.

"Flying crane" invented by Igor Sikorsky, after the appliance model Albatros described by Jules Verne
In 1939, he managed to get off the ground in one device, VS-300, which flew only a few centimeters, but can be considered the forerunner of today's huge Sikorsky helicopters.


Perhaps among writers of science fiction today is hiding another Jules Verne, and over tens or hundreds of years, his ideas, now considered pure fantasy, will become part of the lives of everyday people then living on Earth or on other planets.


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The above post is reprinted from materials provided by National Geographic . Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Romans killed their newborn girls? A discovery highlights the mystery '' barbaric practice '

Foto:themysteryvault.com/Wikimedia 
Scientists say that the results we have obtained can help to analyze the skeletons of different periods of Roman.

According to some historians, the skeletal remains of children found in ancient tombs in different areas of the UK, suggests that the Romans practiced infanticide. Recently, researchers have shown, however, that the bones belong to stillbirths identified and buried by their families in accordance with the customs of that time.

So far, Some argue that the Romans killed their children in an attempt to have more boys than girls. However, a team led by researchers from the Natural History Museum, Museum of London and Durham University have shown that infaticide was not a practice widespread in the Roman province of Britannia, and most of the remains of children found belonged to individuals born dead.

Distinguishing ,, stillbirths remains from those of children born alive is important for archaeologists to study the health of populations in the past and understand how they pertained to cases where children died, "says Dr. Thomas Booth, one of the study coordinators conducted by British experts.

In their research, experts analyzed the skeletons of 10 children buried in Roman cemeteries near London. With the help of the X-ray microtomografiei, researchers were able to study the material composition osteological and found that the biggest part of it was unaffected by bioeroziune process during which the bacteria in the intestines begin to cause bone deterioration immediately after the body dies. In this way, scientists have learned that the bones belonged to stillbirths.

,, The ability to differentiate stillbirths remains from those of children born alive, without affecting the skeletons analyzed, will have a profound impact on the study of past human life, "added Thomas Booth.

Now researchers hope that further studies will be done to improve the knowledge we have so far about how people lived in Britannia.


,, Now we can apply the results of this research to study the skeletons of different periods of Roman, to investigate the risks of death and find out how they are related to the changes undergone by London, "says Dr. Rebecca Redfern, another coordinator of the study.

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source: Mail Online