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01 Oct 09

Book Review: "The Thirty Years War" - WSJ.com

  • At seven in the morning on May 20, 1631, 18,000 soldiers loyal to the Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II stormed the ancient German city of Magdeburg. The Protestant city was in rebellion against its Catholic overlord but had only 7,000 defenders, almost half of whom were armed children. Plague had weakened the populace, and ammunition was low. By mid-morning, Magdeburg was overrun. By noon, it was ablaze. The thousand citizens who huddled in the cathedral were saved; but outside the flames lit hellish scenes of murder and rapine. Twenty-thousand corpses were eventually heaved into the Elbe River. Of 2,000 city buildings, only 200 survived. A year later, the ruins of Magdeburg sheltered less than 500 souls. The city's destruction would go down as the most notorious atrocity of the Thirty Years War.


    The war fought between 1618 and 1648 remains, by many measures, the most destructive in Europe's history. During those years the Holy Roman Empire—which governed most of the European continent east of the Rhine—lost as many as eight million subjects, or a staggering 20% of its population. This amount to three times Europe's death rate during World War II. Whole swaths of central Europe were depopulated, abandoned to wild pigs and wolves.


    Among continental Europeans, the Thirty Years War is etched in memory,

  • The Thirty Years War began, to be sure, as a religious civil war within the Holy Roman Empire—a ramshackle collection of dukedoms and bishoprics ruled by the Catholic Hapsburgs, who sought, nostalgically, to govern all of Christendom as universal monarchs. Since the Reformation, their Protestant subjects had proved unenthused about this project. In 1617, Bohemian Protestants revolted against the empire, announcing their rebellion with the notorious "defenestration of Prague," in which three imperial officials were flung out of a palace window. Crying out to the Virgin Mary as they fell, they were saved by landing in a dung heap.


    The empire struck back, crushing the Bohemians at the Battle of White Mountain in 1620. It required four axes for the executioner to behead the 28 condemned "defenestrators." But the war did not end. A glutted market of mercenaries conspired to prolong it. Eventually foreign powers intervened, eager to profit from the empire's mayhem. The most important of these was Sweden, which became, under Gustavus Adolphus, the empire's unlikely scourge. Gustavus fell in battle in 1632 but not before he had scythed his way across central Europe. France, although Catholic, was eager to sabotage its Hapsburg rivals and fought alongside the Swedes.


    An epic stalemate developed. At the war's peak, a quarter-million men were under arms. Although they fought with everything from medieval pikes to crude poison-gas shells, their most lethal weapons were the plague, typhus and dysentery that marched with them. For every combat death, three soldiers died of disease. Rural areas were particularly ravaged. In 1636, English travelers along the river Main encountered "a wretched little village" inhabited only by corpses. "We spent that night walking up and down with carbines in our hands," one traveler wrote, "listening fearfully to the sound of shots in the woods around us."

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26 Sep 09

Anglo-Saxon culture left behind striking artwork, brilliant poetry -- latimes.com

  • The Anglo-Saxons were a group of Germanic tribes who gradually invaded England starting in the 5th century in the wake of the collapse of the Roman Empire. Originally, they came from what is now the coastal region of northwest Germany.

    Their artisans made striking objects out of gold and enamel and they also created poetry that still amazes people today. Their best-known literary work is "Beowulf," an anonymous epic poem about a warrior who does battle with monsters and a dragon.

    Their language, Old English, is a precursor of modern English. It supplies many of the structurally important words such as pronouns and prepositions as well as words for everyday concepts.

    Unfortunately, much of their literature and artwork have been lost through warfare, looting, upheavals and the passage of time. Scholars must deduce what their culture was like using often scanty evidence.
  • Famous Anglo-Saxons include King Alfred the Great, the only English king so called. He turned back a Danish invasion in the 9th Century, was a patron of English learning, and laid claim to rule England as one unified kingdom. Another is the Venerable Bede, a great scholar whose history remains the primary source for the beginnings of the English people and the coming of Christianity. Bede's history was the first to use the AD (Anno Domini, or Year of the Lord) dating system.

    Anglo-Saxon rule ended with the invasion of French-speaking Normans under William the Conqueror in 1066.
12 Nov 08

Polish lawmaker disowned after slamming Barack Obama | Herald Sun

  • During a parliamentary session last Thursday, the day after Senator Obama's election victory, Mr Gorski had called him a "black crypto-communist", and a "naive individual whose election must delight al-Qaeda".


    Senator Obama "is a disaster, it is the end of the white man's civilisation", he said.


    Mr Gorski, 38, is a member of the conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, which was founded by the president and his twin brother Jaroslaw Kaczynski, a former prime minister who is still at the helm of the movement.

  • Mr Gorski has been in the spotlight before.


    In 2006 he was among a group of lawmakers who filed a resolution in parliament calling for Jesus Christ to be proclaimed king of this overwhelmingly Catholic republic.


    The bill was not passed and the move was ridiculed by Poland's senior Catholic bishops, who said members of parliament should stick to politics.

26 Oct 08

Socialism? No, bailouts are typical - Opinions from The Oregonian Columnists, Editorials, Letters, Blogs, Cartoons and More - OregonLive.com

In-depth discussion, with historical precedents, of the government's options in intervening in the market. By the US editor of the Economist.

www.oregonlive.com/...lism_no_bailouts_are_typi.html - Preview

economics economy usa europe history politics

Decline and fall of the Roman myth - Newspaper Edition - Times Online

  • Euro history from the 'barbarian' p.o.v. Cool. By Terry Jones of Monty Python. - cburell on 2006-10-03

A Congo lesson for Bush - Los Angeles Times

  • Opinion column by author of _King Leopold's Ghost_ to Bush (who said he was reading the book). Devastating style and content. - cburell on 2006-12-29

A century of slaughter - Books - Times Online

  • Niall Ferguson's new book on the causes of 20th century slaughter--and a projection that Asia is the 21st century's hegemon. - cburell on 2006-10-03
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