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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 2781 through 2790 of 6551

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51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture I 18 Oct 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

It was through this contempt for work that Greece went under. This culture of the Greeks, unrivalled in many points; was a culture only possible among conquerors.
If we are to study their characteristics, we must distinguish more accurately these racial groups in Central Europe. Three races come under consideration. In Spain, France, Ireland and Southern Germany, we find, first of all the ancient race of Celts.
If we study the sagas and songs of these peoples, we understand it. They are distinguished form the sagas of ancient Greece and Rome in that they depict what the human heart can suffer, and what redeems it.
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture II 25 Oct 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

Thus we see the transition from the tribal, to the village community, which has developed from certain relationships, from this we understand further metamorphoses. We understand why Tacitus does not speak of the Asen, but of Tuisco and his son Mannus.
We shall see further on, under what conditions the southern culture was spread among the Germani. An interesting survey is presented to us there; the deep-seated kinship of different races.
Cause and effect become clear to us. And so we learn to understand the present from the past. Eternal variability governs not only Nature, but History. How could we face the future with confident courage, if we did not know that the present also changes, that we can shape it to our liking, that here too the poet's words hold good?
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture III 01 Nov 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

Slavonic tribes followed in their footsteps, pressing them farther westward. Under their king Alarich, they conquered Rome, and, in the fifth century, founded the Visigothic Empire in Spain.
Such dependents were called vassals. Others held land under feudal tenure from the big proprietors, as payment for their service in case of war; this was the fief.
Thus we see empires rising and falling, and new creations taking the place of old. We can, however, only understand their organisation, if we realise how the first model realm, the empire of the Franks, was formed.
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture IV 08 Nov 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

We shall see through what circumstances it was that such great power was given to the Franks, such influence over the configuration of European relationships. For this purpose we must understand the character of that race, the necessary metamorphosis of industrial relationships, and the powerful penetration of Christianity in the 4th century.
So European culture needed a new stimulus, and cannot be understood without taking this stimulus into account. Out of Asia, form the far East, whence Christianity once came, came now this new culture, from the Arabs.
And it is a remarkable phenomenon that the Arabs who, to begin with, took possession of the whole of Spain, were soon outwardly conquered by the Franks under Charles Martel a the Battle of Poiters in 732. By this victory the physical strength of the Franks overcame the physical strength of the Moors.
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture V 15 Nov 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

He transferred certain parts of his domain, and with them his rights; to others with less land; that was called being “under exemption"; this judicial authority had grown out of the irresponsible position in such circumstances.
The cultivation of these was in the hands of the bishops and abbots; thus the Church undertook what had formerly been done by secular landholders protected by “exemption,” namely, judiciary authority.
There was, as yet, no actual handicraft; it was only evolving under the surface; weaving, dyeing, etc. were mostly carried on by the women at home. The arts of the goldsmith and the smith were the first crafts to be cultivated.
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture VI 06 Dec 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

So was it still at the death of Charlemagne, and so it remained under his son, Louis the Pious. This we see from his relations with his three sons, Lothair, Pepin and Louis.
Astronomy, too, represented more of less what we understand by it today. Music was not the same as that which we call music today. Music was the science of harmony of the spheres.
At that time Charles III was reigning; he himself proved utterly incapable of undertaking anything against the Normans. Hence it was easy for an unknown Austrian duke, Arnulf of Cairinthia, to put an end to the Carlovingian rule and to usurp the government himself.
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture VII 13 Dec 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

The Magyars were converted to Christianity especially by the bishopric of Passau. TO understand what was passing in the souls of men in those days, we must not reckon with later conceptions.
He who does not understand this, fails also to understand the rise of the later Crusades. Here also material causes have been sought for the movement, but he who sees it in that light only, is talking beside the point.
To follow this in the right way, it is not enough merely to absorb it into you understanding. No one really understands the events who tries to grasp them with his understanding only, and not with feeling, who cannot enter into the subtleties of the fold-soul and grasp what is carried on and accomplished within it.
51. The History of the Middle Ages: Lecture VIII 20 Dec 1904, Berlin
Translator Unknown

He conceived the externals quite freely; they could take place in Germany, just as well as in Palestine. Under conditions becoming more and more externalised, the outward form of faith had become a vital question for the Church.
The first external impulse was given by the ill-treatment of the numerous pilgrims at the hands of the Saracens. Still, there were deeper causes underlying it. Men were subjecting themselves to a rigid dogma; and those who do not understand how, in those days, men clung with heart and soul to religion, know nothing of the Middle Ages.
If we wish to be free, we must have a heart for those who have striven for freedom before us. We must understand that other ages, too, produced men who set store by freedom. History is the story of man's evolution to freedom; and in order to understand it we must study the culminating points of all freedom.
52. The Transitory and the Eternal in Man 06 Sep 1903, Berlin

Nature simply makes jumps, and thus it also lets arise one type from the other under given circumstances. But in every type something remains that reminds of the preceding type; we understand them only apart, not from themselves, but from their ancestors.
Every soul is the forefather of later soul successors. We will understand that the law of heredity which holds sway in space cannot be applied to the soul in the same way.
This is the teaching of reincarnation. Now we understand the naturalists better. How should that remain which was not there once? But what is the remaining preserved?
52. The Origin of the Soul 03 Oct 1903, Berlin

It wants to attain truth like the researchers by knowledge, and it does not deny the basic truth of the religions. This basic truth is often little understood by those who represent the religions. Original, eternal truth forms the basis of all religions.
If we look into ourselves, we see the soul. This is hard to understand for the human beings. Our observation is directed predominantly to that which is outside us. But should that be closer to us than that which we are ourselves?
Because everybody is so near to the soul, he believes to be able to understand everything out of feeling. Should these really be Goethe’s own views which he allows to pronounce Faust in these words?

Results 2781 through 2790 of 6551

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