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<p>[QUOTE="+VGO.DVCKS, post: 5229259, member: 110504"][USER=96898]@Orielensis[/USER], Wow, and you get to pass the monument to Husserl every day! (...I began academic life majoring in philosophy; more religious Existentialism (especially Kierkegaard and Buber) than Phenomenology, but I did read some Heidegger, in a ridiculous English translation.) ...And do you do so on foot? From here, that's enough to tell me that you are back to living in a civilized country! Hearty congratulations!!!</p><p>I had to pick your brakteat of St. Gall, from the first, 12th-century 'golden age' of the series. ...I like the tonsure!</p><p>Second would have been your AE of Chingiz Khan. Next, your 13th-century brakteat of Fulda. It's a stunning example all around. Your emphasis on the toning is duly noted, but what hit me first was the breadth of the flan. That, in particular, was a big surprise. I never knew that flans like that persisted this far into the 13th century, continuing the 12th-century tradition (pun alert: ) 'in a big way.'</p><p>Meanwhile, your observations on the scholarly and more broadly cultural legacies of both St. Gall and Fulda eloquently emphasizes how central the German part of the world was to the perpetuation of (shorthand alert: ) the Western cultural legacy during the early and 'High' middle ages. ...Apparently more for good than ill!!! :<}[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="+VGO.DVCKS, post: 5229259, member: 110504"][USER=96898]@Orielensis[/USER], Wow, and you get to pass the monument to Husserl every day! (...I began academic life majoring in philosophy; more religious Existentialism (especially Kierkegaard and Buber) than Phenomenology, but I did read some Heidegger, in a ridiculous English translation.) ...And do you do so on foot? From here, that's enough to tell me that you are back to living in a civilized country! Hearty congratulations!!! I had to pick your brakteat of St. Gall, from the first, 12th-century 'golden age' of the series. ...I like the tonsure! Second would have been your AE of Chingiz Khan. Next, your 13th-century brakteat of Fulda. It's a stunning example all around. Your emphasis on the toning is duly noted, but what hit me first was the breadth of the flan. That, in particular, was a big surprise. I never knew that flans like that persisted this far into the 13th century, continuing the 12th-century tradition (pun alert: ) 'in a big way.' Meanwhile, your observations on the scholarly and more broadly cultural legacies of both St. Gall and Fulda eloquently emphasizes how central the German part of the world was to the perpetuation of (shorthand alert: ) the Western cultural legacy during the early and 'High' middle ages. ...Apparently more for good than ill!!! :<}[/QUOTE]
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