lunedì 13 dicembre 2010

Questa è la poesia da stampare per domani

O iubelo del core,
che fai cantar d’amore1!

Quanno iubel se scalda,
sì fa l’omo cantare2;
e la lengua barbaglia
e non sa che parlare:
dentro non pò celare,
tant’è granne ’l dolzore.3

Quanno iubel è acceso,
sì fa l’omo clamare;
lo cor d’amor è appreso,
che nol pò comportare:
stridenno el fa gridare,
e non virgogna allore.4

Quanno iubelo ha preso
lo core ennamorato,
la gente l’ha ’n deriso,
pensanno el suo parlato,
parlanno esmesurato
de che sente calore.5

O iubel, dolce gaudio
ched entri ne la mente,
lo cor deventa savio,
celar suo convenente;
non pò esser soffrente
che non faccia clamore6.

Chi non ha costumanza
te reputa ’mpazzito,
vedenno esvalïanza
com’om ch’è desvanito;
dentr’ha lo cor ferito,
non se sente da fore.

Avviso per i genitori

Pubblico questo avviso che dovete far leggere ai vostri GENITORI






martedì 7 dicembre 2010

the celts

CELTS
SOCIETY: 
Unfortunately, Julius Caesar is our best source of information about Celtic society and this evidence is supplemented -as well as objected!- by archaeological remains.
The Celts were generally governed by a council of nobles and by powerful chiefs like Caesar's most dangerous Celtic adversary, Vercingetorix. Caesar thought the ordinary people to be "treated almost as slaves". They were impoverished and oppressed and bound themselves to the service of powerful men in order to survive. If the leader of a faction failed to protect his followers, however, he became completely discredited. There were two privileged classes, the Druids who seem to have combined the roles of priest and magistrate, and the Knights who led the people in war.
Before Caesar's intervention the Gauls used to fight wars every year and the Knight's importance would be reckoned by the number of his servants and warriors. Caesar noted that areas furthest from the Roman Province produced the fiercest soldiers and implies that certain parts of the Celtic world had been enervated by exposure to imported Roman luxuries.
pastedGraphic.pdf
Women had few rights but enjoyed a certain degree of security. If a woman were to marry, the husband would match her dowry with property of an equal value. If one of the partners were to die, the survivor would inherit this property and any profits earned. Funerals were considered a great event, the dead were cremated on a funeral pyre together with their favourite objects and at some time in the past, slaves and retainers had been burnt with their masters. 
The Celts lived on small farms or in villages but could retreat when threatened to the comparative safety of a hill fort. These hill forts were constructed by digging a ditch around the top of suitable hills (or around other natural features which were easy to defend). Timber or dry stone walling was used to contain the rampart material and some of these forts had quite complex works to protect their entrances. Some hill forts are found to have remains of buildings but others have none and there is some debate about how they were used in ancient times. Domestic timber housing could be square, rectangular or circular in plan. In Britain circular houses were more common.>
The Celts had a coinage more than a century before their lands became part of the Roman empire. Hundreds of thousands of coins have been found and some of these have given us information on otherwise unknown rulers. The earliest found in Britain were of pure gold and imitated the stater of Philip of Macedon. Philip made use of Celtic mercenaries and this might explain the existence of these coins in Britain.
Celtic coins often featured pictures of horses, boars and ears of wheat. For low value coins, the Celts used an alloy of copper and tin called "potin". Coins of this type were ultimately cast in long strips and they continued in circulation until the first century CE. The coin illustrated above is a stater of Cunobelin from the period 10 to 40 CE.
Celtic mythology, which included earth gods, various woodland spirits, and sun deities, was particularly rich in elfin demons and tutelaries, beings that still pervade the lore of peoples of Celtic ancestry.
FAITH:
The religious faith of ancient Celtic inhabitants of Gaul and the British Isles from the 2nd century BCE until the 2nd century CE. In parts of Britain that the Romans did not invade, Druidism survived until it was supplanted by Christianity two or three centuries later. This religion included belief in the immortality of the soul, which at death was believed to pass into the body of a newborn child. According to Julius Caesar, drawing on a biased account of the cult written by Posidonius, a Stoic philosopher and historian, the Druids believed that they were descended from a supreme being.
The ancient accounts assert that the functions of priests, religious teachers, judges, and civil administrators were performed by Druids, with supreme power being vested in an archdruid. Three classes of Druids existed: prophets, bards, and priests. They were assisted by female prophets or sorcerers, who did not enjoy the powers and privileges of the Druids. The Druids were well versed in astrology, magic, and the mysterious powers of plants and animals; they held the oak tree and the mistletoe, especially when the latter grew on oak trees, in great reverence, and they customarily conducted their rituals in oak forests. Archaeologists believe that the Druids probably used as altars and temples the stone monuments known as dolmens that are found throughout the areas where Druidism flourished. Stonehenge in England antedates Druidism by many centuries.
The Druids led their people in resisting the Roman invasions, but their power was weakened by the rebelliousness of the Gallic warriors, who were envious of their political authority. The superior military strength of the Romans and the subsequent conversion of many followers of Druidism to Christianity led to the disappearance of the religion.
The Druids officiated at religious ceremonies and were consulted on all aspects of the worship of the gods. They normally elected a chief Druid but sometimes rival factions fought for their preferred candidate. They met every year to decide legal disputes and were held in high regard. Caesar reported that Druidism had its roots in Britain and that students would travel there for instruction. He heard that their religion forbade them from writing about it and that it was transmitted in verse. There were so many verses that Druids might have to spend twenty years learning them.

giovedì 2 dicembre 2010

appunti filosofia







la ricerca dei celti la pubblicher domani quando avrò anche quella dei romani!!!!
mi stavo dimenticando: GRAZIE MILLE AD ALBA CHE CI HA GENTILMENTE DATO GLI APPUNTI!!!!!!

Schede scrittura




Ecco le schede di scrittura


domenica 28 novembre 2010

Viking religion

Inserisco il mio pezzo da studiare per la verifica di inglese (la religione dei vichinghi)


RELIGION


The Scandinavian legends and myths about ancient heroes, gods and about the creation and destruction of the universe developed out of the original common mythology of the Germanic peoples. Most information about Scandinavian mythology is preserved in the old Norse literature (Icelandic, Swedish, and Norwegian Literature), in the Eddas and later sagas.

RELIGIUOS RITUAL


The Scandinavian gods were served by a class of priest called “godar”. Worship was originally conducted outdoors, under guardian trees, near sacred wells, or within sacred arrangements of stones. Later, wooden temples were used, with altars and with carved representations of the gods. The most important temple was at Old Uppsala, Sweden, where animals and even human beings were sacrificed.


GODS AND HEROES

For Vikings the gods lived in a parallel world at Asgard. Access to Asgard was possible only by crossing the bridge Bifrost (the rainbow). Odin was the chief of gods. He have got two black ravens, Huginn (Thought) and Muninn (Memory), that flew during the day to gather to get news from over the world. As god of war, Odin held court in Valhalla, where all brave warriors went after death in battle. His greatest treasures were his eight-footed horse, Sleipner, his spear, Gungnir, and his ring, Draupner. Odin was also the god of wisdom, poetry, and magic, and he sacrificed an eye for the privilege of drinking from Mimir, the fountain of wisdom.

Besides Odin, the major deities of Scandinavian mythology were his son, Thor, the god of thunder. Thor was the strongest of the gods, whom he helped protect from their enemies, the giants. Thor wielded an hammer, called Mjollnir, which represented a powerful thunderbolt. If thrown, the hammer would return to him like a boomerang. Vikings belived that the thunder was the sound of Thor’s chariot. Also, thursday is named for Thor (Thor's day).


Another god was Loki the handsome god who represented evil and was possessed of great knowledge and cunning. He was responsible for the death of Balder, god of light and joy. According to legend Loki and Hel, the goddess of the dead, will lead the forces of evil against the Aesir, or gods, in the titanic struggle of Ragnarok, the end of the world.

After there was Sif, the goddess of the grain, who is a prophetess, and the beautiful golden-haired wife of Thor. She was a swan-maiden, like the Valkyries, were warrior maidens who helped Odin, and can take that form.

The Valkyries rode through the air in brilliant armor, directed battles, distributed death lots among the warriors, and conducted the souls of slain heroes to Valhalla, the great hall of Odin.

THE GIANTS

The great enemies of the gods were the giants, and there were often conflicts between the two races. Among the gods, only Thor can defeat the giants in strength, so the gods usually had to rely on cunning to outwit the giants. Odin himself was capable of clever tricks, but whenever the gods needed a really cunning plan, they turned to Loki. Despite the tension between gods and giants, there was a fair amount of contact on an individual basis, and a number of the gods had relationships with giantesses. One of these was Loki, who had three monstrous children by his giantess wife. His daughter Hel became ruler of the underworld. One son, Jormunagund, was a serpent who grew so large that he stretched all the way around the earth. The other son was Fenris, a wolf so powerful that he terrified the gods until they tricked him into allowing himself to be tied up with a magical chain which bound him until the end of time.

mercoledì 10 novembre 2010

venerdì 5 novembre 2010

ordine appunti filosofia

pagina 1: quella con Eraclito
pagina 2: Parmenide inizio
pagina 3: pagina con scritto in alto "via della ragione"
pagina 4: pagina con scritto in alto "via dell'opinione"
pagina 5: Empedocle
pagina 6: con scritto "flussi che colpiscono le parti simili"
pagina 7: Zenone

NB: non guardate l'ordine del post degli appunti, ma sistemateli dopo averli stampati

appunti filosofia