#OnThisDay in #history - Eva de la Gardie was born in 1724 in #Sweden - born to a powerful noble family, Eva married a count at age 16. She was able to pursue her interest in agronomy to its fullest and through that interest helped to feed people during famine. She discovered an efficient way of making flour and alcohol from potatoes. She also made soaps and makeup from potatoes. Eva earned a spot in the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the first female full member. #OTD#histodons@histodons
Here's sonnets 18 and 19 in a reconstruction of early 17th century London pronunciation. Note the rhyme of "blood"/"brood", and the preserved /æ:/ under secondary stress in "temperate".
I included readings in my normal accent for comparison.
Gramsch, Robert, Das Reich als Netzwerk der Fürsten: politische Strukturen unter dem Doppelkönigtum Friedrichs II. und Heinrichs (VII.) 1225 - 1235 (Mittelalter-Forschungen 40), Ostfildern 2013.
A youth holds a snake in their left hand and reaches towards another with their right. It’s not clear whether the snake to the right is biting the youth or the youth is holding the snake by the jaw…
The list of exciting forthcoming books keeps growing! "Focusing on previously neglected cultural expressions of colonial-period Korean socialism such as Marxist philosophy, Marxist historiography, and travelogues by socialist writers, The Red Decades reveals Marxian socialism as a cultural phenomenon of colonial-age Korea...[]...this text offers a rich, nuanced description of the microcosm of Korean Communism..."
On this day in 1723, Isaac Meredith died aged 27. The Journals show a drawing of the coat of arms that was carved on his gravestone at Comber, Co. Down: https://bit.ly/mere1723
"In the 17th century, a certain amount of what was printed contributed to what ultimately became a Scientific Revolution.
But a great deal more was devoted to alchemy, astrology, witch-finding and obscure arguments about the difference between transubstantiation and consubstantiation — in short, to superstition."
Now reading Figes’ The Crimean War and I did not expect it to start with accounts of a bunch of priests and good Christians murdering each other in their “holiest” churches in Jerusalem in the 1840s. That’s interesting
@alice@GrittyLipids@bookstodon@histodons@SusanHR One interesting thing about the case in this book: the author asked for names and dates, then traveled to investigate them. Some of the history was valid but the names did not exist.
If the entities can get facts, why did they lie, and then make excuses when he came back and confronted them?
Maybe they are forbidden from knowing certain things.
Or maybe they deliberately lie to drive off the skeptical, while recruiting the credulous.
@mike805@GrittyLipids@bookstodon@histodons@SusanHR It's a tactic used by 419 ("Nigerian") scammers and other fraudsters. Sure, the scam might sound flagrantly obvious to many but for the target victims, it's perfect. An intelligence test.
If they don't reject the scam out of hand, they're the most likely to fall for it. This optimizes the effort and attention of the scammer by not wasting time on bad marks.
@worldhistory@histodons That's really cool, and took me on a little historical research trip that made me much more kindly disposed to the Jesuits in general, they seem much more beneficial than I supposed.