Rachel Fulton Brown

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Rachel Fulton Brown

Rachel Fulton Brown

@RFultonBrown

Christian, American, professor of medieval European history, poet, fencer, blogger, wife. Livestreams weekly on the Mosaic Ark: https://t.co/KKsPqDGQ0X

University of Chicago Katılım Kasım 2017
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Rachel Fulton Brown
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown·
“This book is the product of massive and original scholarship....the book requires an almost total rethinking of how we look on Mary today, this in the light of how medieval Christians understood her.”—Fr. James Schall amazon.com/Mary-Art-Praye…
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Rachel Fulton Brown
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown·
Trump doesn't need to solve this clash of civilizations. Our Lord Jesus Christ already did. Galatians 3:28: "There is neither Jew nor Greek...For you are all one in Christ Jesus."
Daniel Foubert 🇵🇱🇫🇷@Arrogance_0024

Trump thinks he can solve a clash of ancient civilisations that started more than 2500 years ago. The Israelis are Mesopotamians, and the Iranians are Indo-Europeans. Abraham is explicitly from Ur of the Chaldees, which is in southern Iraq, near modern Basra. There is no meaningful genetic discontinuity between the people of ancient Mesopotamia and the people who became Canaanites who became Israelites. Hebrew is a Semitic language. The Semitic language family originated in Mesopotamia and the Arabian Peninsula. Hebrew, Aramaic, Akkadian, Arabic, Babylonian — all branches of the same tree. Hebrew and Babylonian Akkadian are cousin languages the way Spanish and Italian are cousins. They share root words, grammatical structures, and conceptual vocabulary going back thousands of years before the Bible was written. The foundational myths of Judaism — creation, the flood, paradise, the first man, the tower — all have direct Mesopotamian predecessors that are older. The ethical and legal framework — the covenant structure, the law codes — mirrors Mesopotamian forms. The calendar is Babylonian. The alphabet is Aramaic-Mesopotamian. The very concept of recording sacred history in written texts is a Mesopotamian invention. El — the chief god of the early Israelites and the root of the word Elohim, one of the Hebrew names for God — was a Canaanite/Mesopotamian deity. The word Israel itself contains El. The angels, the cosmic hierarchy, the idea of a divine council — all have deep Mesopotamian roots. Early Israelite religion before the exile looks very much like a local variant of broader Mesopotamian religious culture, with Yahweh gradually absorbing the attributes of El, Baal and others into a single deity. "Iran" comes directly from "Aryana" — land of the Aryans. The Iranians were Indo-European, not Semitic. This is the foundational distinction. Where the Semitic world — Sumerians absorbed by Akkadians, Babylonians, Canaanites, Jews, Arabs — emerged from the Fertile Crescent and Arabian Peninsula, the Iranians came from somewhere completely different. The Iranian peoples were part of the great Indo-European migration — a population that originated on the Pontic Steppe, the grasslands north of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea, in what is now Ukraine, southern Russia and Kazakhstan. Around 2000–1500 BC these steppe peoples began expanding in all directions on horseback, carrying their languages with them. One branch went west and became the Greeks, Romans, Celts, Germans, Slavs. Another branch went south and east and split into two streams — one into India becoming the Vedic civilization, one into Iran becoming the Persians and Medes. Old Persian, Sanskrit, Greek, Latin and all their descendants are branches of the same tree. The word for father in Persian is "pedar," in Latin "pater," in Greek "patér," in Sanskrit "pitár," in English "father." The word for god in Persian is related to the Sanskrit "deva." The Iranian god Mithra appears in Roman religion as Mithras and possibly echoes in the Vedic Mitra. These are not coincidences — they reflect a common origin perhaps 5,000 years ago on the Eurasian steppe. The two main Iranian tribes that entered history were the Medes in the northwest and the Persians in the south. The Medes formed the first Iranian empire around 700 BC, destroying the Assyrian Empire — the superpower of its day — in alliance with the Babylonians. Then the Persians under Cyrus the Great overthrew the Medes in 550 BC and built the Achaemenid Empire. In 651 AD the Sassanid Persian Empire — the last great pre-Islamic Persian dynasty — was destroyed by the Arab Muslim armies in one of the fastest conquests in history. Iran was Islamicized. Arabic became the language of religion and high culture. Yet something remarkable happened — unlike Egypt, like North Africa, like the Levant, which gradually became Arabized in language and identity, Iran kept its language. Persian survived. Within two centuries Iranians were writing sophisticated poetry, philosophy and science in Persian — using the Arabic script but their own language. The Persian cultural identity proved resilient enough to absorb Islam without being dissolved by it. The Persian literary renaissance of the 9th-10th centuries produced figures like Ferdowsi, whose Shahnameh — Book of Kings — deliberately reconstructed pre-Islamic Persian identity and mythology. It was a conscious act of cultural preservation remarkably similar to what the Jewish scribes did with the Torah in Babylon. A conquered people writing their way back into existence. So you have two civilizational streams that met in the Middle East: The Semitic stream — out of Arabia and the Fertile Crescent, producing Sumerians, Akkadians, Babylonians, Canaanites, Jews, Arabs. Urban, agricultural, text-centered from very early, building civilization in river valleys. The Indo-European Iranian stream — out of the Eurasian steppe, mounted, pastoral, bringing a completely different cosmology, a dualistic theology, a warrior aristocratic culture that then learned to govern sedentary civilizations from the Semitic world. Modern Iranians are the descendants of that Indo-European Iranian stream, heavily mixed with the pre-existing Elamite and Semitic populations of the region, then further shaped by Arab Islamic conquest. Genetically they are distinct from Arabs — closer to South Asians and Europeans than to Semitic Arabs in certain markers, reflecting that ancient steppe origin. Linguistically Persian is closer to English than it is to Arabic — both are Indo-European, while Arabic is Semitic. Which makes the current conflict between Iran and Israel — between the heirs of the Indo-European Iranian world and the heirs of the Semitic Mesopotamian-Canaanite world — in some sense a resumption of the oldest cultural fault line in the Middle East. The same two civilizational streams that first encountered each other when Cyrus walked into Babylon in 539 BC, when he freed the Jews and sent them home. Except then they were allies. And the Iranian was the liberator of the Semite. History has a very dark sense of humor.

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i8chillywilly
i8chillywilly@i8chillywilly·
I have followed the good professor for a while now and listen to her podcast as often as possible. I have read a few of her books as well. All enjoyable. This is one is a real treat!! Give her a follow, a listen and read. Peace!
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown

"Draco Alchemicus Act I: The Casino" is on sale now at Amazon for only $14.45! Get your copy of this first part in our great Christian epic today! amazon.com/Draco-Alchemic…

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Olákúnlé
Olákúnlé@thislesh·
Facts about Corgis: Corgis are incredibly skilled herders, even though they are the smallest breed of herding dogs. They are mostly used to herd cattle. Corgis are highly intelligent and often described as having human intelligence because of their ability to learn commands. Notice how the corgi was leading with the pace of the German Shepard because of its injury.
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Rachel Fulton Brown
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown·
It's spring break—no Mosaic Arkstream tonight. Time to catch up on your Tolkien reading!
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy Jr.@MrJohnJnr·
🚨 NEW: Rubio just confirmed what they've hidden for 50 years — deindustrialization was DELIBERATE. In 1977, the CFR called it "controlled disintegration." Now Trump is ending it and the globalists at Munich are in open panic. We have the receipts. 🧾👇 FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING
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National Association of Scholars
"Peer review has become a way of introducing group think . . . science is in trouble and the reason it's in trouble is it's being nationalized." American science is in deep trouble, beset by multiple plagues including the irreproducibility crisis, doubts about academic integrity, turmoil over government funding, and a general erosion of public trust.
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Rachel Fulton Brown
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown·
“Welcome to paradise,” a man’s voice said. “You’ll find accommodations to the right. The queen invites you to her board and bed and hopes you will amuse her with delight. The mages of the queen will test your sight; the servants here will see to your requests. The ladies of the court will cheer their knight!” A gesture smooth, the courtier well-dressed held out a glovéd hand with which to guide the guests. Who is this queen? What happens at her court? How will her guests amuse her? Find out in Act II of the great Christian epic, "Draco Alchemicus"! dragoncommonroom.com/so/afPpkSAyD?l…
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Grǣġhama
Grǣġhama@grahamscheper·
A year ago today, I achieved my goal of being able to recite 1,000 lines of Beowulf from memory: youtube.com/watch?v=ymkK9j… These days, because of my pigritia and signifigantly busier life, I can only get to about line 750 before I have to reference a book, so hopefully I can reconquer some lost territory in that regard in the coming months. Either way, I'm extremely grateful to my past self for brute-forcing through it; the experience permanently transformed my ability to understand Beowulf and the rhythm of Old English verse in a totally unique and irreplicable way. Memorize poetry!!
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Rachel Fulton Brown
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown·
Today's the day! Today you can buy "Draco Alchemicus Act II: The Court," written by the Dragon Common Room, and beautifully illustrated by Aisha Fajardo. Order your copy today, and read some great Catholic poetry! dragoncommonroom.com/so/afPpkSAyD?l…
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Rachel Fulton Brown
Rachel Fulton Brown@RFultonBrown·
Catholics write great poetry, but some of the greatest Catholic poetry is often not recognized as Catholic. Join us this Saturday for readings from Sally Read's anthology of "100 Great Catholic Poems", along with her reflections on her choices of poems and the meaning of Catholic poetry! youtube.com/live/jlvpeib1V…
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