ᾶσχτ (âsht)
7.1K posts

ᾶσχτ (âsht)
@utilitaryan
global partner @UBS — club of rome member.
🇦🇶🇪🇺🇧🇹 Entrou em Aralık 2017
644 Seguindo7.7K Seguidores

@utilitaryan I don’t recall this being a thing 3 years ago when i visited. Something changed?
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His discontinuity theory is inseparable from his person. French historiography engaged with it more readily, and entertained aspects of it, German scholarship mostly rejected Fallmerayer. For the French, it posed less of an intellectual threat, not because they “accepted” it wholesale, but because their more cosmopolitan and less philologically anchored tradition allowed them to discuss such things without the same taboo.
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@utilitaryan We're really going to ignore Fallmerayer and act like it was mainly French historians?
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It was the Germans with their Romanticism who gave birth to modern Greece. The French were much more stoic; some would even say “blackpilled” to the point where French historians like Lavallée declared the ancient Greeks extinct and long since replaced by Slavs and Albanians.
The Swiss Elf 🏔️🌨️☃️⛷️🇨🇭@magicinthealps
France and Italy are considered 'romantic' by many Anglos, and for a good reason, with Lake Como, Cannes, Paris, Rome, Venice, Saint-Tropez often making the ideal backdrop for a Hollywood story between lovers. Yet the heart of European romanticism is Germany.
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If we are talking physically, then it is undoubtable that France and Italy are the embodiment of Romanticism, but the Romantic soul has always belonged to the Germanicvs. Fichte, Novalis, Goethe, Schiller, Wagner, Schubert, and many more. The Germanic fixation on the inner self and its contempt for society as a whole.
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@utilitaryan Do you speak Turkish? I’ve seen you post in it occasionally
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