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Hesiod
Voice of the common man
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(The Bloodline and Ancestry of the Gods) The Theogony [Mythology Audiobook]
(The Beginning of the World and the Bloodline and Ancestry of the Gods) The Theogony [Mythology Audiobook] by Hesiod
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Theogony
Origin of the Greek gods as told by Hesiod's Theogony
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Greek Creation Myths: Hesiod's Theogony
Dr. Paul Kiritsis gives a talk on creation myths and Hesiod's Theogony.
www.paulkiritsis.net
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Hesiod: Theogony (Part 1)
We read and discuss Hesiod's great epic on the origins and adventures of the Greek gods.
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Hesiod - Works and Days
In the Works and Days, Hesiod describes himself as the heir of a farm bequeathed to him and his brother Perses. However, Perses apparently squandered his wealth and came back for what is owned by Hesiod. Perses went to law and bribed the lords to judge in his favour. The poem contains a sharp attack against unjust judges like those who decided in favour of Perses; they are depicted as pocketing br
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Melissa Schubert: Hesiod's Poetic Theology as Homeric Context [Torrey Honors Lecture]
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Hesiod Theogony Comic Flipbook Animation Thing
CLAN1001 project for my university
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Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles - HESIOD Audiobook
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles - HESIOD Audiobook
Chapter Time
Works and Days 00:00:00
The Theogony 00:51:27
The Shield of Heracles 01:58:10
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles
HESIOD ( - )
Works and Days provides advice on agrarian matters and personal conduct. The Theogony explains the ancestry of the gods. The Shield of Heracles is the
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5 4 5 3 Intro to Hesiod 1501
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Hesiod Theogony & Works and Days by C.S.Morrissey
C.S.Morrissey invites everyone to rediscover Hesiod in his new translation. Available from Talonbooks.
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Hesiod: Theogony (Part Two)
We conclude our reading and discussion of Hesiod's "Theogony."
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Hesiod's Theogony (Abridged)
An Abridged version of Hesiod's Theogony (116-225 and 453-491) set to a diagrammatic representation of the creation of the universe and evolution of humanity as we currently know it.
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Ancient Greek: Reconstructed Pronunciation: Hesiod
This is a recitation of lines 1-20 of Hesiod's Theogony as it would have been pronounced by an Athenian rhapsode in the 4th century BC. All phonological analyses of ancient, dead languages rely on the work of early phoneticians (like Dionysius of Halicarnassus) and on internal evidence (evidence in the language itself). Though there used to be uncertainty on the issue, the majority of scholars n
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- Hesiod's Theogony - Greek Creation - Part 1
Hesiod's Theogony put to film.
VOTE FOR ME!
http://apps.facebook.com/eftours/castingcall/647243936
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Episode 18- Hesiod Part 2: Works and Days (Intro to Theogony)
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Hesiod Wrote About the 5 Ages of Man
Hesiod was a Boeotian farmer until the day he met the muses while he was tending sheep. The muses were the 9 daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne [Memory] who inspired poets, speakers, and artists. By convention, they were invoked at the beginning of an epic poem. The muses inspired Hesiod to write the 800-line epic poem called Works and Days. In it, Hesiod tells a Greek creation story that traces the
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Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1-21 - Ησίοδος (Reconstructed Ancient Greek)
Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1-21
Forgive my mistakes. I'm not perfect in terms of Technical stuff. But it's an attempt. The main purpose here is to juxtapose the three main ways ancient Greek reaches the ears of the unsuspecting learner. Under fear of commuting hubris, I dare contend that widespread beliefs about ancient Greek pronunciation are long overdue for a massive overhaul, thanks to Oxyrynchos
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Theogonie Abrechnung mit der Philosophie
Hesiod - Theogonie! Wer Sokrates verstehen will, was er eigentlich kritisiert, sollte Hesiod gelesen haben. Angefangen von "Werke und Tag" bis hin zu "Theogonie".
Die heutige Philosophie auch die des Sokrates ist nichts anderes als Rechtswissenschaft auf der Basis des Eigentumsrechts, die selbst die Wissenschaft der heutigen Zeit gebar.
Nichts ist heute frei von Theologoie. Daher ist die Theog
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CHS Essentials | Hesiod
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Dungeons & Dragons for kids - Heroes of Hesiod
We trialed the "Heroes of Hesiod - a Monster Slayers Adventure" by Susan Morris with two of our kids, aged 6 & 4. Suffice to say we now have one more eager player for our 3.5 game!
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Lineage2 Hesiod ! High five 5
Скоро открывается проект HESIOD. Вы его долго ждали ! High Five 5. х100 ! Администрация обязуется выплачивать лучшим игрокам по статистики Skill Rating РЕАЛЬНЫЕ WMZ/WMR награды !
Hesiod
Voice of the common man...
Voice of the common man
wn.com/Hesiod
Voice of the common man
- published: 21 Sep 2015
- views: 93
(The Bloodline and Ancestry of the Gods) The Theogony [Mythology Audiobook]
(The Beginning of the World and the Bloodline and Ancestry of the Gods) The Theogony [Mythology Audiobook] by Hesiod...
(The Beginning of the World and the Bloodline and Ancestry of the Gods) The Theogony [Mythology Audiobook] by Hesiod
wn.com/(The Bloodline And Ancestry Of The Gods) The Theogony Mythology Audiobook
(The Beginning of the World and the Bloodline and Ancestry of the Gods) The Theogony [Mythology Audiobook] by Hesiod
- published: 03 Oct 2015
- views: 2885
Theogony
Origin of the Greek gods as told by Hesiod's Theogony...
Origin of the Greek gods as told by Hesiod's Theogony
wn.com/Theogony
Origin of the Greek gods as told by Hesiod's Theogony
- published: 03 Feb 2014
- views: 4831
Greek Creation Myths: Hesiod's Theogony
Dr. Paul Kiritsis gives a talk on creation myths and Hesiod's Theogony.
www.paulkiritsis.net...
Dr. Paul Kiritsis gives a talk on creation myths and Hesiod's Theogony.
www.paulkiritsis.net
wn.com/Greek Creation Myths Hesiod's Theogony
Dr. Paul Kiritsis gives a talk on creation myths and Hesiod's Theogony.
www.paulkiritsis.net
- published: 22 Jun 2012
- views: 7970
Hesiod: Theogony (Part 1)
We read and discuss Hesiod's great epic on the origins and adventures of the Greek gods....
We read and discuss Hesiod's great epic on the origins and adventures of the Greek gods.
wn.com/Hesiod Theogony (Part 1)
We read and discuss Hesiod's great epic on the origins and adventures of the Greek gods.
- published: 20 May 2015
- views: 1702
Hesiod - Works and Days
In the Works and Days, Hesiod describes himself as the heir of a farm bequeathed to him and his brother Perses. However, Perses apparently squandered his wealth...
In the Works and Days, Hesiod describes himself as the heir of a farm bequeathed to him and his brother Perses. However, Perses apparently squandered his wealth and came back for what is owned by Hesiod. Perses went to law and bribed the lords to judge in his favour. The poem contains a sharp attack against unjust judges like those who decided in favour of Perses; they are depicted as pocketing bribes as they render their unfair verdicts. Hesiod seems to have thought that instead of giving him money or property which he will again spend in no time, it is better to teach him the virtues of work and to impart his wisdom which can be used to generate an income.
Made by Donald Miller
Great Books of the Western Tradition.
wn.com/Hesiod Works And Days
In the Works and Days, Hesiod describes himself as the heir of a farm bequeathed to him and his brother Perses. However, Perses apparently squandered his wealth and came back for what is owned by Hesiod. Perses went to law and bribed the lords to judge in his favour. The poem contains a sharp attack against unjust judges like those who decided in favour of Perses; they are depicted as pocketing bribes as they render their unfair verdicts. Hesiod seems to have thought that instead of giving him money or property which he will again spend in no time, it is better to teach him the virtues of work and to impart his wisdom which can be used to generate an income.
Made by Donald Miller
Great Books of the Western Tradition.
- published: 24 Mar 2015
- views: 761
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles - HESIOD Audiobook
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles - HESIOD Audiobook
Chapter Time
Works and Days 00:00:00
The Theogony 00:51:27
The Shield of Heracl...
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles - HESIOD Audiobook
Chapter Time
Works and Days 00:00:00
The Theogony 00:51:27
The Shield of Heracles 01:58:10
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles
HESIOD ( - )
Works and Days provides advice on agrarian matters and personal conduct. The Theogony explains the ancestry of the gods. The Shield of Heracles is the adventure of Heracles accepting an enemy's challenge to fight. - Summary by Arthur Krolman
Genre(s): Classics (Antiquity)
Language: English
wn.com/Works And Days, The Theogony, And The Shield Of Heracles Hesiod Audiobook
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles - HESIOD Audiobook
Chapter Time
Works and Days 00:00:00
The Theogony 00:51:27
The Shield of Heracles 01:58:10
Works and Days, The Theogony, and The Shield of Heracles
HESIOD ( - )
Works and Days provides advice on agrarian matters and personal conduct. The Theogony explains the ancestry of the gods. The Shield of Heracles is the adventure of Heracles accepting an enemy's challenge to fight. - Summary by Arthur Krolman
Genre(s): Classics (Antiquity)
Language: English
- published: 29 Sep 2015
- views: 176
Hesiod Theogony & Works and Days by C.S.Morrissey
C.S.Morrissey invites everyone to rediscover Hesiod in his new translation. Available from Talonbooks....
C.S.Morrissey invites everyone to rediscover Hesiod in his new translation. Available from Talonbooks.
wn.com/Hesiod Theogony Works And Days By C.S.Morrissey
C.S.Morrissey invites everyone to rediscover Hesiod in his new translation. Available from Talonbooks.
- published: 24 Sep 2012
- views: 2820
Hesiod: Theogony (Part Two)
We conclude our reading and discussion of Hesiod's "Theogony."...
We conclude our reading and discussion of Hesiod's "Theogony."
wn.com/Hesiod Theogony (Part Two)
We conclude our reading and discussion of Hesiod's "Theogony."
- published: 22 May 2015
- views: 288
Hesiod's Theogony (Abridged)
An Abridged version of Hesiod's Theogony (116-225 and 453-491) set to a diagrammatic representation of the creation of the universe and evolution of humanity as...
An Abridged version of Hesiod's Theogony (116-225 and 453-491) set to a diagrammatic representation of the creation of the universe and evolution of humanity as we currently know it.
wn.com/Hesiod's Theogony (Abridged)
An Abridged version of Hesiod's Theogony (116-225 and 453-491) set to a diagrammatic representation of the creation of the universe and evolution of humanity as we currently know it.
- published: 10 May 2013
- views: 1138
Ancient Greek: Reconstructed Pronunciation: Hesiod
This is a recitation of lines 1-20 of Hesiod's Theogony as it would have been pronounced by an Athenian rhapsode in the 4th century BC. All phonological analys...
This is a recitation of lines 1-20 of Hesiod's Theogony as it would have been pronounced by an Athenian rhapsode in the 4th century BC. All phonological analyses of ancient, dead languages rely on the work of early phoneticians (like Dionysius of Halicarnassus) and on internal evidence (evidence in the language itself). Though there used to be uncertainty on the issue, the majority of scholars now agree on a particular pronunciation. This video presumes this pronunciation and acts upon it.
This video also employs the use of pitch accents, a fundamental characteristic of the language not employed in Ancient Greek pedagogy. The results of employing the accents are tremendous. The language sounds thoroughly different. On the acute accent, I rise a fifth. The grave, I choose to ignore, believing with some support that it merely indicates the starting pitch from which the acute rises. On the circumflex, I rise and then dip downward.
Stress, although often thought not to exist in Classical Greek at all, was in fact a key element of the language. Dynamic modulation, vowel modification - all key elements of stress are not only impossible to avoid in language generally, but even in music.
wn.com/Ancient Greek Reconstructed Pronunciation Hesiod
This is a recitation of lines 1-20 of Hesiod's Theogony as it would have been pronounced by an Athenian rhapsode in the 4th century BC. All phonological analyses of ancient, dead languages rely on the work of early phoneticians (like Dionysius of Halicarnassus) and on internal evidence (evidence in the language itself). Though there used to be uncertainty on the issue, the majority of scholars now agree on a particular pronunciation. This video presumes this pronunciation and acts upon it.
This video also employs the use of pitch accents, a fundamental characteristic of the language not employed in Ancient Greek pedagogy. The results of employing the accents are tremendous. The language sounds thoroughly different. On the acute accent, I rise a fifth. The grave, I choose to ignore, believing with some support that it merely indicates the starting pitch from which the acute rises. On the circumflex, I rise and then dip downward.
Stress, although often thought not to exist in Classical Greek at all, was in fact a key element of the language. Dynamic modulation, vowel modification - all key elements of stress are not only impossible to avoid in language generally, but even in music.
- published: 01 Apr 2011
- views: 23202
- Hesiod's Theogony - Greek Creation - Part 1
Hesiod's Theogony put to film.
VOTE FOR ME!
http://apps.facebook.com/eftours/castingcall/647243936...
Hesiod's Theogony put to film.
VOTE FOR ME!
http://apps.facebook.com/eftours/castingcall/647243936
wn.com/Hesiod's Theogony Greek Creation Part 1
Hesiod's Theogony put to film.
VOTE FOR ME!
http://apps.facebook.com/eftours/castingcall/647243936
- published: 13 Dec 2007
- views: 14520
Hesiod Wrote About the 5 Ages of Man
Hesiod was a Boeotian farmer until the day he met the muses while he was tending sheep. The muses were the 9 daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne [Memory] who inspir...
Hesiod was a Boeotian farmer until the day he met the muses while he was tending sheep. The muses were the 9 daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne [Memory] who inspired poets, speakers, and artists. By convention, they were invoked at the beginning of an epic poem. The muses inspired Hesiod to write the 800-line epic poem called Works and Days. In it, Hesiod tells a Greek creation story that traces the lineage of mankind through 5 successive "ages" or "races" from the "Golden Age" to the present "Iron Age."
wn.com/Hesiod Wrote About The 5 Ages Of Man
Hesiod was a Boeotian farmer until the day he met the muses while he was tending sheep. The muses were the 9 daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne [Memory] who inspired poets, speakers, and artists. By convention, they were invoked at the beginning of an epic poem. The muses inspired Hesiod to write the 800-line epic poem called Works and Days. In it, Hesiod tells a Greek creation story that traces the lineage of mankind through 5 successive "ages" or "races" from the "Golden Age" to the present "Iron Age."
- published: 25 Oct 2012
- views: 2309
Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1-21 - Ησίοδος (Reconstructed Ancient Greek)
Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1-21
Forgive my mistakes. I'm not perfect in terms of Technical stuff. But it's an attempt. The main purpose here is to juxtapose the th...
Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1-21
Forgive my mistakes. I'm not perfect in terms of Technical stuff. But it's an attempt. The main purpose here is to juxtapose the three main ways ancient Greek reaches the ears of the unsuspecting learner. Under fear of commuting hubris, I dare contend that widespread beliefs about ancient Greek pronunciation are long overdue for a massive overhaul, thanks to Oxyrynchos and new knowledge that should force us to create a new-new re-reconstructed version.
Μουσάων Ἑλικωνιάδων ἀρχώμεθ᾽ ἀείδειν,
αἵ θ᾽ Ἑλικῶνος ἔχουσιν ὄρος μέγα τε ζάθεόν τε
καί τε περὶ κρήνην ἰοειδέα πόσσ᾽ ἁπαλοῖσιν
ὀρχεῦνται καὶ βωμὸν ἐρισθενέος Κρονίωνος·
καί τε λοεσσάμεναι τέρενα χρόα Περμησσοῖο 5
ἢ Ἵππου κρήνης ἢ Ὀλμειοῦ ζαθέοιο
ἀκροτάτῳ Ἑλικῶνι χοροὺς ἐνεποιήσαντο
καλούς, ἱμερόεντας· ἐπεῤῥώσαντο δὲ ποσσίν.
Ἔνθεν ἀπορνύμεναι, κεκαλυμμέναι ἠέρι πολλῇ,
ἐννύχιαι στεῖχον περικαλλέα ὄσσαν ἱεῖσαι, 10
ὑμνεῦσαι Δία τ᾽ αἰγίοχον καὶ πότνιαν Ἥρην
Ἀργεΐην, χρυσέοισι πεδίλοις ἐμβεβαυῖαν,
κούρην τ᾽ αἰγιόχοιο Διὸς γλαυκῶπιν Ἀθήνην
Φοῖβόν τ᾽ Ἀπόλλωνα καὶ Ἄρτεμιν ἰοχέαιραν
ἠδὲ Ποσειδάωνα γαιήοχον, ἐννοσίγαιον, 15
καὶ Θέμιν αἰδοίην ἑλικοβλέφαρόν τ᾽ Ἀφροδίτην
Ἥβην τε χρυσοστέφανον καλήν τε Διώνην
Λητώ τ᾽ Ἰαπετόν τε ἰδὲ Κρόνον ἀγκυλομήτην
Ἠῶ τ᾽ Ἠέλιόν τε μέγαν λαμπράν τε Σελήνην
Γαῖάν τ᾽ Ὠκεανόν τε μέγαν καὶ Νύκτα μέλαιναν 20
ἄλλων τ᾽ ἀθανάτων ἱερὸν γένος αἰὲν ἐόντων.
This is an attempt at Reconstructed Ancient Greek, not Erasmian pronunciation.
wn.com/Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1 21 Ησίοδος (Reconstructed Ancient Greek)
Hesiod, Theogeny Lines 1-21
Forgive my mistakes. I'm not perfect in terms of Technical stuff. But it's an attempt. The main purpose here is to juxtapose the three main ways ancient Greek reaches the ears of the unsuspecting learner. Under fear of commuting hubris, I dare contend that widespread beliefs about ancient Greek pronunciation are long overdue for a massive overhaul, thanks to Oxyrynchos and new knowledge that should force us to create a new-new re-reconstructed version.
Μουσάων Ἑλικωνιάδων ἀρχώμεθ᾽ ἀείδειν,
αἵ θ᾽ Ἑλικῶνος ἔχουσιν ὄρος μέγα τε ζάθεόν τε
καί τε περὶ κρήνην ἰοειδέα πόσσ᾽ ἁπαλοῖσιν
ὀρχεῦνται καὶ βωμὸν ἐρισθενέος Κρονίωνος·
καί τε λοεσσάμεναι τέρενα χρόα Περμησσοῖο 5
ἢ Ἵππου κρήνης ἢ Ὀλμειοῦ ζαθέοιο
ἀκροτάτῳ Ἑλικῶνι χοροὺς ἐνεποιήσαντο
καλούς, ἱμερόεντας· ἐπεῤῥώσαντο δὲ ποσσίν.
Ἔνθεν ἀπορνύμεναι, κεκαλυμμέναι ἠέρι πολλῇ,
ἐννύχιαι στεῖχον περικαλλέα ὄσσαν ἱεῖσαι, 10
ὑμνεῦσαι Δία τ᾽ αἰγίοχον καὶ πότνιαν Ἥρην
Ἀργεΐην, χρυσέοισι πεδίλοις ἐμβεβαυῖαν,
κούρην τ᾽ αἰγιόχοιο Διὸς γλαυκῶπιν Ἀθήνην
Φοῖβόν τ᾽ Ἀπόλλωνα καὶ Ἄρτεμιν ἰοχέαιραν
ἠδὲ Ποσειδάωνα γαιήοχον, ἐννοσίγαιον, 15
καὶ Θέμιν αἰδοίην ἑλικοβλέφαρόν τ᾽ Ἀφροδίτην
Ἥβην τε χρυσοστέφανον καλήν τε Διώνην
Λητώ τ᾽ Ἰαπετόν τε ἰδὲ Κρόνον ἀγκυλομήτην
Ἠῶ τ᾽ Ἠέλιόν τε μέγαν λαμπράν τε Σελήνην
Γαῖάν τ᾽ Ὠκεανόν τε μέγαν καὶ Νύκτα μέλαιναν 20
ἄλλων τ᾽ ἀθανάτων ἱερὸν γένος αἰὲν ἐόντων.
This is an attempt at Reconstructed Ancient Greek, not Erasmian pronunciation.
- published: 13 Jan 2015
- views: 268
Theogonie Abrechnung mit der Philosophie
Hesiod - Theogonie! Wer Sokrates verstehen will, was er eigentlich kritisiert, sollte Hesiod gelesen haben. Angefangen von "Werke und Tag" bis hin zu "Theogonie...
Hesiod - Theogonie! Wer Sokrates verstehen will, was er eigentlich kritisiert, sollte Hesiod gelesen haben. Angefangen von "Werke und Tag" bis hin zu "Theogonie".
Die heutige Philosophie auch die des Sokrates ist nichts anderes als Rechtswissenschaft auf der Basis des Eigentumsrechts, die selbst die Wissenschaft der heutigen Zeit gebar.
Nichts ist heute frei von Theologoie. Daher ist die Theogonie um so interessanter. Sie klingt wie der biblische Lobgesang der Abrahmisten auf den Gott des Eigentums, der die Menschen mit seinem "Sinn des Lebens" aus Eden für immer verbannte.
Hörbuch der Staat Prolog im Himmel Goethe Faust Erörterung Analyse Blasphemie in der Antike Eigentumismus Keuronfuih Politprofiler
„Wer nicht von dreitausend Jahren sich weiß Rechenschaft zu geben, bleib im Dunkeln unerfahren, mag von Tag zu Tage leben.“ (Goethe)
Er hat sie alle gelesen!
wn.com/Theogonie Abrechnung Mit Der Philosophie
Hesiod - Theogonie! Wer Sokrates verstehen will, was er eigentlich kritisiert, sollte Hesiod gelesen haben. Angefangen von "Werke und Tag" bis hin zu "Theogonie".
Die heutige Philosophie auch die des Sokrates ist nichts anderes als Rechtswissenschaft auf der Basis des Eigentumsrechts, die selbst die Wissenschaft der heutigen Zeit gebar.
Nichts ist heute frei von Theologoie. Daher ist die Theogonie um so interessanter. Sie klingt wie der biblische Lobgesang der Abrahmisten auf den Gott des Eigentums, der die Menschen mit seinem "Sinn des Lebens" aus Eden für immer verbannte.
Hörbuch der Staat Prolog im Himmel Goethe Faust Erörterung Analyse Blasphemie in der Antike Eigentumismus Keuronfuih Politprofiler
„Wer nicht von dreitausend Jahren sich weiß Rechenschaft zu geben, bleib im Dunkeln unerfahren, mag von Tag zu Tage leben.“ (Goethe)
Er hat sie alle gelesen!
- published: 30 Aug 2014
- views: 559
Dungeons & Dragons for kids - Heroes of Hesiod
We trialed the "Heroes of Hesiod - a Monster Slayers Adventure" by Susan Morris with two of our kids, aged 6 & 4. Suffice to say we now have one more eager play...
We trialed the "Heroes of Hesiod - a Monster Slayers Adventure" by Susan Morris with two of our kids, aged 6 & 4. Suffice to say we now have one more eager player for our 3.5 game!
wn.com/Dungeons Dragons For Kids Heroes Of Hesiod
We trialed the "Heroes of Hesiod - a Monster Slayers Adventure" by Susan Morris with two of our kids, aged 6 & 4. Suffice to say we now have one more eager player for our 3.5 game!
- published: 05 Sep 2012
- views: 782
Lineage2 Hesiod ! High five 5
Скоро открывается проект HESIOD. Вы его долго ждали ! High Five 5. х100 ! Администрация обязуется выплачивать лучшим игрокам по статистики Skill Rating РЕАЛЬНЫЕ...
Скоро открывается проект HESIOD. Вы его долго ждали ! High Five 5. х100 ! Администрация обязуется выплачивать лучшим игрокам по статистики Skill Rating РЕАЛЬНЫЕ WMZ/WMR награды !
wn.com/Lineage2 Hesiod High Five 5
Скоро открывается проект HESIOD. Вы его долго ждали ! High Five 5. х100 ! Администрация обязуется выплачивать лучшим игрокам по статистики Skill Rating РЕАЛЬНЫЕ WMZ/WMR награды !
- published: 21 Jan 2012
- views: 2182
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Hesiod's interview
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Interview with Hesiod
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NEID - Interview
NEID
BEATRICE BUCHER und MASSIMO MILANO
7. Juli 2012 bis 30.8.2012
Er ist Thema in allen Religionen und jedem Kulturkreis; bereits Hesiod und Aristoteles diskutierten den negativen Neid, seine Ursprünge, Formen und Auswüchse, während der positive, also anerkennende, ja beneidenswerte Neid weniger Beachtung fand. Das besondere am Neid, der oft als die grösste Todsünde und als Keim jeden übels beze
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iUniverse Author Interview With Wagdi Zeid
Self-published author of The Last Pharaoh And Other Plays. Available in Softcover, Hardcover & E-Book formats @ http://bookstore.iuniverse.com/.
Akhnaton, a pharaoh of the eighteenth dynasty, is about to challenge everything his people and culture hold dear in The Last Pharaoh. Before his rule, Egyptians lived a life of slavery under their rulers, who demanded abject submission. In a culture where
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5 minutes from Get Over Yourself! The MiltnMia Show! #30 Interview with Toteras #4
Interview with Toteras #4: Women want men to change but to what?
After Milt introduces the show and introduces his 4th Interview with Toteras, then speaks about their 2 relationship booklets, The Get Over Yourself! Handbook on Cheating and Betrayal and The Get Over Yourself! Handbook on Creating Happiness in a Relationship, he speaks about the amazing background of Toteras, then reads some text f
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HALF GIRL HALF SNAKE!
In Greek mythology, Echidna (Ancient Greek: Ἔχιδνα, "she viper") was half woman half snake, known as the "Mother of All Monsters" because most of the monsters in Greek myth were mothered by her. Hesiod's Theogony described her as:
[...] the goddess fierce Echidna who is half a nymph with glancing eyes and fair cheeks, and half again a huge snake,[1] great and awful, with speckled skin, eating raw
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Homer, Mapping and Mnemonics, with Jenny Strauss Clay
Jenny Strauss Clay is famous for her work on Homer, the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod, with a focus on how these archaic Greek hexameter poems maps out an epic cosmos. But today she will talk about a different kind of mapping, based on what has been labelled the "spatial turn" in Classical studies. Her recent book, Homer's Trojan Theater, exploits digital technology, cognitive mapping and mnemonics t
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Bakari Pace Interview Original Air Date 95-02-13 [Thx to Harold Channer]
Thanks to Harold Channer·
Bakari A. Pace is an independent researcher, author, theorist, and speaker on how the sustainable development movement addresses humanity's challenge on how to use our minds and experience in the highest advantage of others in the shortest possible time.
Since 2010, Bakari has been uncovering the public health, environmental, and economic implications of our scarcity-bas
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Hesiod's Origin of Monsters
CLAN 1001 Digital Project 2013
Music copyright to querflote, available here: https://soundcloud.com/querflote/5-audio-track-1
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5. The Rise of the Polis (cont.)
Introduction to Ancient Greek History (CLCV 205)
In this lecture, Professor Donald Kagan tells the story of the emergence of the polis from the Dark Ages. He shows that by the time of the poet Hesiod, there is already a polis in place. He describes the importance of the polis in the Greek world and explains that it was much more than a mere place of habitation; it was a place where there was ju
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Blooper reel for Hesiod
Tallie and I got together to work on a quick sketch for my uni project. It took hours and we couldn't even manage to do one good take. We failed hard, but had so much fun doing it.
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Modern Hesiod's Races of Man.
A Digital Project I did for CLAN1001.
Shows a modern day Cult Leading Hesiod and his MAGICAL POT.
Music by Celestial Aeon Project and New World Computing.
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Interview with Gary Troup (Clip 2)
2nd clip of an interview with Gary Troup, author of "Bad Twin"
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Interview Uncensored- The Epic Battle (Gods Vs Monsters)
Clan1001 project - Jinn & Arunraj
This brave interviewer dared himself to interview the ancient legendary beings of Greek mythology. What does the interviewer have in hold for us to hear..
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Sharon Ferguson Interview for film THEOGONY
Actress Sharon Ferguson discusses her experience playing EVE in the short film THEOGONY directed by Giovanni Zelko
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Interview with Klytemnestra
Digital Project
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Gichi Gamba Interview From Theogony
Actor Gichi Gamba talks about his experiences playing the character ADAM in the short film THEOGONY. See more on www.theogonythemovie.com
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Billy Collins On The Great Poets
Coleridge's "Conversation" poems inspire much of Collins' work.
Billy Collins: Well I mean poetry, I think, art moves in a kind of pendulum. You can see even from the Greeks the argument as to whether literature should be in the common tongue, or should it be in an elevated language? This pendulistic battle goes back and forth. Wordsworth for instance, to go back to him, wanted to write poetr
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Interview with Kilson
This is my lovely interview with a living angel in disguise. Gorgeous.
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ninja Assasin Interview
an interview with my main character of the movie ninja assasin
the interview explains everything haha
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Surly Steamroller
My Surly Steamroller.
Wheels are Mavic cxp33 rims laced to surly hubs. The rear hub is a flip flop hub. Omnicrum GXP crankset, Thompson seat post, Romin SL seat, Ritchie stem and bar, Cane creek brakes, etc... It actually weighs 21.8 pounds (rather than the 18 I say in the video), so it's not really THAT light. It could be much lighter. Lighter weight tires and frame would be the main place left
NEID - Interview
NEID
BEATRICE BUCHER und MASSIMO MILANO
7. Juli 2012 bis 30.8.2012
Er ist Thema in allen Religionen und jedem Kulturkreis; bereits Hesiod und Aristoteles disku...
NEID
BEATRICE BUCHER und MASSIMO MILANO
7. Juli 2012 bis 30.8.2012
Er ist Thema in allen Religionen und jedem Kulturkreis; bereits Hesiod und Aristoteles diskutierten den negativen Neid, seine Ursprünge, Formen und Auswüchse, während der positive, also anerkennende, ja beneidenswerte Neid weniger Beachtung fand. Das besondere am Neid, der oft als die grösste Todsünde und als Keim jeden übels bezeichnet wird, ist das konkrete Mitleiden des Neiders. Denn Neid entsteht in der Regel um etwas, das man zwar selbst auch besitzt, aber eben nicht in der beneideten Form: "Der Töpfer grollt dem Töpfer und der Zimmermann dem Zimmermann, es neidet der Bettler den Bettler und der Sänger den Sänger" heisst es bei Hesiod und findet in dieser Form im Alten Testament mit dem Todschlag Abels durch seinen Bruder Kain zum symbolträchtigen Höhepunkt. Zum Neid gehört also eine andere Person, die in einer besonderen Gunst zu stehen scheint. Dem Neid nachgebend, folgt aber nicht etwa die Besitznahme des begehrten Gutes, sondern vielmehr der Ausschluss, die Verunglimpfung, die Vernichtung des Besitzers, auch wenn dies letztlich an der Situation des Neiders nichts ändern sollte. Schon die Götter versuchten sich vor dem Neid zu schützen, der als Dämon in Erscheinung trat, und mussten seinen Blick abwehren. Und so taucht Neid in Form des scheelen, missgünstigen Blicks sowohl in Erzählungen, Sagen und Märchen als auch in der Geschichte der Kunst auf, wie es Hieronymus Bosch in seinem Zyklus zu den Todsünden eindrücklich darstellte. Zum neiderfüllten Blick gesellten sich bald vor allem in mittelalterlichen Schwankbüchern, Bilderbögen und auch auf Spielkarten verschiedene Darstellungen, bei denen menschliche wie tierische Neider vorgeführt wurden.
Die Gemeinschaftsarbeit von Beatrice Bucher und Massimo Milano resultiert aus Fragen nach Werten, Vorstellungen und Bildern, die für die heutige Gesellschaft Wertmassstab sind und damit Auslöser von Neid sein können. In ihrer Arbeit versinnbildlichen sie insbesondere Prozesse, die im Umgang mit Neid möglich sind. Wenn sie, im wahren Sinn des Wortes, vordergründig-spielerisch den Zugang zu ihren Antworten nur scheinbar verwehren und damit durchaus Neid auszulösen in Kauf nehmen, dann loten sie hintergründig-reflexiv ihre Antworten an Aktuellem und Konkretem aus und transferieren dabei kunsthistorische Topoi des Neids ins Jetzt.
wn.com/Neid Interview
NEID
BEATRICE BUCHER und MASSIMO MILANO
7. Juli 2012 bis 30.8.2012
Er ist Thema in allen Religionen und jedem Kulturkreis; bereits Hesiod und Aristoteles diskutierten den negativen Neid, seine Ursprünge, Formen und Auswüchse, während der positive, also anerkennende, ja beneidenswerte Neid weniger Beachtung fand. Das besondere am Neid, der oft als die grösste Todsünde und als Keim jeden übels bezeichnet wird, ist das konkrete Mitleiden des Neiders. Denn Neid entsteht in der Regel um etwas, das man zwar selbst auch besitzt, aber eben nicht in der beneideten Form: "Der Töpfer grollt dem Töpfer und der Zimmermann dem Zimmermann, es neidet der Bettler den Bettler und der Sänger den Sänger" heisst es bei Hesiod und findet in dieser Form im Alten Testament mit dem Todschlag Abels durch seinen Bruder Kain zum symbolträchtigen Höhepunkt. Zum Neid gehört also eine andere Person, die in einer besonderen Gunst zu stehen scheint. Dem Neid nachgebend, folgt aber nicht etwa die Besitznahme des begehrten Gutes, sondern vielmehr der Ausschluss, die Verunglimpfung, die Vernichtung des Besitzers, auch wenn dies letztlich an der Situation des Neiders nichts ändern sollte. Schon die Götter versuchten sich vor dem Neid zu schützen, der als Dämon in Erscheinung trat, und mussten seinen Blick abwehren. Und so taucht Neid in Form des scheelen, missgünstigen Blicks sowohl in Erzählungen, Sagen und Märchen als auch in der Geschichte der Kunst auf, wie es Hieronymus Bosch in seinem Zyklus zu den Todsünden eindrücklich darstellte. Zum neiderfüllten Blick gesellten sich bald vor allem in mittelalterlichen Schwankbüchern, Bilderbögen und auch auf Spielkarten verschiedene Darstellungen, bei denen menschliche wie tierische Neider vorgeführt wurden.
Die Gemeinschaftsarbeit von Beatrice Bucher und Massimo Milano resultiert aus Fragen nach Werten, Vorstellungen und Bildern, die für die heutige Gesellschaft Wertmassstab sind und damit Auslöser von Neid sein können. In ihrer Arbeit versinnbildlichen sie insbesondere Prozesse, die im Umgang mit Neid möglich sind. Wenn sie, im wahren Sinn des Wortes, vordergründig-spielerisch den Zugang zu ihren Antworten nur scheinbar verwehren und damit durchaus Neid auszulösen in Kauf nehmen, dann loten sie hintergründig-reflexiv ihre Antworten an Aktuellem und Konkretem aus und transferieren dabei kunsthistorische Topoi des Neids ins Jetzt.
- published: 11 Jul 2012
- views: 492
iUniverse Author Interview With Wagdi Zeid
Self-published author of The Last Pharaoh And Other Plays. Available in Softcover, Hardcover & E-Book formats @ http://bookstore.iuniverse.com/.
Akhnaton, a pha...
Self-published author of The Last Pharaoh And Other Plays. Available in Softcover, Hardcover & E-Book formats @ http://bookstore.iuniverse.com/.
Akhnaton, a pharaoh of the eighteenth dynasty, is about to challenge everything his people and culture hold dear in The Last Pharaoh. Before his rule, Egyptians lived a life of slavery under their rulers, who demanded abject submission. In a culture where rulers are revered as gods, change comes slowly, if at all. The pharaoh's grand vision of sweeping social reform is met with violent hostility by the priesthood and every other power player in the kingdom. When Akhnaton announces that he is, in fact, as mortal and fallible as his subjects, his proclamation inspires rivalries that would enthusiastically put his new mortality to the test. Neighbors struggle with questions of faith, morality, and the social order in Winter Dreams, a two-act play that could take place in any small town in America. When a child preacher stirs up old drama and rivalries, more questions than answers arise. Is he really the voice of God, or are other forces at work? The New Odyssey explores a darker future for humanity. In 1999—as the flames of the disastrous Third World War cool, and the fourth apocalyptic global war looms—a college professor summons Hesiod, Homer, and Shakespeare. He argues passionately to enlist their help in a bold plan to save humanity from its eventual destruction—at the hand of womankind. If he can get these three minds from humanity's past in on his scheme, there may be hope for mankind's future yet.
About the Author: Wagdi Zeid teaches Shakespeare and drama at UMass Lowell and earned his PhD in theatre from the City University of New York. He taught at American University and Cairo University in his native Egypt. He was Egypt's cultural attaché in the United States, a cultural counselor in Turkey, and the director of Cairo University's Center for Foreign Languages.
wn.com/Iuniverse Author Interview With Wagdi Zeid
Self-published author of The Last Pharaoh And Other Plays. Available in Softcover, Hardcover & E-Book formats @ http://bookstore.iuniverse.com/.
Akhnaton, a pharaoh of the eighteenth dynasty, is about to challenge everything his people and culture hold dear in The Last Pharaoh. Before his rule, Egyptians lived a life of slavery under their rulers, who demanded abject submission. In a culture where rulers are revered as gods, change comes slowly, if at all. The pharaoh's grand vision of sweeping social reform is met with violent hostility by the priesthood and every other power player in the kingdom. When Akhnaton announces that he is, in fact, as mortal and fallible as his subjects, his proclamation inspires rivalries that would enthusiastically put his new mortality to the test. Neighbors struggle with questions of faith, morality, and the social order in Winter Dreams, a two-act play that could take place in any small town in America. When a child preacher stirs up old drama and rivalries, more questions than answers arise. Is he really the voice of God, or are other forces at work? The New Odyssey explores a darker future for humanity. In 1999—as the flames of the disastrous Third World War cool, and the fourth apocalyptic global war looms—a college professor summons Hesiod, Homer, and Shakespeare. He argues passionately to enlist their help in a bold plan to save humanity from its eventual destruction—at the hand of womankind. If he can get these three minds from humanity's past in on his scheme, there may be hope for mankind's future yet.
About the Author: Wagdi Zeid teaches Shakespeare and drama at UMass Lowell and earned his PhD in theatre from the City University of New York. He taught at American University and Cairo University in his native Egypt. He was Egypt's cultural attaché in the United States, a cultural counselor in Turkey, and the director of Cairo University's Center for Foreign Languages.
- published: 24 Jan 2013
- views: 144
5 minutes from Get Over Yourself! The MiltnMia Show! #30 Interview with Toteras #4
Interview with Toteras #4: Women want men to change but to what?
After Milt introduces the show and introduces his 4th Interview with Toteras, then speaks abou...
Interview with Toteras #4: Women want men to change but to what?
After Milt introduces the show and introduces his 4th Interview with Toteras, then speaks about their 2 relationship booklets, The Get Over Yourself! Handbook on Cheating and Betrayal and The Get Over Yourself! Handbook on Creating Happiness in a Relationship, he speaks about the amazing background of Toteras, then reads some text from the website set up in honor of the man, SchoolofAbsurdity.com, which describes his life-story, before he introduces the interview with Demetrius Toteras, featuring the issue of Change, its differing elements and the central issue of Change as it relates to relationships, women want men to change, but to what?
These are the themes Toteras discusses:
On Change: 'everything is subject to change'; deliberate change vs cyclical change; women want a man to change but to what?; women are tired of men and their wants; love is about being sweet every minute to women; sexual slapping; women want a man who feels; on veterans and feeling; on Plato, the 1st psychologist; on the Theogony and Hesiod; 'politeness is offensive for what it hides'; it's the man who makes the woman and vice versa; on Muslim men and women as their property; the Phd finding gism on his bedsheets; on Darwin's quest to understand man's emotions; on the differing feelings and emotions towards women and females.
Milt then returns after the interview and closes the show.
wn.com/5 Minutes From Get Over Yourself The Miltnmia Show 30 Interview With Toteras 4
Interview with Toteras #4: Women want men to change but to what?
After Milt introduces the show and introduces his 4th Interview with Toteras, then speaks about their 2 relationship booklets, The Get Over Yourself! Handbook on Cheating and Betrayal and The Get Over Yourself! Handbook on Creating Happiness in a Relationship, he speaks about the amazing background of Toteras, then reads some text from the website set up in honor of the man, SchoolofAbsurdity.com, which describes his life-story, before he introduces the interview with Demetrius Toteras, featuring the issue of Change, its differing elements and the central issue of Change as it relates to relationships, women want men to change, but to what?
These are the themes Toteras discusses:
On Change: 'everything is subject to change'; deliberate change vs cyclical change; women want a man to change but to what?; women are tired of men and their wants; love is about being sweet every minute to women; sexual slapping; women want a man who feels; on veterans and feeling; on Plato, the 1st psychologist; on the Theogony and Hesiod; 'politeness is offensive for what it hides'; it's the man who makes the woman and vice versa; on Muslim men and women as their property; the Phd finding gism on his bedsheets; on Darwin's quest to understand man's emotions; on the differing feelings and emotions towards women and females.
Milt then returns after the interview and closes the show.
- published: 24 Sep 2014
- views: 5
HALF GIRL HALF SNAKE!
In Greek mythology, Echidna (Ancient Greek: Ἔχιδνα, "she viper") was half woman half snake, known as the "Mother of All Monsters" because most of the monsters i...
In Greek mythology, Echidna (Ancient Greek: Ἔχιδνα, "she viper") was half woman half snake, known as the "Mother of All Monsters" because most of the monsters in Greek myth were mothered by her. Hesiod's Theogony described her as:
[...] the goddess fierce Echidna who is half a nymph with glancing eyes and fair cheeks, and half again a huge snake,[1] great and awful, with speckled skin, eating raw flesh beneath the secret parts of the holy earth. And there she has a cave deep down under a hollow rock far from the deathless gods and mortal men. There, then, did the gods appoint her a glorious house to dwell in: and she keeps guard in Arima beneath the earth, grim Echidna, a nymph who dies not nor grows old all her days.[2]
According to Apollodorus, Echidna was the daughter of Tartarus and Gaia,[3] while according to Hesiod, either Ceto and Phorcys or Chrysaor and the naiad Callirhoe were her parents.[4] Another account says her parents were Peiras and Styx (according to Pausanias, who did not know who Peiras was aside from her father).[5] Echidna was a drakaina, with the face and torso of a beautiful woman (depicted as winged in archaic vase-paintings) and the body of a serpent, sometimes having two serpent's tails.[6] She is also sometimes described, as Karl Kerenyi noted, in archaic vase-painting, with a pair of echidnas performing sacred rites in a vineyard, while on the opposite side of the vessel, goats were attacking the vines:[7] thus chthonic Echidnae are presented as protectors of the vineyard.
The site of her cave Homer calls "Arima, couch of Typhoeus".[8] When she and her mate attacked the Olympians, Zeus beat them back and punished Typhon by sealing him under Mount Etna. However, Zeus allowed Echidna and her children to live as a challenge to future heroes. Although to Hesiod, she was an immortal and ageless nymph, according to Apollodorus, Echidna used to "carry off passers-by", until she was finally killed where she slept by Argus Panoptes, the hundred-eyed giant.[3]
Learn more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echidna_(mythology)
wn.com/Half Girl Half Snake
In Greek mythology, Echidna (Ancient Greek: Ἔχιδνα, "she viper") was half woman half snake, known as the "Mother of All Monsters" because most of the monsters in Greek myth were mothered by her. Hesiod's Theogony described her as:
[...] the goddess fierce Echidna who is half a nymph with glancing eyes and fair cheeks, and half again a huge snake,[1] great and awful, with speckled skin, eating raw flesh beneath the secret parts of the holy earth. And there she has a cave deep down under a hollow rock far from the deathless gods and mortal men. There, then, did the gods appoint her a glorious house to dwell in: and she keeps guard in Arima beneath the earth, grim Echidna, a nymph who dies not nor grows old all her days.[2]
According to Apollodorus, Echidna was the daughter of Tartarus and Gaia,[3] while according to Hesiod, either Ceto and Phorcys or Chrysaor and the naiad Callirhoe were her parents.[4] Another account says her parents were Peiras and Styx (according to Pausanias, who did not know who Peiras was aside from her father).[5] Echidna was a drakaina, with the face and torso of a beautiful woman (depicted as winged in archaic vase-paintings) and the body of a serpent, sometimes having two serpent's tails.[6] She is also sometimes described, as Karl Kerenyi noted, in archaic vase-painting, with a pair of echidnas performing sacred rites in a vineyard, while on the opposite side of the vessel, goats were attacking the vines:[7] thus chthonic Echidnae are presented as protectors of the vineyard.
The site of her cave Homer calls "Arima, couch of Typhoeus".[8] When she and her mate attacked the Olympians, Zeus beat them back and punished Typhon by sealing him under Mount Etna. However, Zeus allowed Echidna and her children to live as a challenge to future heroes. Although to Hesiod, she was an immortal and ageless nymph, according to Apollodorus, Echidna used to "carry off passers-by", until she was finally killed where she slept by Argus Panoptes, the hundred-eyed giant.[3]
Learn more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echidna_(mythology)
- published: 03 Apr 2013
- views: 1254656
Homer, Mapping and Mnemonics, with Jenny Strauss Clay
Jenny Strauss Clay is famous for her work on Homer, the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod, with a focus on how these archaic Greek hexameter poems maps out an epic cosmo...
Jenny Strauss Clay is famous for her work on Homer, the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod, with a focus on how these archaic Greek hexameter poems maps out an epic cosmos. But today she will talk about a different kind of mapping, based on what has been labelled the "spatial turn" in Classical studies. Her recent book, Homer's Trojan Theater, exploits digital technology, cognitive mapping and mnemonics to analyse visualization in Homer, especially in relation to the Homeric battlefield. (For the accompanying website to the book, go to: http://www.homerstrojantheater.org/.) She has continued in this direction with a new project investigating Homer's Catalogue of Ships (Iliad 2) as a cognitive map, which promises to revolutionise the way we think about Homeric poetry and geography (http://ships.lib.virginia.edu/neatline-exhibits). But first of all she broaches the controversial topic of writing in Homer...
An interview for www.classicsconfidential.co.uk
wn.com/Homer, Mapping And Mnemonics, With Jenny Strauss Clay
Jenny Strauss Clay is famous for her work on Homer, the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod, with a focus on how these archaic Greek hexameter poems maps out an epic cosmos. But today she will talk about a different kind of mapping, based on what has been labelled the "spatial turn" in Classical studies. Her recent book, Homer's Trojan Theater, exploits digital technology, cognitive mapping and mnemonics to analyse visualization in Homer, especially in relation to the Homeric battlefield. (For the accompanying website to the book, go to: http://www.homerstrojantheater.org/.) She has continued in this direction with a new project investigating Homer's Catalogue of Ships (Iliad 2) as a cognitive map, which promises to revolutionise the way we think about Homeric poetry and geography (http://ships.lib.virginia.edu/neatline-exhibits). But first of all she broaches the controversial topic of writing in Homer...
An interview for www.classicsconfidential.co.uk
- published: 25 Mar 2013
- views: 1147
Bakari Pace Interview Original Air Date 95-02-13 [Thx to Harold Channer]
Thanks to Harold Channer·
Bakari A. Pace is an independent researcher, author, theorist, and speaker on how the sustainable development movement addresses human...
Thanks to Harold Channer·
Bakari A. Pace is an independent researcher, author, theorist, and speaker on how the sustainable development movement addresses humanity's challenge on how to use our minds and experience in the highest advantage of others in the shortest possible time.
Since 2010, Bakari has been uncovering the public health, environmental, and economic implications of our scarcity-based economic theories, and addresses their obsolescence and necessity to be replaced by abundance-based principles which address our unifying challenge.
Bakari's focus is on introducing individuals to the economics of abundance as a technical and ontological reality and bringing them into the sustainable development process with the goal of opening eyes to the way things are but most importantly, to the way they could be.
wn.com/Bakari Pace Interview Original Air Date 95 02 13 Thx To Harold Channer
Thanks to Harold Channer·
Bakari A. Pace is an independent researcher, author, theorist, and speaker on how the sustainable development movement addresses humanity's challenge on how to use our minds and experience in the highest advantage of others in the shortest possible time.
Since 2010, Bakari has been uncovering the public health, environmental, and economic implications of our scarcity-based economic theories, and addresses their obsolescence and necessity to be replaced by abundance-based principles which address our unifying challenge.
Bakari's focus is on introducing individuals to the economics of abundance as a technical and ontological reality and bringing them into the sustainable development process with the goal of opening eyes to the way things are but most importantly, to the way they could be.
- published: 05 Sep 2013
- views: 3038
Hesiod's Origin of Monsters
CLAN 1001 Digital Project 2013
Music copyright to querflote, available here: https://soundcloud.com/querflote/5-audio-track-1...
CLAN 1001 Digital Project 2013
Music copyright to querflote, available here: https://soundcloud.com/querflote/5-audio-track-1
wn.com/Hesiod's Origin Of Monsters
CLAN 1001 Digital Project 2013
Music copyright to querflote, available here: https://soundcloud.com/querflote/5-audio-track-1
- published: 09 May 2013
- views: 44
5. The Rise of the Polis (cont.)
Introduction to Ancient Greek History (CLCV 205)
In this lecture, Professor Donald Kagan tells the story of the emergence of the polis from the Dark Ages. He...
Introduction to Ancient Greek History (CLCV 205)
In this lecture, Professor Donald Kagan tells the story of the emergence of the polis from the Dark Ages. He shows that by the time of the poet Hesiod, there is already a polis in place. He describes the importance of the polis in the Greek world and explains that it was much more than a mere place of habitation; it was a place where there was justice, law, community, and a set of cultural values that held Greeks together. Finally, Professor Kagan argues, following the lead of Victor David Hanson, that the polis came to be chiefly through the emergence of a new man: the hoplite farmer.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Polis in Hesiod's Work
22:01 - Chapter 2. The Citizen
26:32 - Chapter 3. Greek Farmers and the Function of the Polis
36:12 - Chapter 4. Property Holding and Internal Colonization
42:26 - Chapter 5. The New Farm
57:09 - Chapter 6. Politics
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Fall 2007.
wn.com/5. The Rise Of The Polis (Cont.)
Introduction to Ancient Greek History (CLCV 205)
In this lecture, Professor Donald Kagan tells the story of the emergence of the polis from the Dark Ages. He shows that by the time of the poet Hesiod, there is already a polis in place. He describes the importance of the polis in the Greek world and explains that it was much more than a mere place of habitation; it was a place where there was justice, law, community, and a set of cultural values that held Greeks together. Finally, Professor Kagan argues, following the lead of Victor David Hanson, that the polis came to be chiefly through the emergence of a new man: the hoplite farmer.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Polis in Hesiod's Work
22:01 - Chapter 2. The Citizen
26:32 - Chapter 3. Greek Farmers and the Function of the Polis
36:12 - Chapter 4. Property Holding and Internal Colonization
42:26 - Chapter 5. The New Farm
57:09 - Chapter 6. Politics
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Fall 2007.
- published: 20 Nov 2008
- views: 54495
Blooper reel for Hesiod
Tallie and I got together to work on a quick sketch for my uni project. It took hours and we couldn't even manage to do one good take. We failed hard, but had s...
Tallie and I got together to work on a quick sketch for my uni project. It took hours and we couldn't even manage to do one good take. We failed hard, but had so much fun doing it.
wn.com/Blooper Reel For Hesiod
Tallie and I got together to work on a quick sketch for my uni project. It took hours and we couldn't even manage to do one good take. We failed hard, but had so much fun doing it.
- published: 14 Oct 2010
- views: 82
Modern Hesiod's Races of Man.
A Digital Project I did for CLAN1001.
Shows a modern day Cult Leading Hesiod and his MAGICAL POT.
Music by Celestial Aeon Project and New World Computing....
A Digital Project I did for CLAN1001.
Shows a modern day Cult Leading Hesiod and his MAGICAL POT.
Music by Celestial Aeon Project and New World Computing.
wn.com/Modern Hesiod's Races Of Man.
A Digital Project I did for CLAN1001.
Shows a modern day Cult Leading Hesiod and his MAGICAL POT.
Music by Celestial Aeon Project and New World Computing.
- published: 11 May 2012
- views: 68
Interview with Gary Troup (Clip 2)
2nd clip of an interview with Gary Troup, author of "Bad Twin"...
2nd clip of an interview with Gary Troup, author of "Bad Twin"
wn.com/Interview With Gary Troup (Clip 2)
2nd clip of an interview with Gary Troup, author of "Bad Twin"
- published: 05 May 2006
- views: 4731
Interview Uncensored- The Epic Battle (Gods Vs Monsters)
Clan1001 project - Jinn & Arunraj
This brave interviewer dared himself to interview the ancient legendary beings of Greek mythology. What does the interviewer...
Clan1001 project - Jinn & Arunraj
This brave interviewer dared himself to interview the ancient legendary beings of Greek mythology. What does the interviewer have in hold for us to hear..
wn.com/Interview Uncensored The Epic Battle (Gods Vs Monsters)
Clan1001 project - Jinn & Arunraj
This brave interviewer dared himself to interview the ancient legendary beings of Greek mythology. What does the interviewer have in hold for us to hear..
- published: 05 May 2014
- views: 79
Sharon Ferguson Interview for film THEOGONY
Actress Sharon Ferguson discusses her experience playing EVE in the short film THEOGONY directed by Giovanni Zelko...
Actress Sharon Ferguson discusses her experience playing EVE in the short film THEOGONY directed by Giovanni Zelko
wn.com/Sharon Ferguson Interview For Film Theogony
Actress Sharon Ferguson discusses her experience playing EVE in the short film THEOGONY directed by Giovanni Zelko
- published: 07 Feb 2008
- views: 759
Gichi Gamba Interview From Theogony
Actor Gichi Gamba talks about his experiences playing the character ADAM in the short film THEOGONY. See more on www.theogonythemovie.com...
Actor Gichi Gamba talks about his experiences playing the character ADAM in the short film THEOGONY. See more on www.theogonythemovie.com
wn.com/Gichi Gamba Interview From Theogony
Actor Gichi Gamba talks about his experiences playing the character ADAM in the short film THEOGONY. See more on www.theogonythemovie.com
- published: 08 Feb 2008
- views: 1159
Billy Collins On The Great Poets
Coleridge's "Conversation" poems inspire much of Collins' work.
Billy Collins: Well I mean poetry, I think, art moves in a kind of pendulum. You can see even ...
Coleridge's "Conversation" poems inspire much of Collins' work.
Billy Collins: Well I mean poetry, I think, art moves in a kind of pendulum. You can see even from the Greeks the argument as to whether literature should be in the common tongue, or should it be in an elevated language? This pendulistic battle goes back and forth. Wordsworth for instance, to go back to him, wanted to write poetry, as he said, in the speaking language of men the way . . . he wanted to get speech back into it.
And so did Frost. And as _____ also the idea of bringing . . . bringing poetry into context with common speech. And the other camp would say that poetry has to be completely different from regular speech, that regular speech is down here and poetry takes place on another linguistic level. Those two voices, or those two opposed positions, I think pretty much throughout the history of English literature at least, have determined these various movements back and forth. And that would seem to be thanks to a number of poets that came after the high modernism of T.S. Elliot and Ezra Pound. And you can add Harper and Wallace Stevens. There's been a movement back to the connection between poetry and common speech. Those big modernists tried to get beyond personality. They wanted to make something . . . poetry into something more than the expression of the individual personality. But personality seems to have returned to poetry.
Billy Collins: Well I mean poetry, I think, art moves in a kind of pendulum. You can see even from the Greeks the argument as to whether literature should be in the common tongue, or should it be in an elevated language? This pendulistic battle goes back and forth. Wordsworth for instance, to go back to him, wanted to write poetry, as he said, in the speaking language of men the way . . . he wanted to get speech back into it.
And so did Frost. And as _____ also the idea of bringing . . . bringing poetry into context with common speech. And the other camp would say that poetry has to be completely different from regular speech, that regular speech is down here and poetry takes place on another linguistic level. Those two voices, or those two opposed positions, I think pretty much throughout the history of English literature at least, have determined these various movements back and forth. And that would seem to be thanks to a number of poets that came after the high modernism of T.S. Elliot and Ezra Pound. And you can add Harper and Wallace Stevens. There's been a movement back to the connection between poetry and common speech. Those big modernists tried to get beyond personality. They wanted to make something . . . poetry into something more than the expression of the individual personality. But personality seems to have returned to poetry.
wn.com/Billy Collins On The Great Poets
Coleridge's "Conversation" poems inspire much of Collins' work.
Billy Collins: Well I mean poetry, I think, art moves in a kind of pendulum. You can see even from the Greeks the argument as to whether literature should be in the common tongue, or should it be in an elevated language? This pendulistic battle goes back and forth. Wordsworth for instance, to go back to him, wanted to write poetry, as he said, in the speaking language of men the way . . . he wanted to get speech back into it.
And so did Frost. And as _____ also the idea of bringing . . . bringing poetry into context with common speech. And the other camp would say that poetry has to be completely different from regular speech, that regular speech is down here and poetry takes place on another linguistic level. Those two voices, or those two opposed positions, I think pretty much throughout the history of English literature at least, have determined these various movements back and forth. And that would seem to be thanks to a number of poets that came after the high modernism of T.S. Elliot and Ezra Pound. And you can add Harper and Wallace Stevens. There's been a movement back to the connection between poetry and common speech. Those big modernists tried to get beyond personality. They wanted to make something . . . poetry into something more than the expression of the individual personality. But personality seems to have returned to poetry.
Billy Collins: Well I mean poetry, I think, art moves in a kind of pendulum. You can see even from the Greeks the argument as to whether literature should be in the common tongue, or should it be in an elevated language? This pendulistic battle goes back and forth. Wordsworth for instance, to go back to him, wanted to write poetry, as he said, in the speaking language of men the way . . . he wanted to get speech back into it.
And so did Frost. And as _____ also the idea of bringing . . . bringing poetry into context with common speech. And the other camp would say that poetry has to be completely different from regular speech, that regular speech is down here and poetry takes place on another linguistic level. Those two voices, or those two opposed positions, I think pretty much throughout the history of English literature at least, have determined these various movements back and forth. And that would seem to be thanks to a number of poets that came after the high modernism of T.S. Elliot and Ezra Pound. And you can add Harper and Wallace Stevens. There's been a movement back to the connection between poetry and common speech. Those big modernists tried to get beyond personality. They wanted to make something . . . poetry into something more than the expression of the individual personality. But personality seems to have returned to poetry.
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 3639
Interview with Kilson
This is my lovely interview with a living angel in disguise. Gorgeous....
This is my lovely interview with a living angel in disguise. Gorgeous.
wn.com/Interview With Kilson
This is my lovely interview with a living angel in disguise. Gorgeous.
- published: 04 Sep 2010
- views: 57
ninja Assasin Interview
an interview with my main character of the movie ninja assasin
the interview explains everything haha...
an interview with my main character of the movie ninja assasin
the interview explains everything haha
wn.com/Ninja Assasin Interview
an interview with my main character of the movie ninja assasin
the interview explains everything haha
- published: 16 Feb 2010
- views: 57
Surly Steamroller
My Surly Steamroller.
Wheels are Mavic cxp33 rims laced to surly hubs. The rear hub is a flip flop hub. Omnicrum GXP crankset, Thompson seat post, Romin SL sea...
My Surly Steamroller.
Wheels are Mavic cxp33 rims laced to surly hubs. The rear hub is a flip flop hub. Omnicrum GXP crankset, Thompson seat post, Romin SL seat, Ritchie stem and bar, Cane creek brakes, etc... It actually weighs 21.8 pounds (rather than the 18 I say in the video), so it's not really THAT light. It could be much lighter. Lighter weight tires and frame would be the main place left to save weight, but more effective would be going on a diet...
It's a basic single speed with some nicer bits here and there.
To you random viewers! :) I primarily made this video for my brother, so that's why I start out with addressing him specifically.
wn.com/Surly Steamroller
My Surly Steamroller.
Wheels are Mavic cxp33 rims laced to surly hubs. The rear hub is a flip flop hub. Omnicrum GXP crankset, Thompson seat post, Romin SL seat, Ritchie stem and bar, Cane creek brakes, etc... It actually weighs 21.8 pounds (rather than the 18 I say in the video), so it's not really THAT light. It could be much lighter. Lighter weight tires and frame would be the main place left to save weight, but more effective would be going on a diet...
It's a basic single speed with some nicer bits here and there.
To you random viewers! :) I primarily made this video for my brother, so that's why I start out with addressing him specifically.
- published: 02 May 2013
- views: 6138