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Defenestrations of Prague - Wikipedia

Defenestrations of Prague - Wikipedia
wikipedia.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wikipedia.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

OBITUARY: John Alexander Wilson GUNN (1937-2023) - The Quebec Chronicle Telegraph

OBITUARY: John Alexander Wilson GUNN (1937-2023) - The Quebec Chronicle Telegraph
qctonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from qctonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Age of Invention: How the Dutch Did it Better

You’re reading Age of Invention, my newsletter on the causes of the British Industrial Revolution and the history of innovation. This edition went out to over 15,600 subscribers. To support my work, you can upgrade your subscription here: One of the weird things about Britain, despite its being the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution, is that its financial infrastructure was for a long time remarkably backward. Its “Financial Revolution”, by which both people and the state began to borrow at ever lower interest rates, only really took off in the early eighteenth century long after London’s extraordinary growth in 1550-1650, when it had suddenly expanded eightfold to become one of Europe’s most important commercial hubs. Indeed, even for much of the late seventeenth century, England lacked many of the most basic financial institutions that had been used for decades and decades by their most important rival and trading partner, the Dutch Republic.

Book World: This diplomat s diaries reveal the very long history of British racism

Praying to Portraits: Audience, Identity, and the Inquisition in the Early Modern Hispanic World By Adam Jasienski

In Praying to Portraits, art historian Adam Jasienski examines the history, meaning, and cultural significance of a crucial image type in the early modern Hispanic world: the sacred portrait. Across early modern Spain and Latin America, people prayed to portraits. They prayed to “true” effigies of saints, to simple portraits that were repainted as devotional objects, and even to images of living sitters depicted as holy figures. Jasienski places these difficult-to-classify image types within their historical context. He shows that rather than being harbingers of secular modernity and autonomous selfhood, portraits were privileged sites for mediating an individual’s relationship to the divine. Using Inquisition records, hagiographies, art-theoretical treatises, poems, and plays, Jasienski convincingly demonstrates that portraiture was at the very center of broader debates about the status of images in Spain and its colonies. Highly original and persuasive, Praying to Portraits pr

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