Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of DemocracyHarper & Row, 1963 - 428 páginas Herbert J. Muller examines the meaning of freedom in the great civilizations of the past including the Sumerian, Egyptian, Minoan, Assyrian, Persian, Phoenician, Greek, Roman and early Christian. Ranging from the attempts of the cave man to free himself from the tyranny of nature through magic and ritual, to the religious despotism of Byzantium, the author surveys freedom's gains and triumps, its losses and failures. In doing so, he provides the reader with new insight into the meaning and destiny of freedom in Western Civilization. |
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Página 77
... town was a more genuinely Christian community than the feudal manor was , than any large state could ever be , or than the papal city of Rome ever was after Gregory the Great . It most completely embodied the medieval social ideal ...
... town was a more genuinely Christian community than the feudal manor was , than any large state could ever be , or than the papal city of Rome ever was after Gregory the Great . It most completely embodied the medieval social ideal ...
Página 78
... towns " occupied by tenants instead of serfs - free peasants who were often called " burgenses , " after their ... town houses . Other indirect influences of the urban bourgeois , generally as unpre- meditated , were perhaps more ...
... towns " occupied by tenants instead of serfs - free peasants who were often called " burgenses , " after their ... town houses . Other indirect influences of the urban bourgeois , generally as unpre- meditated , were perhaps more ...
Página 87
... town . There is evidence that these men paid for their freedom by hard work at very low wages , and did not simply rejoice in their new lot . From the outset , moreover , town government was naturally pretty much in the hands of the ...
... town . There is evidence that these men paid for their freedom by hard work at very low wages , and did not simply rejoice in their new lot . From the outset , moreover , town government was naturally pretty much in the hands of the ...
Contenido
The Rise and Fall of Islam | 1 |
THE ORIGINS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION | 25 |
The Medieval Sources of Freedom | 47 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of Democracy Herbert Joseph Muller Vista de fragmentos - 1963 |
Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of Democracy Herbert Joseph Muller Vista de fragmentos - 1963 |
Términos y frases comunes
absolute absolute monarchy Americans ancien régime ancient aristocracy Aristotle authority basic became began bourgeois burghers caliphs Catholic century Charlemagne chiefly Christendom Christian Church civilization classical common culture Dark Ages declared democracy democratic doctrine early economic effort emperor England English Enlightenment European faith feudal Florence France freedom French French Revolution Fugger genius Greek grew growth historians holy Holy Roman emperor human idea ideal independent inspired intellectual interests Islam Jacob Fugger kings land less liberty lords Louis XIV Magna Carta major means medieval ment merchants Middle Ages Mohammed monarchy Moslems nation-state natural never nobility Parliament peasants philosophical political popes popular principle Prophet Puritan reason reform religion religious remained Renaissance Revolution revolutionary rise Roman Empire Rome royal rule rulers scientific sense simple social society Spain spirit theory thinkers Thomas Aquinas thought tion towns tradition truth Voltaire wealth western Europe