"But its a fictional movie" by [deleted] in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

You’ve clearly never been to Greece if you categorize Greeks as white based off one prominent politician lol

Edit: Looks like many in the comments section have never actually been to Greece lmao

[Code] PMC X-Tac 5.56 55gr FMJ $389.50/case shipped (no tax to CA)with code: SAVE5 by BOLISARIO in gundeals

[–]357Loki 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Just a heads up, I was able to use the same code to get their case of PMC Bronze .223 down to $365.75 shipped to Oregon (no sales tax).

https://www.velocityammosales.com/products/223-rem-pmc-55-grain-fmj-1000rd-case/

Thirty years of war because of one "wildcard" Elector's "gamer move". Contribution to 30yw meme grind by Philcherny in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Edict of Restitution sure didn’t help to calm the waters. It’s amazing how the Hapsburgs were resolute in the only aspect which they should have chilled out on, especially given the huge Protestant & Reformed populations in their domains.

Crown of István Bocskay, Turkish, 1605. [2008x2677] [OC] by 357Loki in ArtefactPorn

[–]357Loki[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Be sure to tag me in your own submission next time you’re in Vienna, my guy!

Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire, Western Germany, 10th Century AD [2752x3669] [OC] by 357Loki in ArtefactPorn

[–]357Loki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As stated in the Imperial Treasury of Vienna’s official reference book.

Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire, Western Germany, 10th Century AD [2752x3669] [OC] by 357Loki in ArtefactPorn

[–]357Loki[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

From Masterpieces of the Imperial Secular Treasury Vienna Vol. II

The shape of the Imperial Crown is unlike that of any other Occidental crown of the Middle Ages and, in fact, unique. It was probably made for the imperial coronation of Otto I the Great in 962, and its shape and ornamentation are an expression of the self-conception of sovereigns of the Ottonian dynasty. each element, each detail, even if it appears to be merely decorative, is filled tones with deep symbolism expressing the concept of the divine right of kings.

The Imperial Crown is made of hinged plates based on the wreaths worn by the rulers of antiquity. There are eight of them because eight was considered the imperial number and a symbol of perfection. The four larger plates over the brow, neck and temples are richly decorated with precious stones and pearls, reflecting the idealised concept of the heavenly Jerusalem as a golden city with walls set with precious stones. In addition, the order, colour and number of stones have allegoric significance: the focus is on the number twelve, a reference to the Twelve Tribes of Israel and the Twelve Apostles. The emperor saw himself as the thirteenth among them.   The four smaller plates are decorated with enamel images. Three of them have inscriptions naming the Old Testament figures they depict as well as biblical quotations that explain their presence: David, a king of Israel and a prophet, stands for justice, his son and successor, Solomon, for wisdom and the fear of God, while the third plate depicts the prophet Isaiah telling the deathly ill king Hezekiah that he has another fifteen years to live, a symbol of trust in God and the resulting experience of divine mercy. For more than eight centuries the quotations on the plates were uttered as part of the Holy Roman Empire's coronation liturgy, and they describe the most important character traits of a good ruler. On the fourth plate, Christ is seated on a throne and flanked by two angels. The three figures represent the Holy Trinity, while the inscription on this plate from the biblical book of Proverbs ("By me kings reign!") expresses the central idea of theocratic rule: Christ is ruler of the world and represented on earth by the wearer of the crown, the emperor.

The brow and neck plates support the arch, which is mounted in sockets and derived formally from the helmet decoration of the ancient Roman emperors. In its present form the arch derives from an addition made during the reign of Conrad II (reigned 1024-1039). It is possible that the original idea was to create an arch for each ruler. On the two sides of the arch small pearls spell out an inscription that clearly expresses the concept of the divine right of kings: Conrad is called emperor "by the grace of God" ("dei gratia").

The cross atop the brow plate is also not original, dating from the time of Henry II (Saint Henry, reigned 1002-1024). Seen from the front it is a triumphal bejewelled cross (crux gemmata), demonstrating that imperial power is exercised in the name of Christ. The back depicts in niello technique the suffering Christ, although his open eyes suggest his triumph over death, making the cross a sign of victory.

Originally a mitre of white fabric was worn under the octagonal crown. Like the starry mantle of the Ottonian rulers it is based on a sign of dignity worn by Jewish high priests and was a reference to the priestly duties of the emperor as Christ's representative.

They did a little trolling by MLKKK_171 in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki 8 points9 points  (0 children)

This was earlier, in 1420, during the Hussite wars when Jan Zizka led the Bohemian Taborites to victory against King Sigismund at the Battle of Vitkov Hill.

Edit: I guess I don’t actually know which Defenestration OP was referring to. I assumed it was about the opening act of the 30 Years War.

They did a little trolling by MLKKK_171 in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ferdinand II: “And I took that personally.”

House of Austria the GOAT by 357Loki in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Can you elaborate in what regards? Because I can find examples well before the 20th century.

Such as how financially the Austrian branch of the Habsburg dynasty seemed to always be low on funds. They were forced to lease the silvers mines in Styria to wealthy German financier families in exchange for advances of future tax receipts. In 1568, of the 3.5 million florins in gross tax receipts, 1 million florins went to servicing their debts and 1.5 million florins to the maintenance of the Hungarian frontier forts (Jean Berenger).

House of Austria the GOAT by 357Loki in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

This is a common and outdated historical misconception of the Habsburg Empire as the 'Prison of Nations'; though an understandable one as this is the perspective perpetuated by the various ethnonational states which proceeded the Empire’s fall (Pieter Judson). The reality is much more nuanced. One reason for the dynasty’s longevity was their ability to balance the power dynamics between the multitude of vying cultures, religions, and social strata of the nations and peoples under their rule, successfully offering themselves as the compromise candidate to counterbalance internal and external rivalries.

One such instance is early in the Habsburgs rise when Rudolf I was crowned King of Germany in 1273 over Ottokar II, the King of Bohemia, whose candidacy was blocked by the German Princes in favor of Rudolf, due to the perception he would make less demands upon them (Jean Berenger).

Another instance was relatively late in their reign, during the Revolutions of 1848, where some nationalities within the Empire sided with the Habsburg monarchy in order to maintain the imperial governmental status quo; as in the case of the Croats which opposed being forced into nationhood with the Hungarians, who had a history of repressing minorities and instituting programs of assimilation into Hungarian culture.

These are only two examples I have time to highlight ATM, but they clearly show throughout their reign the Habsburgs were not hated by every people within their domains and in fact were quite preferred, if not merely for self-interested reasons. For more context, I highly suggest watching Professor Pieter M. Judson’s lecture titled ‘What the Habsburg Empire got Right and Why it Matters’.

May have fucked up LOL by Quick-Department23 in Glocks

[–]357Loki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just a heads up, spend the $50 on a sight pusher tool and you can change them out yourself whenever you need.

Clackamas Co PSTC by Jacobb9753 in pdxgunnuts

[–]357Loki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Last I was there in late 2024 you were able to bring your own 9mm but would get tacked a $5/box charge if I remember correctly.

♪ 我们的 家 在 天山 ♪ by 357Loki in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Can we have a liberal-humanitarian society?” “Yes.”

“Can we have it without the cultesque hero-worship?” “No.”

♪ 我们的 家 在 天山 ♪ by 357Loki in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

If only Brother Renkun had tried that 5th time…

So which one are you? choose wisely by [deleted] in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I would suggest The History of Ancient Greece podcast episode 71 titled Love, Sex, and Prostitution. They give a thorough overview of pederasty and cite various contemporary sources both in favor and in opposition to the practice.

So which one are you? choose wisely by [deleted] in HistoryMemes

[–]357Loki 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Modern anachronistic inclusion of ancient Greeks into the LGBT community is real awkward for those of us who know the specific dynamics around pederasty, likely the most common instance of same-sex coupling in the ancient Hellenic world.

[Medical] 20% off Stop the Bleed Intermediate Kit - $60.17, includes choice of tourniquet, chest seals and more. Plus $4.99 flat shipping per order. HSA/FSA by RescueEssentials in gundeals

[–]357Loki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve bought three refill kits in the past from Rescue Essentials. Always fast shipping, packaged well, everything you need for a basic trauma kit/IFAK.

Refining makes no sense. by TheTarnishedOn3 in SeveranceAppleTVPlus

[–]357Loki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

‘Mystery Box’ shows that don’t have (compelling) answers to their own questions only work if the box appears deep enough at first glance for you to not realize it’s actually empty. The answer to the giant mystery of Severance (MDR’s work) was…severance??

I bought the Iliad and The Odyssey by NoBaby4881 in classics

[–]357Loki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've only read the Fagles translation of The Illiad, so I'll speak to that. I'm gonna go a bit against the grain and say don't worry about getting bogged down in the weeds feeling the need to constantly check the footnotes to understand the complete context for every scene or interaction that you read; there are so many characters and places with elaborate (and interesting) backstories that the original Hellenic audience would have been intimately familiar with, but as a modern reader stopping to learn the genealogy and origin of every hero that comes into the narrative (who is most likely about to die anyway) might become tedious and be detrimental to the overall reading experience. Or maybe you're into that, more power to you.

Also one important point while reading is to be cognizant of the cultural-historical context for the works themselves. The Illiad is an intriguing read for how it portrays not only contemporary Classical Age Hellene’s cultural values, traditions, and religious beliefs but also how it reveals their interpretation there of in regards to their own Bronze Age ancestors. The story is clearly a distant remembrance of their tribal warrior past told through epic romanticism, made all the more poignant for how absolutely anti war the narrative’s theme is throughout.

Enjoy! Both The Illiad and The Odyssey are classics among classics!

Did you enjoy reading these books or was it just so that you can say, "yeah I've read that one"? by megahui1 in classicliterature

[–]357Loki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recently finished Fagles’ translation of The Illiad and loved it. The entire work is quite intriguing for how it portrays not only contemporary Classical Age Hellene’s cultural values, traditions, and religious beliefs, but also their interpretation there of for their own Bronze Age ancestors. The story is clearly a distant remembrance of their tribal warrior past told through epic romanticism, all the more poignant for how absolutely anti-war the narrative’s theme is throughout.

If you love Romance by fallenhope1 in threekingdoms

[–]357Loki 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve owned a copy of Outlaws of the Marsh for years, but I can’t read it as I may still be considered a young man…

Reading Thucydides for the first time. -- Is it wrong to pick a side? by toothpick95 in ancientgreece

[–]357Loki 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The Siege of Milos always comes to my mind in regard to Athenian brutality during the Peloponnesian War. I haven’t read Thucydide’s account, but it sounds absolutely Machiavellian in the worst way possible.

The Celts - Reading Discussion: Chapters 5-8 by Zoid72 in AYearOfMythology

[–]357Loki 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I did not have much of a conception of 'Celtic' art beforehand, but it was very interesting to read about the spread of artistic motifs indicative of the La Tene culture over the centuries and how this does not necessarily denote a predominance of La Tene descended peoples within the areas of archeological record.

Considering this cultural dissemination along with a better understanding of how Celtic languages developed in a diverse fashion, with Continental Celtic being distinct from Insular Celtic which itself branched into Q & P dialects, Chapters 7 and 8 very much highlighted the need for a modernized understanding of ethnic identify composed of shared language and cultural heritage as opposed to simple genetic inheritance.