The Drachenbändiger: 12 questions to Wolfgang Schwerdt (excerpt)
Where does your fascination for dragons really?
(...) Of course I had dragon since my youth fascinated because I was an avid reader of literature, which had to do with legends, myths and legends. Schwab's most beautiful legends of classical antiquity, the Germanic gods and heroes and, of course, the Iliad and the Odyssey, to name a few. And since dragons are of course always do so.
How to become a dragon expert?
Dragons research is becoming a complex affair, and Dragon expert requires quite simply universal interests that require what is called in modern times, a scholar, a versatile well-read and informed. (...) In the history of culture-oriented researchers dragon, the dragon is not the starting point, but the result and expression of cultural and historical processes. And so the dragon linguistic research questions are as much as the study of social organization, function and development of ideologies, literary analysis and source criticism, art and art history, archeology and knowledge of their methods and much, much more. A little of what there is so behind a cultural and historical research all dragon is certainly under my next book with the almost programmatic title "Andre times, other dragons are guessable.
coming soon still hang out another book from you. Can you tell us anything about it?
nothing better than this I had already indicated above, then it constitutes a small fiction book on the cultural history of the dragon and say, Andre times, another Dragon. (...) In this book from the series of small cultural stories I span the range from the creation of the Western dragon idea in the Near East and their social and cultural importance in Europe over a period of not less than 10,000 years ago until today. It starts with the Dragons edged divine right of the Babylonian creation and ends with the very streamlined the dragon fantasy of our time.
is now of course the religious question: Is there really dragons?
is for many people will hang, either as biological beings in the form of the Komodo dragons in the Galapagos Islands or the dinosaurs, either as inner cosmic power of an esoteric doctrine, either as an archetype of depth psychology. For me, the dragon exists exclusively as a cultural-historical phenomenon, a real concept of the model complex natural and social processes.
with permission from "Crazy Cultu Clap". This is kpmplette interview here: http://crazy-culture-clap.com/2010/06/09/der-drachenbandiger-12-fragen-an-wolfgang-schwerdt/
In autumn 2010, will the paperback " Other times, other dragons "in the past, Publisher: www.vergangenheitsverlag.de
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Steps To Stitch Anarkali Suit
The Drachenbändiger: 12 questions to Wolfgang Schwerdt (excerpt)
Where does your fascination for dragons really?
(...) Of course I had dragon since my youth fascinated because I was an avid reader of literature, which had to do with legends, myths and legends. Schwab's most beautiful legends of classical antiquity, the Germanic gods and heroes and, of course, the Iliad and the Odyssey, to name a few. And since dragons are of course always do so.
How to become a dragon expert?
Dragons research is becoming a complex affair, and Dragon expert requires quite simply universal interests that require what is called in modern times, a scholar, a versatile well-read and informed. (...) In the history of culture-oriented researchers dragon, the dragon is not the starting point, but the result and expression of cultural and historical processes. And so the dragon linguistic research questions are as much as the study of social organization, function and development of ideologies, literary analysis and source criticism, art and art history, archeology and knowledge of their methods and much, much more. A little of what there is so behind a cultural and historical research all dragon is certainly under my next book with the almost programmatic title "Andre times, other dragons are guessable.
coming soon still hang out another book from you. Can you tell us anything about it?
nothing better than this I had already indicated above, then it constitutes a small fiction book on the cultural history of the dragon and say, Andre times, another Dragon. (...) In this book from the series of small cultural stories I span the range from the creation of the Western dragon idea in the Near East and their social and cultural importance in Europe over a period of not less than 10,000 years ago until today. It starts with the Dragons edged divine right of the Babylonian creation and ends with the very streamlined the dragon fantasy of our time.
is now of course the religious question: Is there really dragons?
is for many people will hang, either as biological beings in the form of the Komodo dragons in the Galapagos Islands or the dinosaurs, either as inner cosmic power of an esoteric doctrine, either as an archetype of depth psychology. For me, the dragon exists exclusively as a cultural-historical phenomenon, a real concept of the model complex natural and social processes.
with permission from "Crazy Cultu Clap". This is kpmplette interview here: http://crazy-culture-clap.com/2010/06/09/der-drachenbandiger-12-fragen-an-wolfgang-schwerdt/
In autumn 2010, will the paperback " Other times, other dragons "in the past, Publisher: www.vergangenheitsverlag.de
Where does your fascination for dragons really?
(...) Of course I had dragon since my youth fascinated because I was an avid reader of literature, which had to do with legends, myths and legends. Schwab's most beautiful legends of classical antiquity, the Germanic gods and heroes and, of course, the Iliad and the Odyssey, to name a few. And since dragons are of course always do so.
How to become a dragon expert?
Dragons research is becoming a complex affair, and Dragon expert requires quite simply universal interests that require what is called in modern times, a scholar, a versatile well-read and informed. (...) In the history of culture-oriented researchers dragon, the dragon is not the starting point, but the result and expression of cultural and historical processes. And so the dragon linguistic research questions are as much as the study of social organization, function and development of ideologies, literary analysis and source criticism, art and art history, archeology and knowledge of their methods and much, much more. A little of what there is so behind a cultural and historical research all dragon is certainly under my next book with the almost programmatic title "Andre times, other dragons are guessable.
coming soon still hang out another book from you. Can you tell us anything about it?
nothing better than this I had already indicated above, then it constitutes a small fiction book on the cultural history of the dragon and say, Andre times, another Dragon. (...) In this book from the series of small cultural stories I span the range from the creation of the Western dragon idea in the Near East and their social and cultural importance in Europe over a period of not less than 10,000 years ago until today. It starts with the Dragons edged divine right of the Babylonian creation and ends with the very streamlined the dragon fantasy of our time.
is now of course the religious question: Is there really dragons?
is for many people will hang, either as biological beings in the form of the Komodo dragons in the Galapagos Islands or the dinosaurs, either as inner cosmic power of an esoteric doctrine, either as an archetype of depth psychology. For me, the dragon exists exclusively as a cultural-historical phenomenon, a real concept of the model complex natural and social processes.
with permission from "Crazy Cultu Clap". This is kpmplette interview here: http://crazy-culture-clap.com/2010/06/09/der-drachenbandiger-12-fragen-an-wolfgang-schwerdt/
In autumn 2010, will the paperback " Other times, other dragons "in the past, Publisher: www.vergangenheitsverlag.de
Monday, June 21, 2010
How To Stopleg Twitches
65 years after World War II - Reflections of a Nuremberg prosecutor
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz (chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen processes) in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University, Berlin
report: The chief prosecutor in the biggest murder trial in history, "the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen process, Professor Benjamin Ferencz, held on 28 May 2010 a public lecture in the lecture hall of the Humboldt University in Berlin. The use of the Security Police (Sipo) and Security Service (SD) were special units of the Nazi regime, which committed particularly in the war against the Soviet Union 1941-1945 mass killings of civilians. Members of the Einsatzgruppen were mostly members of the SS, but also a number of German police officers. Overall, the Einsatzgruppen killed about one million people, including Jews, Gypsies and political opponents of the Nazi regime as communists and partisans. The leaders of the Einsatzgruppen always reported in detail on the killings in Berlin. These files were found after the war and formed the basis for the use of group process from 1946/47. The process took place after the main Nuremberg war crimes trial under the sole responsibility of the United States held in a U.S. military court. All 22 defendants in this process, including SS-group leader Otto Ohlendorf, were convicted, 14 received the death penalty. Four of these death sentences have been on 7 Executed in June 1951, the rest were converted to partial life imprisonment. Benjamin Ferencz
was at 27 the youngest chief prosecutor in the Einsatzgruppen process. He was born in 1920 in Romania and grew up in the U.S.. During his law studies at Harvard, he was concerned particularly with international law. During the war, he first came as an ordinary infantry soldier to Europe, but was liberated several concentration camps. After his discharge from the military called him back, but the U.S. military tribunal, led by Robert M. Jackson to Germany: Ferencz should lead the charge against the commanders and leaders of the Einsatzgruppen.
Even after the Nuremberg trials are Ferencz was still committed to building a strong international law: he is a pioneer and long time supporters of the International Criminal Court in The Hague (ICC). He also published several basic works on the subject and was Professor of International Law in New York. On 27 May 2010 was Benjamin Ferencz for his lifelong commitment to international law in the Foreign Office with the Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany excellent.
The lecture by Prof. Dr. Ferenc on 28 May interest was shown in the auditorium of the Humboldt University was packed to the rafters. The eminent 90th witness on the World War, was witness to the worst human rights violations and experienced the great moments of the development of international humanitarian law. He spoke about his personal experiences and include details about his investigation into the Nazi war criminals. At the end of his lecture he made the audience courage to continue to to fight international justice and, ultimately, global and lasting peace. He, who is investigating the perpetrators of the greatest mass murder in history and has accused them, is an "optimistic realist" which concerns the establishment of effective international sanctions against war crimes. was organized
this talk by the Foundation "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future, and the chair of Prof. Dr. Werle for German and International Criminal Law, Criminal Law and Legal Contemporary History at the Humboldt University in Berlin.
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University (video)
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz (chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen processes) in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University, Berlin
report: The chief prosecutor in the biggest murder trial in history, "the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen process, Professor Benjamin Ferencz, held on 28 May 2010 a public lecture in the lecture hall of the Humboldt University in Berlin. The use of the Security Police (Sipo) and Security Service (SD) were special units of the Nazi regime, which committed particularly in the war against the Soviet Union 1941-1945 mass killings of civilians. Members of the Einsatzgruppen were mostly members of the SS, but also a number of German police officers. Overall, the Einsatzgruppen killed about one million people, including Jews, Gypsies and political opponents of the Nazi regime as communists and partisans. The leaders of the Einsatzgruppen always reported in detail on the killings in Berlin. These files were found after the war and formed the basis for the use of group process from 1946/47. The process took place after the main Nuremberg war crimes trial under the sole responsibility of the United States held in a U.S. military court. All 22 defendants in this process, including SS-group leader Otto Ohlendorf, were convicted, 14 received the death penalty. Four of these death sentences have been on 7 Executed in June 1951, the rest were converted to partial life imprisonment. Benjamin Ferencz
was at 27 the youngest chief prosecutor in the Einsatzgruppen process. He was born in 1920 in Romania and grew up in the U.S.. During his law studies at Harvard, he was concerned particularly with international law. During the war, he first came as an ordinary infantry soldier to Europe, but was liberated several concentration camps. After his discharge from the military called him back, but the U.S. military tribunal, led by Robert M. Jackson to Germany: Ferencz should lead the charge against the commanders and leaders of the Einsatzgruppen.
Even after the Nuremberg trials are Ferencz was still committed to building a strong international law: he is a pioneer and long time supporters of the International Criminal Court in The Hague (ICC). He also published several basic works on the subject and was Professor of International Law in New York. On 27 May 2010 was Benjamin Ferencz for his lifelong commitment to international law in the Foreign Office with the Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany excellent.
The lecture by Prof. Dr. Ferenc on 28 May interest was shown in the auditorium of the Humboldt University was packed to the rafters. The eminent 90th witness on the World War, was witness to the worst human rights violations and experienced the great moments of the development of international humanitarian law. He spoke about his personal experiences and include details about his investigation into the Nazi war criminals. At the end of his lecture he made the audience courage to continue to to fight international justice and, ultimately, global and lasting peace. He, who is investigating the perpetrators of the greatest mass murder in history and has accused them, is an "optimistic realist" which concerns the establishment of effective international sanctions against war crimes. was organized
this talk by the Foundation "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future, and the chair of Prof. Dr. Werle for German and International Criminal Law, Criminal Law and Legal Contemporary History at the Humboldt University in Berlin.
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University (video)
How To Stopleg Twitches
65 years after World War II - Reflections of a Nuremberg prosecutor
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz (chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen processes) in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University, Berlin
report: The chief prosecutor in the biggest murder trial in history, "the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen process, Professor Benjamin Ferencz, held on 28 May 2010 a public lecture in the lecture hall of the Humboldt University in Berlin. The use of the Security Police (Sipo) and Security Service (SD) were special units of the Nazi regime, which committed particularly in the war against the Soviet Union 1941-1945 mass killings of civilians. Members of the Einsatzgruppen were mostly members of the SS, but also a number of German police officers. Overall, the Einsatzgruppen killed about one million people, including Jews, Gypsies and political opponents of the Nazi regime as communists and partisans. The leaders of the Einsatzgruppen always reported in detail on the killings in Berlin. These files were found after the war and formed the basis for the use of group process from 1946/47. The process took place after the main Nuremberg war crimes trial under the sole responsibility of the United States held in a U.S. military court. All 22 defendants in this process, including SS-group leader Otto Ohlendorf, were convicted, 14 received the death penalty. Four of these death sentences have been on 7 Executed in June 1951, the rest were converted to partial life imprisonment. Benjamin Ferencz
was at 27 the youngest chief prosecutor in the Einsatzgruppen process. He was born in 1920 in Romania and grew up in the U.S.. During his law studies at Harvard, he was concerned particularly with international law. During the war, he first came as an ordinary infantry soldier to Europe, but was liberated several concentration camps. After his discharge from the military called him back, but the U.S. military tribunal, led by Robert M. Jackson to Germany: Ferencz should lead the charge against the commanders and leaders of the Einsatzgruppen.
Even after the Nuremberg trials are Ferencz was still committed to building a strong international law: he is a pioneer and long time supporters of the International Criminal Court in The Hague (ICC). He also published several basic works on the subject and was Professor of International Law in New York. On 27 May 2010 was Benjamin Ferencz for his lifelong commitment to international law in the Foreign Office with the Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany excellent.
The lecture by Prof. Dr. Ferenc on 28 May interest was shown in the auditorium of the Humboldt University was packed to the rafters. The eminent 90th witness on the World War, was witness to the worst human rights violations and experienced the great moments of the development of international humanitarian law. He spoke about his personal experiences and include details about his investigation into the Nazi war criminals. At the end of his lecture he made the audience courage to continue to to fight international justice and, ultimately, global and lasting peace. He, who is investigating the perpetrators of the greatest mass murder in history and has accused them, is an "optimistic realist" which concerns the establishment of effective international sanctions against war crimes. was organized
this talk by the Foundation "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future, and the chair of Prof. Dr. Werle for German and International Criminal Law, Criminal Law and Legal Contemporary History at the Humboldt University in Berlin.
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University (video)
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz (chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen processes) in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University, Berlin
report: The chief prosecutor in the biggest murder trial in history, "the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen process, Professor Benjamin Ferencz, held on 28 May 2010 a public lecture in the lecture hall of the Humboldt University in Berlin. The use of the Security Police (Sipo) and Security Service (SD) were special units of the Nazi regime, which committed particularly in the war against the Soviet Union 1941-1945 mass killings of civilians. Members of the Einsatzgruppen were mostly members of the SS, but also a number of German police officers. Overall, the Einsatzgruppen killed about one million people, including Jews, Gypsies and political opponents of the Nazi regime as communists and partisans. The leaders of the Einsatzgruppen always reported in detail on the killings in Berlin. These files were found after the war and formed the basis for the use of group process from 1946/47. The process took place after the main Nuremberg war crimes trial under the sole responsibility of the United States held in a U.S. military court. All 22 defendants in this process, including SS-group leader Otto Ohlendorf, were convicted, 14 received the death penalty. Four of these death sentences have been on 7 Executed in June 1951, the rest were converted to partial life imprisonment. Benjamin Ferencz
was at 27 the youngest chief prosecutor in the Einsatzgruppen process. He was born in 1920 in Romania and grew up in the U.S.. During his law studies at Harvard, he was concerned particularly with international law. During the war, he first came as an ordinary infantry soldier to Europe, but was liberated several concentration camps. After his discharge from the military called him back, but the U.S. military tribunal, led by Robert M. Jackson to Germany: Ferencz should lead the charge against the commanders and leaders of the Einsatzgruppen.
Even after the Nuremberg trials are Ferencz was still committed to building a strong international law: he is a pioneer and long time supporters of the International Criminal Court in The Hague (ICC). He also published several basic works on the subject and was Professor of International Law in New York. On 27 May 2010 was Benjamin Ferencz for his lifelong commitment to international law in the Foreign Office with the Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany excellent.
The lecture by Prof. Dr. Ferenc on 28 May interest was shown in the auditorium of the Humboldt University was packed to the rafters. The eminent 90th witness on the World War, was witness to the worst human rights violations and experienced the great moments of the development of international humanitarian law. He spoke about his personal experiences and include details about his investigation into the Nazi war criminals. At the end of his lecture he made the audience courage to continue to to fight international justice and, ultimately, global and lasting peace. He, who is investigating the perpetrators of the greatest mass murder in history and has accused them, is an "optimistic realist" which concerns the establishment of effective international sanctions against war crimes. was organized
this talk by the Foundation "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future, and the chair of Prof. Dr. Werle for German and International Criminal Law, Criminal Law and Legal Contemporary History at the Humboldt University in Berlin.
lecture by Prof. Dr. Benjamin Ferencz in the main auditorium of the Humboldt University (video)
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Alexis Texas Does Not Work With Black Guys
lost time? Video for new book
The editors of the interview collection "Lost Time", Alexander Thomas and Cornelia Siebeck, have a lot of work behind him for over 2 years the work took have on the book project in which nearly worked a dozen interviewers, and the Berlin photographer Monique Ulrich. Historians question in this band of people from the former East Germany to their personal stories: What was life in the GDR? What motivated them to commit themselves for or against it or come to terms with it? As the collapse of the GDR was experienced? And how they see life and action in the GDR in retrospect? The speakers here are not only well-known figures such as politicians Hans Modrow, the theologian Hans Misselwitz, the artist Klaus Kordon, Bert Papenfuss or André Herzberg (singer of the East German cult band "Pankow"), but also a mountaineer, a cultural association secretary or a geriatric nurse. This paints an unusually vivid, but contradictory, subjective snapshot analysis of the GDR past 20 years after the wall came down. In one, the interviewees are agreed that times were not lost. Thomas and Siebeck tell in the video, what attracted you to the very question.
The editors of the interview collection "Lost Time", Alexander Thomas and Cornelia Siebeck, have a lot of work behind him for over 2 years the work took have on the book project in which nearly worked a dozen interviewers, and the Berlin photographer Monique Ulrich. Historians question in this band of people from the former East Germany to their personal stories: What was life in the GDR? What motivated them to commit themselves for or against it or come to terms with it? As the collapse of the GDR was experienced? And how they see life and action in the GDR in retrospect? The speakers here are not only well-known figures such as politicians Hans Modrow, the theologian Hans Misselwitz, the artist Klaus Kordon, Bert Papenfuss or André Herzberg (singer of the East German cult band "Pankow"), but also a mountaineer, a cultural association secretary or a geriatric nurse. This paints an unusually vivid, but contradictory, subjective snapshot analysis of the GDR past 20 years after the wall came down. In one, the interviewees are agreed that times were not lost. Thomas and Siebeck tell in the video, what attracted you to the very question.
Alexis Texas Does Not Work With Black Guys
lost time? Video for new book
The editors of the interview collection "Lost Time", Alexander Thomas and Cornelia Siebeck, have a lot of work behind him for over 2 years the work took have on the book project in which nearly worked a dozen interviewers, and the Berlin photographer Monique Ulrich. Historians question in this band of people from the former East Germany to their personal stories: What was life in the GDR? What motivated them to commit themselves for or against it or come to terms with it? As the collapse of the GDR was experienced? And how they see life and action in the GDR in retrospect? The speakers here are not only well-known figures such as politicians Hans Modrow, the theologian Hans Misselwitz, the artist Klaus Kordon, Bert Papenfuss or André Herzberg (singer of the East German cult band "Pankow"), but also a mountaineer, a cultural association secretary or a geriatric nurse. This paints an unusually vivid, but contradictory, subjective snapshot analysis of the GDR past 20 years after the wall came down. In one, the interviewees are agreed that times were not lost. Thomas and Siebeck tell in the video, what attracted you to the very question.
The editors of the interview collection "Lost Time", Alexander Thomas and Cornelia Siebeck, have a lot of work behind him for over 2 years the work took have on the book project in which nearly worked a dozen interviewers, and the Berlin photographer Monique Ulrich. Historians question in this band of people from the former East Germany to their personal stories: What was life in the GDR? What motivated them to commit themselves for or against it or come to terms with it? As the collapse of the GDR was experienced? And how they see life and action in the GDR in retrospect? The speakers here are not only well-known figures such as politicians Hans Modrow, the theologian Hans Misselwitz, the artist Klaus Kordon, Bert Papenfuss or André Herzberg (singer of the East German cult band "Pankow"), but also a mountaineer, a cultural association secretary or a geriatric nurse. This paints an unusually vivid, but contradictory, subjective snapshot analysis of the GDR past 20 years after the wall came down. In one, the interviewees are agreed that times were not lost. Thomas and Siebeck tell in the video, what attracted you to the very question.
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