Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Transit of Venus


Great post today about Harry Crosby and the Transit of Venus at Steven Fama's the glade of theoric ornithic hermetica.

    
    All brightness like an orchestra of swords
    All flashing messages of joy
    All gay as ladies with their lords
    Meteor with comet spinning spun
    New every morning with the sun.



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Monday, May 28, 2012

Lübeck — Part Two


The Holy Ghost Hospital (Heiligen-Geist-Hospital) in Lübeck was built in 1286 and looks today much as it did then. It housed a monastic foundation that rendered charity to the sick and needy.







Eventually the Hospital was converted into an old age home. These wooden cubicles were built in 1820 and inhabited by older persons living on charity up till 1970. Note the fine medieval roof.


Inside the nearby St Jakobi-Kirche, whose war-battered tower is seen as it was around 1980, are found two of Germany's most interesting organs.



In these badly faded pictures you can see first the Friedrich Stellwagen transept organ from 1636-37. It incorporates Gothic pipes from the 15th century, making it one of the oldest instruments in Germany.



An excellent sound sample of the Stellwagen organ can be heard here.



The Great Organ in the Jakobi-Kirche appeared in different versions between 1466 and 1740.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Lübeck — Part One


An hour's train ride from Hamburg, the Baltic seaport town of Lübeck was the most important city in the Hanseatic League. The city was largely destroyed in the bombings of World War Two. This Merian map of 1641 shows it in its glory days.




I took dozens of photos from my visits there, mostly inside the ancient redbrick Gothic churches which have been well-restored.


The Holsten Tor, gate to the city.


The Marienkirche, built between 1250 and 1350.














Plaque commemorating Bach's apprenticeship with Buxtehude here.

Eternal Gothic

Front door handles

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Sunday, May 20, 2012

San Francisco discovered in Game of Thrones



This cgi from Game of Thrones shows the San Francisco Palace of Fine Arts in the background, and a second shot of the same dome enlarged behind it. The buildings in front were photographed in Malta. Ned Stark is about to be decapitated: Joffrey and retinue are on the platform to the left, waiting for the Lord of Winterfell who will enter through the portal at the right.

The Palace of Fine Arts was built for the Panama-Pacific Exposition of 1915. Obviously its creator Bernard Maybeck, shown below at home with his family around 1910, would have been completely cool with its appearance in Game of Thrones.


+    Clicking embiggens as always.



Saturday, May 19, 2012

You be the judge




Good fun is to be had at http://ybtj.justice.gov.uk/, where you can compete with British judges in determining the proper judgement for miscreants who have been convicted and are now up for sentencing.

As a proper medievalist, my habitual sentence for most of them would be something along the lines of toss-'em -in-the-dungeon-and-throw-away-the key, but a couple of the cases proved me a real softy, bestowing justice more leniently than the actual judges.

What surprised me that if the evil-doer says I'm sowwy, the sentence is apparently automatically mitigated--fat chance that would have in this country.

It helps to know that misdemeanors are tried in magistrates' court, and more serious matters in Crown Court, which is robed. The modern judge's costume looks ridiculously unattractive compared with the scarlet robes, white ermine cuffs, buckle shoes and long wigs which His Lordship wore in times gone by. If you're going to make a theater out of the trial system, why not really go for it.

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Monday, May 14, 2012

Pellworm


The little North Frisian island of Pellworm on the North Sea coast of Schleswig-Holstein is a convenient escape from Hamburg on hot summer days. It is encircled by a dyke upon which grazing sheep circulate in a somewhat diffident manner.


Over the edge is a thin strip of beach populated by day-vacationers, probably Hamburgers. Note the pounding surf, an object of derision for any visitor from California.


German beach behavior should be and probably is already a worthy subject of sociological analysis. First, there signs are posted which divide the beach like grids on a sheet of graph paper indicating what it is permitted and where: let your dog run free, take your clothes off, build a sand castle, etc. Second, the visitor stakes claim to a small parcel of beach sand over which s/he becomes the temporary proprietor. This may be accomplished by renting a Strandkorb or "beach basket" in which you can sit and activate your nature experience by staring out at the ocean.


Or if for some reason you feel encouraged to resist entropy you might rent a bicycle and examine the island's rather minimal architectural heritage, which includes an attractive ancient parish church.







North Germans are proud of their patch of sea coast on the North Sea and on the Baltic. To hear the touristic and media hype, you'd think Germany was one of the great sea-faring nations of the world. This is distinctly not the case, but there are many pleasant moments to be found along the German coast.


And also some odd ones. I can't remember where I took this photo of a monument to an ocean mine, (probably Cuxhaven), or rather to those who were killed by such. I couldn't figure out from the inscription whether enemy personnel who were blown up by the German mines were being memorialized, or rather those who were laying the mines, in which case they must have been awfully clumsy.



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Sunday, May 13, 2012

Jugglers I have known—3/3




Francis the Juggler anticipating the momentary arrival of a set of dumbbells being hurled to him by his partner at the Renaissance Faire in Novato, 1977.

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Friday, May 11, 2012

Jugglers I have known—2/3


Cuthbert, Renaissance Pleasure Faire in Novato, 1978

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Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Jugglers I have known—1/3


Francis, Renaissance Pleasure Faire in Novato, 1978

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