RT @41Strange: Dolphins use Pufferfish to get high. Pufferfish produce a potent defensive chemical, which they eject when threatened. In small enough doses, the toxin seems to induce "a trance-like state" in dolphins (www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/dol…) pic.twitter.com/8Kni2l7THS
posted at 12:06:50
RT @womensart1: 'The Skate Girls of Kabul' photographic series by Jessica Fulford-Dobson on Afghan girls who are not allowed to ride bikes, so have got together to learn to skateboard instead, overriding restrictions against them #womensart #FridayFeeling pic.twitter.com/DLaqee1K7r
posted at 12:05:38
「訴訟を支援している人たち、および弁護士はほとんどすべてキリスト教関係者」(by 佐伯真光氏) blog.goo.ne.jp/daikanjin/e/d2…
posted at 11:55:50
RT @hosoi: 話題のかぶる傘を中国の通販で650円で買った。 ベビーカー押しながら日傘ささなくていい!両手空いて超快適!令和イチの買い物だった。 ただ問題がひとつあって、みんな口を揃えて「一緒に歩きたくない」と言う。悲しい pic.twitter.com/e787LiUsrI
posted at 10:24:01
RT @nonomaru116: @IichiroJingu キリスト教系でカトリックとプロテスタントと呼ばれているんで、仏教側も伝統仏教と新仏教と両方呼んでバランス取ったならわかるのですが……。
posted at 10:04:52
RT @pvvbzROgo32zWXo: @IichiroJingu 板沢武雄は謎の人ですよね。日蘭交渉史の研究者でもあり、戦時協力の尖兵でもあって、戦後平泉澄以上に戦争責任を問われてもおかしくないのに、公職追放で確か慰留されてるんですよね。山口啓二の聞き書き(たしか歴評)で読んだことあります。
posted at 09:16:36
RT @IichiroJingu: @nonomaru116 うーむ。板沢はそういう本を書いていたので公職追放になってしまったのですが、実際には「皇国史観」の人ではないんですよねー。そして、戦後の天皇はその種の知識は不要だったでしょうし。とすると、何を期待されて呼ばれたのか。
posted at 09:16:30
@nonomaru116 うーむ。板沢はそういう本を書いていたので公職追放になってしまったのですが、実際には「皇国史観」の人ではないんですよねー。そして、戦後の天皇はその種の知識は不要だったでしょうし。とすると、何を期待されて呼ばれたのか。
posted at 08:50:58
RT @nonomaru116: @IichiroJingu 戦前戦中の著書に『国史を貫く肇国精神』『神武の道』『天壌無窮史観』があるので、そういう知識を買われて神道講義のため呼ばれたのでしょうか? それにしても、ガチ僧籍を持つ人なのだから、単なる神道ではなく、一緒に天台教学的な話もさせたんでしょうか?鈴木大拙が「禅」の人だけに、特に。
posted at 08:47:11
ウィキペディアには観音寺が「名刹」とあるけど、少なくとも現在はかなりうらびれた雰囲気。境内の案内板に板沢武雄の名前が出ていた。 www.sukima.com/12_touhoku00_0…
posted at 08:40:19
板沢武雄は釜石市の観音寺という天台宗のお寺に生れた人で、自身も得度しており、神道ではないな。ここは単なるワープロミスではなく、執筆者(山口輝臣)はかなり雑。 ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E6%9D%BF…
posted at 08:35:32
小倉・山口『天皇の歴史09巻 天皇と宗教』(講談社、2011)に、昭和天皇『独白録』に関連して「聞き書きに前後して、自らの発案により、板沢武雄(神道)・鈴木大拙(仏教)・田中耕太郎(カトリック)・斎藤勇(プロテスタント)から相次いで宗教に関する進講を受けている」(p339)とあるけど、
posted at 08:33:29
「 14世紀に南朝を開いた後醍醐天皇から賜ったとして、奈良県五條市の旧家に保管されている「日の丸」の旗について、京都大などは16日、生地を分析した結果、1463~1634年の絹地だったと発表した」か。かなり幅が広いなあ。 www.yomiuri.co.jp/culture/201908…
posted at 08:17:18
@pvvbzROgo32zWXo ありがとうございます。自分で読めばよいだけなのですが、ちょっと横着をしてしまいました。宮地の父親、確認できたらお知らせします。
posted at 07:32:42
RT @tanuki_cembalo: ゴージャスなお猿の学校🐒 pic.twitter.com/F9I9dmPUyl
posted at 06:48:48
RT @mmmiriammm3: Beethovenfriesと赤ちゃん。 pic.twitter.com/AIA1EbKDYv
posted at 06:47:32
RT @mmmiriammm3: 今日はここへ。 pic.twitter.com/EvOSVPAQuW
posted at 06:47:00
RT @HirokoMiyamoto7: 休憩にお菓子を 頂きに やって来ました。 サクサクの クッキーに クリームがサンドされて、 抹茶クリームと ブルーベリーが 絶妙な相性で 美味しいです✨ 和を 意識したトッピングで 爪楊枝が 付いています。 pic.twitter.com/uGqcc9pkdV
posted at 06:44:34
RT @womensart1: Vicky Lindo, contemporary UK ceramicist who creates often quirky, highly decorated ceramics #womensart pic.twitter.com/s9xCJZ1RTB
posted at 06:41:44
RT @AnneLouiseAvery: The shapeshifting tanuki "blazed across the night sky as fiery comets, hid in plain view as stones..froze convincingly as statues & confused travellers at night as flickering lanterns. They could even turn into everyday household objects, such as teapots." folklorethursday.com/legends/tanuki… pic.twitter.com/aFuyT1GRQY
posted at 06:40:28
RT @wyrdwritere: Getting medieval on the grass: summer 1019(ish) - summer 2019 blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanus… pic.twitter.com/n7c9Dh3voS
posted at 06:39:20
RT @CathJMaguire: 6. The Sinagoga de Santa Maria la Blanca, Toledo. A gem of Almohad architecture. pic.twitter.com/omROhuULAG
posted at 06:38:31
RT @CathJMaguire: However #ALevelResultsDay turned out for you, remember the words of a much wiser Catherine than I: “If you are what you are supposed to be, you will set the world on fire” - Catherine of Siena. (Catherine of Siena Exchanging her Heart with Christ’s, 15th century, @metmuseum) pic.twitter.com/gczzSO5Khl
posted at 06:37:38
RT @CathJMaguire: Today, the Church celebrates the Feast of the Assumption of Mary. Although it was proclaimed dogma in 1950, Christians had believed for centuries that Mary was assumed bodily into heaven at the end of her earthly life. (📸 Bibliotheque Renaissance de Nancy, MS 1874) pic.twitter.com/MQ2oPvxqOB
posted at 06:36:52
RT @Sara_Canadian: How to tell a Serf from a Slave in Medieval England legalhistorymiscellany.com/2019/08/15/how… pic.twitter.com/YMk6v8u2rR
posted at 06:35:17
RT @GawkyLions: Name: Cecil Gawkiness: 10/10 Lionness: 7/10 Creativity: 10/10 Meet Cecil. Cecil enjoys picnics, musicals and the smell of buttercups. He strongly dislikes filing his accounts at the end of the tax year, and badgers. Ref: Decretum Gratiani, Toulouse ca. 1340-1350. Avignon MS 659. pic.twitter.com/eKxYPIqlcG
posted at 06:33:22
RT @GawkyLions: Name: Abraham Gawkiness: 8/10 Lionness: 3/10 Creativity: 7/10 Abraham is a sensitive soul. He is a big fan of cured meats, but not chorizo. He also paints in watercolour. He doesn't understand backgammon, and is full of existential dread. Ref: Found on an unknown church in Pisa. pic.twitter.com/q6rYqT6RKa
posted at 06:32:44
RT @GawkyLions: Name: Earnest Gawkiness: 3/10 Lionness: 3/10 Creativity: 2/10 Earnest has spent years mastering hypnosis and alchemy. He dreams of one day seeing the sights of Slough. Look into his disarming eyes if you dare. Ref: Origin unknown (Help us out if you know!) pic.twitter.com/3e43iJXvlM
posted at 06:31:25
RT @TheMERL: Hello, we've found a harvest jug of ⚫️pure chaotic energy⚫️ and want to tell you about it. pic.twitter.com/tjibNcHJ0f
posted at 06:31:03
RT @bodleianlibs: From Liber scintillarum [Bodleian Library MS. Canon. Pat. Lat. 44, fol. 014r]. C what we did there? pic.twitter.com/GtfdnFmSIy
posted at 06:29:29
RT @hilda_beastoxf: A past #Research Spotlights focused on the work of our Professorial Fellow, @DanielWakelin1. Prof Wakelin studies the creativity of ordinary people in Middle Ages shown by their making and use of books, like this alphabet copied from a woodcut of 1464. bit.ly/31CY70t pic.twitter.com/Y20F6tAhWD
posted at 06:27:43
RT @BLMedieval: Oh look, cute medieval spiders! 🕷️🕸️🕷️ You're welcome. Sloane MS 4016, f. 6r Royal 13 B VIII, f. 11v pic.twitter.com/VzdENadIee
posted at 06:25:39
RT @freyjawaru: Death of the Virgin in a cutting from a choir book, Lewis E M 4:10 Free Library of Philadelphia, 1340 Flemish pic.twitter.com/jKE0rNEpCc
posted at 06:24:27
RT @freyjawaru: If I’m remembering correctly, this is the largest cut initial in the Free Library’s collection. It’s something like 20 cm or larger. Lewis E M 15:6 Master of Morgan 85 @FreeLibrary #AssumptionDay pic.twitter.com/AYMICcfq0a
posted at 06:23:55
RT @freyjawaru: No this is the one. It’s almost 38 cm. Largest cut initial in the Lewis medieval mss collections @freelibrary Lewis EM 66:20 Initial G with the Coronation of the Virgin with saints below, including John the Baptist #AssumptionDay Imagine how huge the book was! pic.twitter.com/RrCcXbhEew
posted at 06:23:30
RT @RadboudE: Beatus! Mooie initiaal in veertiende eeuws brevier uit klooster Schwarzenbroich. St Agatha Ms 124 pic.twitter.com/FtNEWuYgOZ
posted at 06:21:35
RT @JohanOosterman: Penitent Magdalene. Marvelous and moving miniature of Mary Magdalene. She is venerated on July 22. Prayer Book of Joanna of Ghistelles. Simon Bening, Gnent or Bruges, ca 1516. @BLMedieval Egerton 2125 pic.twitter.com/89EdEzJTx4
posted at 06:21:03
RT @No1Cathedral: We're looking forward to meeting new @UniKent & @CanterburyCCUni students - and good wishes to all our city's students thinking about their futures today #alevelresultsday pic.twitter.com/3T2pyqmOAs
posted at 06:18:46
RT @No1Cathedral: As we celebrate the Blessed Virgin Mary, it's a special day for visitors to see this stunning stained glass in the Corona at the east end of the Cathedral. pic.twitter.com/So6t7nLffD
posted at 06:18:11
RT @BedesBooks: Oh it's #NationalTellAJokeDay. Well then. When a medieval knight was killed in battle, what sign did they put on his grave? Rust in peace! pic.twitter.com/eDtMBrWxAB
posted at 06:16:39
RT @BedesBooks: Today is the feast day of the Blessed Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus. This lovely hand-coloured Nativity is from a Book of Hours printed on vellum by Paris printer & book producer Antoine Verard, in 1503. #OnThisDay #OTD #RareBooks pic.twitter.com/KN4sd7nZ2a
posted at 06:16:19
RT @BedesBooks: To celebrate #WorldCalligraphyDay we thought we'd take a whistle stop tour through 1000 years of manuscripts in our collections. So here is a medieval manuscripty thread. #MedievalTwitter pic.twitter.com/orXi73Q7ZK
posted at 06:15:32
RT @red_loeb: 'Repeat after me: amo, amas, amat!' #FridayFeeling BnF MS Français 574; Gossouin de Metz,Image du monde; 14th c; f.27r @GallicaBnF pic.twitter.com/G6BuF2rzu4
posted at 06:14:09
RT @red_loeb: Dante, Beatrice, and the heavens #FridayThoughts Bodl. Lib. MS. Holkham misc. 48; Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri; 1350–1375; Italy; p.141 @BDLSS Yates Thompson 36; Divina Commedia, Dante Alighieri; 1444-1450; Italy; f.169r @BLMedieval pic.twitter.com/Z0ptZhl72J
posted at 06:13:35
RT @red_loeb: Exquisite initials 'L'(iber), 'I'(nitium), 'Q'(uoniam), & 'I'(n) at the beginning of the Gospels complete with symbols of the Evangelists. Durham Cathedral Library MS. A.II.4; Bible of William of St Calais; 11th century; Normandy; ff.87v, 99r, 107r, 119v @BedesBooks pic.twitter.com/Q6Ra7grkYK
posted at 06:13:20
RT @PiersatPenn: Dancing with the God of Love Master of the Vienna Roman de la Rose (fl. 1425–1465) and @GallicaBnF Fr. 798 pic.twitter.com/u4yGd3ftNj
posted at 06:11:54