Countless eurozone crisis cartoons have been drawn since the beginning of the current economic crisis. However, Guardian newspaper cartoonist Kipper Williams is having a blast with the eurozone crisis, and through his work, it is easily identifiable that Greece is at the epicentre of his work. Through his cartoons he aims to depict the seriousness and the devastation of this crisis via a silly and fanciful manner. Despite being a cartoon, it does show how some people perceive other people, nations, and economies by emphasising various parts of their lives, traditions and culture. Here is some of his work, which can easily offend, if seen by people from the PIIGS nations.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
Olympic Medals, London 2012
The Olympic Medals alter every 4 years, following the cultural and historic distinctions of the host city. However, some facts remain the same. This is the case with the Olympic medals for the coming London 2012 Games. The medals were designed by British artist David Watkins.
The medals all have a picture of the Greek goddess of victory, Nike, on the front, stepping out of the Parthenon to arrive in the host city, and the London 2012 logo superimposed on lots of straight lines and one wiggly one on the back. The rim of each medal will have the sport and discipline of its winner engraved on it. The reverse of each medal carries a bespoke design featuring the River Thames, a symbol of London that also suggests a fluttering baroque ribbon. The square on the medal reinforces the sense of place, as in a map inset. The 2012 logo is given a 3D representation as a metaphor for the modern city. The background grid radiates energy and represents athletes' achievements and effort. The ribbons, on the other hand, will be coloured royal purple in the year of the Queen's diamond jubilee.
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Pantheon
The Pantheon is one of Rome's most famous buildings, located in Piazza della Rotunda, in the heart of the Italian capital. The Pantheon was built as a Roman temple and later it was consecrated as a Catholic Church. It is the biggest covered place without intermediate supports that was built before the invention of reinforced concrete.
The original Pantheon was built in 27 to 25 B.C., during the third consulship of Marcis Vipsanius Agrippa, however, it was destroyed by fire in 80 A.D. The current building was built during the reign of Emperor Hadrian, about 125 A.D.
During the Byzantine epoch, emperor Phocas gave the building to Pope Boniface IV, who re-consecrated it as a Christian Church, renaming it the "Church of Mary and all the Martyr Saints". The consecration not only spared the Pantheon from the complete dispossession, like all the other antique monuments, but it also guaranteed an uninterrupted use of the building, making it unique in the millenarian history of the city of Rome.
The pronaos has 16 Corinthian columns made of granite. The nave of the arcade ends with a splendid bronze portal and it is the biggest and most integral of all the ancient portals currently in use in Rome.
The hall is made up of a circular space with a hemispheric dome with a diameter of 43,30 metres, the same as its height. The dome is the centre piece of this amazing Church, which rests on a cylinder of masonry walls. In the middle of the dome is an oeil-de boeuf. The floor has a draining system for the rainwater that enters through the hole of the dome.
Monday, May 28, 2012
Political Cartoons in regards to the economy
There have been countless political cartoons concerning the economic crisis, which has hit the world economy since 2008. Many of these cartoons go against a certain currency or a certain country or groups of countries. It is fair to assume that most of them exaggerate, thus criticising the current financial reality. However, it is a way of pointing out the truth behind this colossus economic downfall.
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Greece is not East Germany!
Greece is not East Germany!
Apparently Angela Merkel is secretly
preparing a six-point plan to revive Greece in the same way that East Germany
was modernised after the fall of Communism. The German Chancellor’s rescue plan
to transform ailing euro zone countries through privatisation and relaxation of
employment laws will be presented to the EU for discussion in the coming weeks.
The message towards the PIGS will be “behave more like the Germans”. It is a
fact that Germany and Chancellor Merkel have grown tired of Greece’s failure to
modernise its economy and reform bloated stated enterprises.
It is fair to say that the world
media, including blogs, have battered the failing states of Europe, with Greece
being constantly at its epicentre. Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, said
recently that she had more sympathy for children in rural sub-Saharan Africa
than for Greeks facing hardship. May we remind her that Greece is not a third
world country, and no one asked for her sympathy. She is right to claim that
Greeks should help themselves by paying taxes. Again may we remind her that it
is not the working class who is not paying taxes, but her class, the elite and
political class of Greece, destroying unjustly its reputation.
Other remarks by the two German
Christian Democrat MPs, Josef Schlarmann and Frank Schaeffler, who arrogantly
expressed the view that Greece should sell its islands and ancient ruins,
including the Acropolis, should be discarded. We can only explain these views
coming from two uneducated people, who do not understand how politics and
relations work in a globalised world.
Despite the fact that Germany
wishes to change Greece in the same way it did Eastern Germany, we should
remind everyone that Greece is not Germany. Greece can never be a good Germany;
it can only be a good Greece. Having this in our minds we can understand how
there are different kinds of democracies in each country, following distinct
views concerning politics, religion, society, traditions and so on, which make
each democracy in each state distinct from the next.
Also Germany might be currently unhappy with Greece, however let us not forget that Germany has benefitted by this crisis, and even before 2008, since the Aegean State is constantly buying its weapons from Germany and France. This is evident through the Memorandums signed, emphasising how Greece should and must continue buying defence weapons from the two northern states of the euro zone.
Also Germany might be currently unhappy with Greece, however let us not forget that Germany has benefitted by this crisis, and even before 2008, since the Aegean State is constantly buying its weapons from Germany and France. This is evident through the Memorandums signed, emphasising how Greece should and must continue buying defence weapons from the two northern states of the euro zone.
The biggest radio telescope!
South Africa and Australia will
partner in the development of the biggest radio telescope ever built. Their main objectives are to probe the
origins of the universe and even look for extra-terrestrial life. The SKA
(Square Kilometre Array), billed as one of the most ambitious international
scientific co-operations in history, will be ten thousand times faster and
fifty times more sensitive than any telescope ever built.
This project is due to be
completed in 2024. SKA’s 3000 dishes will have a data collecting area of one
million square metres. The South African host computer is to be situated in
Cape Town, being also linked to stations in Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar and
Mauritius. The Australian project, on the other hand, will have stations in New
Zealand.
Saturday, May 26, 2012
The Cathedral of Florence
The Cathedral of Florence is dedicated to Santa Maria del Fiore. It is the fruit of the commitment of a large number of artists who worked on it over a period of centuries.
At the end of the 13th century, Florence, then a Commune, was already flourishing and the build up area had spread considerably.
What amazes the visitor is undoubtedly the facade, which was designed by Emilio de Fabris. It depicts various events from the life of the Virgin Mary and of numerous local Saints from Florence. It is fair to say that the Cathedral's exterior is more majestic than its interior, however, the dome is enchanting.
The interior is very spacious, both in height and width, following the dictates of Italian Gothic architecture.
Friday, May 25, 2012
Have changes in the character of warfare necessitated re-evaluating the ethics of war?
War,
in contrast to peace, is the ‘evil’ side of humanity and human relations. War
and ethics have always come together; it is not a modern theory; as Walzer
states, “For as long as men and women have talked about war, they have talked
about it in terms of right and wrong”[1].
But today, after so many wars and so many total wars (the two World Wars), this
has come to the forefront, not only in the academic field but also in the
political one. The Just War tradition is in the modern epoch a crucial point,
taken into account for all military interventions.
The
character of warfare has changed. Today one can identify the main use of the
air force, which limits casualties, at least from the attacker’s point of view.
Weapons of mass destruction, nuclear weapons and the new technologies have altered
warfare forever. But it is important to identify that it is “not only the ends
but the means which settle whether or not a war is just”[2].
This means that any disproportionate and excessive act is wrong.
It
is crucial here to state that ethics are contested. Is there a one, unique,
global ethical code that everyone follows? People all around the world seem to
have diverse views about ethics. Many believe that “all ethical values are relative
to culture”[3]. This
might be the case but one should take in to account the fact that we are all
humans, with the same aspirations, dreams and goals. Ethical values are similar
if not the same around the world, especially when it comes to matters that
affect everyone in the international field.
In
this paper I will show how the change in warfare does not necessarily have to
re-evaluate the ethics of war. This is why we can identify Clausewitz’s
relevance even today, as Dr Gray explains “the objective nature of war is
permanent”[4];
the means are the ones that change and evolve. Through many paradigms from the
twentieth century we will see how this is realised, taking in to perspective
older wars and conflicts. However, it is also true that ethics have played a positive
role, making wars less brutal. The role of international organisations, for
example the UN and its role in the maintenance of ethics and a more humane
theory behind this inhuman act, will show the importance of ethics and how they
still prevail and are taken in to a serious account. Nevertheless, it is
important to see the positive reaction towards these international bodies, making
wars less barbaric. War, although brutal, it has changed towards a positive
manner.
To
show how ethics and morals around the act of war have not changed dramatically it
is important to use an example from a previous period, to emphasize the
everlasting values that come with the idea and the act of war. The Melian
Dialogue is the best paradigm for this case. The powerful Athenians show their
power to the small island of Melos, in a realist manner. Although they did not
have the weapons that exist today, still they acted in a cruel and inhumane
way. After getting their way, as explained by Thucydides towards the end of his
fifth book, “the Athenians thereupon put to death all who were of military age,
and made slaves of the women and children. They then colonised the island”[5].
This shows how the powerful have always acted in the same way and that what
Athenians said is still true today, that “the powerful exact what they can, and
the weak grant what they must”[6].
“The Athenians shared a moral vocabulary, shared it with the people of Mytilene
and Melos; and allowing for cultural differences, they share it with us too”[7]. This is the realist approach to war, where
morality and ethics have no place. Although the world has changed we can state
that morality has remained the same. Nevertheless, since the end of the Cold
War and with the international institutions (UN, Red Cross, Geneva Convention
and many more), a more ethical way of combat is being introduced, where the
barbaric practises and the disproportionate acts of wars up to World War II
have been abandoned.
It
is important here to analyse the Just War tradition and its effect on the
modern way of warfare, which is relevant to the matter concerning ethics. Norman
observes that the just war tradition “has been the dominant intellectual
tradition of thought about the morality of war”[8].
“The definition of a just military action is any action necessary and
proportionate to winning the war”[9].
This tradition has two branches, the ius ad bellum (meaning the justice into
going to war) and the ius in bello (which means the manner with which an actor
manages a war). The latter one is important for us here, that is why I will not
analyse the ius ad bellum, which is an enormous topic on its own and because it
is not relevant to the question, as is the ius in bello, which has two main
sections that are important. Discrimination is the first factor. This
emphasises the importance in war that the soldiers should aim at the enemy
soldiers. Civilians should not be in the middle of this quarrel. This today can
be translated into that the air force should aim at military sites, buildings
and not towards cities and areas which are populated by civilians. This was the
unfortunate case in World War II where both sides bombed cities. A great
paradigm is Dresden, where the “historic centre, on the southern bank of the
Elbe were consumed. A second wave of bombers ... extended the destruction
killing thousands of people who had fled the fires”[10].
The second factor is proportionality. The outcome should always be more
positive than negative. The way with which war is fought should be morally
correct. Exaggerations are unacceptable. One historical embellishment was the
use of the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It was an unexpected use of
enormous force against a state that did not pose a threat as did Nazi Germany. This
is why there has been a “rebirth of interest in the just war tradition”[11]
and it has been widely spread due to the human rights and globalization which
prevail in our modern epoch.
The
change of warfare is the key issue here but it does not mean that ethics should
change with it. Today wars are waged by states, which should and most of the
time do follow international law and abide by the UN laws. In spite of this, paradigms
of the hegemonic powers going against these laws are observed even to this day.Such
instance is the USA going against the UN when it decided to go to war in Iraq.
In any case it’s important to take in to account that “if you wish to pursue a
goal which appears to be otherwise ethically permitted or even required, then
you must pursue it by means that are ethically satisfactory – and if there are
no ways that are ethically satisfactory, then you have to rethink the rightness
of the goal”[12].
During
the 20th and now in the 21st centuries one can easily
identify the improvement of the technologies concerning warfare. Nuclear weapons
and weapons of mass destruction have brought mankind close to the brink of
annihilation. Nevertheless, there are many international bodies which
contribute in maintaining the proportionality needed when states are blinded by
their goals and ambitions. “The web of institutions (like the International Committee
of the Red Cross [ICRC]), agreements (the Hague and Geneva Conventions) have
all constrained the use of force in twentieth century politics and have
certainly helped mitigate some of its worst excesses, for all that the century
as a whole was a staggering bloody one”[13].
During
the 20th century “legal and moral thought in the just war tradition
have sought to limit the right of individual states to resort to force, while
reserving a somewhat larger latitude to international organizations”[14],
especially the United Nations. The United Nations Charter has changed the way
with which states go to war. Since they are the main political actors in the
international field, and as Clausewitz believes that “war is merely the
continuation of policy by other means”[15],
the Charter refers to its member states and how they are forbidden into
threatening other political actors. The only war which is allowed is a
defensive one. As the UN Charter, Article 2 (4) emphasises; “All Members shall
refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force
against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in
any state against which the United Nations is taking preventive or enforcement
action”[16].
The international arena has been
transformed by these international bodies and by globalization. The modern
world does not live in a Hobbesian world, but in a Lockean one. Liberalism
prevails today, where state actors comply with the international norms, due to
the fact that they correspond to their interests. The UN is the embodiment of
morality in the modern world, although it does find it hard to realise its
goals. However, “a contemporary jus ad bellum is developing in the practice of
the UN and of individual states”[17].
It
is vital at this point to show, through some case studies how modern warfare
and ethics come together. What is evident, through the international
organisations, is that technology is improving and inventing ways of destroying
life as we know it are increasing; however, these bodies and conventions have
contributed into keeping back these weapons and the political actors from actually
fulfilling their goals. The objectives of every state is not to commence an
unjust war, which isn’t as Hobbes stated “a war misliked; it is a war misliked
for particular reasons”[18].
This was the case with the war in Korea, where the bombing of civilian
populations could be seen as an ethical conviction. The bombings of civilians
in Vietnam by the USA are until this day a controversial factor. In Vietnam a
crucial feature was the rule against killing civilians, which was an important
one, more than ever before.
The
Persian Gulf War in 1991 “continued the trend toward increasingly restrained
bombing in order to minimize direct casualties to non-combatants”[19].
This is where the cultural and religious buildings where protected and not
bombed, in contrast to World War II where cities were destroyed and historical
buildings bombed, for example in London, Coventry, Dresden. A just war had to
be fought in order for political support from the international and domestic
arena to stay intact. Even if one sees only the political goals of maintaining
the ethical side of war in one piece, it is important to identify the existence
of ethics and the prevalence of them after the end of World War II and
especially after the end of the Cold War.
A
recent paradigm is the NATO campaign, i.e. the air operation, over Yugoslavia,
in respect to the crises witnessed in Kosovo, by Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic. The unique feature in this war was that President Bill Clinton
excluded the use of ground forces. “For the first time, the use of air strikes
alone brought a foe to its knees – and at the cost of no NATO lives”[20].
The disappearance of collateral damage was important in this war; that is why
“the toll on the civilian population was indeed relatively limited”[21].
A key issue, which is common in most if not all the previous wars, from
antiquity till the modern era, is the destruction of the enemy’s morale. This
was also the case in Kosovo, where television and radio stations were targeted,
as were factories, public roads, bridges, oil refineries and anything that
would inflict directly or indirectly the civilian population. The high point of
this was the immobilisation of the national power grid. But although technology
has improved it has yet to reach the point where it does not make mistakes.
These collateral damages were emphasized by Serbia and by the media, which used
this for propaganda. However, it was recognized that during the war “some
European allies resisted escalated air attacks that would endanger civilians
and NATO officials also scrutinized the target list to comply with
international legal proscriptions”[22].
Eliot Cohen alleged that “air power is an unusually seductive form of military
strength, in part because, like modern courtship, it appears to offer
gratification without commitment”[23].
This is the situation in many cases, especially after the Cold War with the
improvement of the military air force.
Iraq
is the final and most recent paradigm. Kahl in his article has a poll where
many Muslim states believe that the USA “didn’t try very hard to avoid civilian
casualties in Iraq”[24].
The same was believed by ally nations in the West. Although this is the case an
improvement has been identified, especially in comparison to other wars in the
past but also towards the beginning of this campaign. Soldiers are trained in
the rules of engagement (ROE), which stresses the importance of conforming with
the laws of war. Even “the number of US air strikes has also declined sharply
since the end of major combat, indicating the US military’s heightened concern
for proportionality”[25].
This last example shows the change in the theory of war and who fights it. As with
Afghanistan and partly with Iraq, the US and its allies went to war to fight
the war on terrorism. This did not exist before, where the main political
actors fought each other, that is why questions of how these groups should be
fought are raised.
It
is also essential to stress the importance of ethics in warfare due to the fact
that we live in an era where “the CNN factor”[26]
plays a crucial role, analysing and inspecting every action taken by the
military. Eliot Cohen describes this case by stating that, “as television makes
military blunders and accidents ever more evident, airmen will find themselves
trying to explain away civilian suffering that previous generations would have
accepted as the regrettable but inevitable price of military action”[27].
It is evident that even from the media; the military has a pressure of keeping
war ‘clean’ and moral. The technology exists for mass destruction but ethics
restrict the military from acting in such ways.
In
previous eras it was evident that ethics and war did not coexist. Two paradigms
emphasise this. Kant considered “war as the antithesis of the moral law”[28].
Carl von Clausewitz, the greatest expert on war, believed that “to introduce
the principle of moderation into the theory of war itself would always lead to
logical absurdity”[29].
Nevertheless, through the case studies presented above it is easy to identify
that modern warfare and ethics co-exist.
Modern
warfare, although evolving technologically it has also advanced morally. It is
important to acknowledge that the change in the character of warfare has also
kept its ‘barbaric’ form, as is expected when one actor goes to war. The ethics
of war have been evaluated by the nature of modern wars, the technology used,
the minimising of collateral damage. International organisations, such as the
UN, human rights groups, have contributed in transforming the way with which
the military should fight.
Wars
towards the end of the 20th century and until now, at the beginning
of the 21st century, have become more ethical. Re-evaluating ethics
of war due to the changes in the character of warfare are not necessitated. A
change has come naturally, towards a positive outlook. Barbaric practices, such
as the ones that took place in the past, from ancient Athens until World War
II, have been forgotten. It is only right to hope that this pattern and modern
tradition remains intact. But political actors during war could fight in a barbaric
manner, showing that Kant and Clausewitz were right. The cruel practices should
never in the future be repeated. What should prevail in this ethic of modern
warfare is “a basic respect for life urged on those who engage in war”[30].
However, the ethical basis of war still remains the same and extreme situations
might occur in the future.
[1]
Walzer Michael, Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical
Illustrations, (New York, Basic Books: A Division of Harper Collins Publishers,
1977), p. 3
[2]
Grayling A. C., Among the Dead Cities: Was the Allied Bombing of Civilians in
WWII a Necessity or a Crime?, ( London, Bloomsbury, 2006), p. 214
[3]
Dower Nigel, The Ethics of War and Peace: Cosmopolitan and Other Perspectives,
(Cambridge, Polity Press, 2009), p. 18
[4]
Echevaria Antulio, Gray Colin, ‘Clausewitz and “How Has War Changed?”’, Journal
Article Excerpt, Parameters, Vol. 35, (2005)
[5]
Jowett B., Thucydides, Vol. I, (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1881), p. 407
[6]
Jowett B., Thucydides, Vol. I, (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1881), p. 399
[7]
Walzer Michael, Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical
Illustrations, (New York, Basic Books: A Division of Harper Collins Publishers,
1977), p.
[8]
Dower Nigel, The Ethics of War and Peace: Cosmopolitan and Other Perspectives,
(Cambridge, Polity Press, 2009), p. 2
[9]
Grayling A. C., Among the Dead Cities: Was the Allied Bombing of Civilians in
WWII a Necessity or a Crime?, ( London, Bloomsbury, 2006), p. 214
[10] Packer George, ‘Letter From Dresden
EMBERS: Will a prideful city finally confront its past?’, The New Yorker (01
February 2010), p. 32
[11]
Rengger Nicholas, ‘On the Just War Tradition in the Twenty-First Century’,
International Affairs, Vol. 78, No. 2 (April 2002), p. 359
[12]
Dower Nigel, The Ethics of War and Peace: Cosmopolitan and Other Perspectives,
(Cambridge, Polity Press, 2009), p. 94
[13]
Rengger Nicholas, ‘On the Just War Tradition in the Twenty-First Century’,
International Affairs, Vol. 78, No. 2 (April 2002), p. 356
[14]
Johnson James Turner, Morality and Contemporary Warfare, ( New Haven and
London, Yale University Press, 1999), p. 58
[15]
Clausewitz von Carl, On War, (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2008), p 28
[16] http://www.un.org/en/documents/charter/chapter1.shtml,
24-03-10, 18.56pm
[17]
Johnson James Turner, Morality and Contemporary Warfare, ( New Haven and
London, Yale University Press, 1999), p. 69
[18]
Walzer Michael, Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical
Illustrations, (New York, Basic Books: A Division of Harper Collins Publishers,
1977),p. 12
[19]
Thomas Ward, The Ethics of Destruction: Norms and Force in International
Relations, (Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 2001), p. 158
[20]
Byman Daniel, Waxman Matthew, ‘ Kosovo and the Great Air Power Debate’,
International Security, Vol. 24, No. 4, (Spring 2000), p. 5
[21]
Thomas Ward, The Ethics of Destruction: Norms and Force in International
Relations, (Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 2001), p. 162
[22]
Byman Daniel, Waxman Matthew, ‘ Kosovo and the Great Air Power Debate’,
International Security, Vol. 24, No. 4, (Spring 2000), p. 33
[23]
Byman Daniel, Waxman Matthew, ‘ Kosovo and the Great Air Power Debate’,
International Security, Vol. 24, No. 4, (Spring 2000), p. 38
[24]
Kahl, Colin H., ‘How We Fight’, Foreign Affairs, Vol. 85, Issue 6, (Nov/Dec
2006), pp. 83-101
[25]
Kahl, Colin H., ‘How We Fight’, Foreign Affairs, Vol. 85, Issue 6, (Nov/Dec
2006), pp. 83-101
[26]
Thomas Ward, The Ethics of Destruction: Norms and Force in International
Relations, (Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 2001), p. 171
[27]
Thomas Ward, The Ethics of Destruction: Norms and Force in International
Relations, (Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 2001), p. 175
[28]
Rengger Nicholas, ‘On the Just War Tradition in the Twenty-First Century’,
International Affairs, Vol. 78, No. 2 (April 2002), p. 357
[29]
Clausewitz von Carl, On War, (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2008), p. 14
[30]
Coates A. J., The Ethics of War, (Manchester and New York, Manchester
University Press, 1997), p. 227
Thursday, May 24, 2012
The Greek Grand Canyon, Meteora!
Meteora is a majestic, unique place found in the centre of Greece, in the area of Thessaly, next to Kalambaka, where it meets the foothills of the massive Pindos mountain range. The name, Meteora, literally means suspended in the air, which is the name given to the group of tall, precipitous rocks that predominate in that area, together with the monastic community that is formed by the monasteries which are built on top of them, being located half way between earth and the heavens. The rock formations were created by river segment when they were underwater millions of years ago. They were moulded by the river waters, winds and pressure, giving us these lovely and weird rock shapes.
The Holy Meteora is the second most important monastic community, after Mount Athos in Macedonia (Northern Greece). It has been acknowledged by UNESCO as a Monument of Global Cultural Heritage. Since 1995 the Greek State acknowledged the holiness of Meteora by Law, characterising it sacred, intact and inviolate, so as to secure its authenticity and reassure its effective protection.
The site of this unique place strikes the visitor with a curious mixture of awe and amazement. This is heightened by the fact that many became monks here, building amazing monastic complexes on the top of rocks, away from cities and people, becoming hermits, finding spiritual tranquillity. It was the ideal refuge for the hermits and the anchorites, who put their lives in danger by climbing on the peaks and the cavities that had been formed, so as to live away from society.
According to tradition, the first hermits had already settled by 9th century AD. However, it is more likely that they actually resided there around the 11th century, as it was the time that anchorites and hermits from all over Greece gradually commenced moving towards cavities of rocks, seeking peace of mind, serenity and undisturbed communication with God. This spiritual place has given Orthodoxy countless saints, leaving behind important work and fascinating monasteries, with unparalleled iconographic paradigms from the Cretan and Macedonian School of Byzantine Iconography. Currently there are six monasteries, which are all that remain from the glorious past, of more than 20 monasteries.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Thermopyles
In the year 480 B.C., in Thermopyles, the most astonishing and unequal battle between few Greeks and a million Persians took place. This battle is one of the most famous and important battles in World History.
300 Spartans and 700 Thespians under the orders of Leonidas, King of Sparta, decided to fight against the Persians and win or die, defending the freedom of their country. According to Herodotus, the Father of History, the Persian army consisted of about one million seven hundred thousand soldiers who were under the command of king Xerxes.
The Persians asked the defenders to give their arms up, however, Leonidas replied to them with the heroic phrase, "Come and Get Them" This phrase has been and will always be a bright paradigm for the generations to come of an important and brave Greek army.
On Kolonos an epitaph was placed to honour the dead soldiers. The epitaph has the following message engraved on it: " You stranger, go to the Lakedaimonians and let them know that we lie here, faithful to their laws".
During the 1st century A.D. the philosopher Apollonios Tyanefs visited Thermopyles. Someone asked him which is the highest mountain in the world. He replied: "Kolonos is the highest mountain in the world, because on this mountain the law keeping and the noble self-sacrifice have put up a monument, which has its base on the earth and reaches the stars".
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