perspective – Latin Translation – Keybot Dictionary
TTN Translation Network
TTN
TTN
Login
Deutsch
Français
Source Languages
Target Languages
Select
Select
Keybot
13
Results
6
Domains
www.hoonved.com
Show text
Show cached source
Open source URL
These have been styled barbarian invasions, but that invokes an image of warlike hooligans deliberately assaulting the bastions of civilisation, and reflects a distinctly Roman
perspective
(or perhaps even propaganda, but that sort of thing wouldn't happen these days).
Compare text pages
Compare HTM pages
Open source URL
Open target URL
Define
medievalwriting.50megs.com
as primary domain
Periodic assaults on the use of vernacular languages in a religious context coincided with the suppression of heresy or the imposition of orthodoxy. The Gothic Bibles of Theoderic the Ostrogoth were destroyed and scraped down because they were associated with the Arian heresy. The reform of Benedictine monasticism in England in the 10th century was followed by a return to Latin rather than Old English texts, a process enhanced by the effects of the Norman conquest of England. Irish vernacular texts disappeared from the church with monastic reforms. The vernacular Bibles of the Lollards were banned. Latin was sacred, but also exclusive and an instrument of power.
dainvest.gr
Show text
Show cached source
Open source URL
These have been styled barbarian invasions, but that invokes an image of warlike hooligans deliberately assaulting the bastions of civilisation, and reflects a distinctly Roman
perspective
(or perhaps even propaganda, but that sort of thing wouldn't happen these days).
Compare text pages
Compare HTM pages
Open source URL
Open target URL
Define
medievalwriting.50megs.com
as primary domain
Periodic assaults on the use of vernacular languages in a religious context coincided with the suppression of heresy or the imposition of orthodoxy. The Gothic Bibles of Theoderic the Ostrogoth were destroyed and scraped down because they were associated with the Arian heresy. The reform of Benedictine monasticism in England in the 10th century was followed by a return to Latin rather than Old English texts, a process enhanced by the effects of the Norman conquest of England. Irish vernacular texts disappeared from the church with monastic reforms. The vernacular Bibles of the Lollards were banned. Latin was sacred, but also exclusive and an instrument of power.