◄ Frauenkirche, Dresden [HD] ►
Frauenkirche - HD footage, information and facts on Frauenkirche, also known as the Church of Our Lady. Frauenkirche is one of the most stunning churches in whole Germany. It has a very unique exterior due to its troublesome history.
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Berlin Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Berlin – Germany’s capital city has had a long and storied past, making it a fascinating place to visit today. Check out the top sights in Berlin!
When ready, browse vacation packages to Berlin:
Your #Berlin #vacation should include a #tour of the incredible architecture of the city owed to its lengthy history. From the Charlottenburg Palace to the Bahn Tower, you’ll find plenty to look at in the city’s downtown area. Stop by Prater Garten for a German brew—built in 1837, it’s one of few buildings that has survived both World Wars.
#Visit Museum Island, located in the Spree River. It features five museums where you can explore the art of numerous cultures, or wander through a replica of the Ishtar Gate.
If you’re looking for a thriving nightlife, Berlin is the place to go. When the sun sets on the city, the party really begins, and you can find any number of clubs where you can dance until long after the sun comes up.
For now, we hope you enjoy watching this #travel #guide as much as we enjoyed making it.
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Official welcomes pope's regret, cathedral visit
(9 May 2009) SHOTLIST
1. Pope Benedict XVI and Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vatican secretary of state, inside al-Hussein bin Talal mosque
2. Pope touring mosque
3. Wide exterior of mosque
4. Cardinals, bishops sitting down before speeches
5. Wide of Prince Ghazi bin Mohammed of Jordan speaking
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Prince Ghazi bin Mohammed of Jordan:
As a Muslim, I bid your Holiness welcome today, as we understand this visit to be a deliberate gesture of good will and mutual respect from the supreme spiritual leader and pontiff of the largest denomination of the world's largest religion to the world's second largest religion.
7. Pope listening
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Prince Ghazi bin Mohammed of Jordan:
I must also thank you, Holiness, for the regret you expressed after the Regensburg lecture of September 13th, 2006 for the hurt caused by this lecture to Muslims.
9. Audience
10. Benedict XVI and Ghazi bin Mohammed shaking hands
11. Wide of pope approaching lectern
12. Various of audience
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Pope Benedict XVI (starts under previous shot)
Certainly, the contradiction of tensions and divisions between the followers of different religious traditions, sadly, cannot be denied. However, is it not also the case that often it is the ideological manipulation of religion, sometimes for political ends, that is the real catalyst for tension and division, and at times even violence in society?
14. Audience clapping
16. Pope shaking hands with Ghazi bin Mohammed at end of speech
17. Overhead shot of Pope Benedict XVI arriving at Greek-Melkite Cathedral of Saint-Georges
18. Various of pope walking among crowd
19. Overhead of crowd cheering
20. Pope waving
21. Top view of congregation
22. SOUNDBITE (French) Gregory III Laham, Patriarch of the Church of Antioch
Holy Father, blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord, Benedictus, Benedict our Pope.
23. Mid of pope
24. Mid of procession AUDIO: chanting
25. Mid of Pope AUDIO: chanting
26. Top view of congregation AUDIO: chanting
27. Zoom into pope receiving book AUDIO: chanting
28. Top view of congregation
29. SOUNDBITE (English) Pope Benedict XVI: (++PARTLY OVERLAID WITH PAN OF AUDIENCE++)
The Church herself is a pilgrim people and thus, through the centuries, has been marked by determined historical events and pervading cultural epochs. Sadly, some of these (periods) have included times of theological dispute or periods of repression. Others, however, have been moments of reconciliation, marvellously strengthening the communion of the Church, and times of rich cultural revival, to which Eastern Christians have contributed so greatly.
30. Top view of congregation
31. SOUNDBITE (English) Pope Benedict XVI: (++PARTLY OVERLAID WITH VARIOUS OF BISHOPS AND NUNS++)
And, just as two thousand years ago it was in Antioch that the disciples were first called Christians, so also today, as small minorities in scattered communities across these lands, you too are recognised as followers of the Lord.
32. Top view of pope walking through crowd, leaving
STORYLINE:
The top religious adviser to Jordan's king on Saturday thanked Pope Benedict XVI for expressing regret after a speech that many Muslims deemed insulting to the Prophet Muhammad, but he complained that the West continued to have a distorted view of Islam.
Prince Ghazi bin Mohammed delivered his assessment after giving Benedict a tour of the biggest mosque in Amman - the pontiff's second visit to a Muslim place of worship since becoming pope in 2005.
Jordan is Pope Benedict's first stop on his first Middle East tour during which he hopes to improve strained ties with both Muslims and Jews.
But the prince said Muslims had felt hurt.
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Berlin Wall;Amazing facts about Berlin Wall(2018)
#BerlinWall,#BerlinwallFacts,#FactsAboutBarlinWall
The Berlin Wall was a guarded concrete barrier that physically and ideologically divided Berlin from 1961 to 1989.
The Berlin Wall was more than 140 kilometers (87 mi) long.
Around 5,000 people attempted to escape over the Berlin Wall, with an estimated death toll ranging from 136 to more than 200.
In 1963, an East German soldier stole a tank drove it through the Berlin Wall to escape.
The last person who died at the Berlin Wall attempted to escape in a hot air balloon but fell to his death.
The Berlin Wall was torn down by mistakenly-empowered citizens after an East German spokesman misspoke at a press conference and mentioned immediate border crossing privileges for every citizen.
David Bowie performed at the Berlin Wall in 1987 while East Germans gathered to listen behind. You could hear them cheering and singing along from the other side.
Usain Bolt owns a 3-ton segment of the Berlin Wall.
There is a section of the Berlin Wall in the men's bathroom of the Main Street Station casino in Las Vegas.
n 1989, Margaret Thatcher pleaded with Mikhail Gorbachev to keep the Berlin Wall up.
The 9th of November is a significant day in Germany. In 1918, Germany became a republic. In 1923, the Bier Hall Putsch in Munich. In 1938, Kristallnacht. In 1989, the Berlin Wall fell.
The Berlin Wall's actual demolition did not happen in 1989. It began in the summer of 1990 and was not completed until 1992.
Before the Berlin Wall's rction, 3.5 million East Germans defected from their country.
On 15 August 1961, Conrad Schumann was the first East German border guard to escape by jumping the barbed wire to West Berlin.
The East German government claimed that the Berlin Wall was an anti-fascist protective rampart intended to dissuade aggression from the West, but it was mostly to prevent their citizens from fleeing to West Berlin.
Inside the Berlin Wall ended up the ironically-named the Church of Reconciliation. GDR authorities ordered the church to be dynamited in 1985.
A Swedish woman married the Berlin Wall in front of a few guests in 1979. She was devastated when most of it was torn down in 1989.
In 1964, 57 people escaped from under the noses of East German border guards, through a tunnel under the Berlin Wall.
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Augmented reality app shows history of Berlin Wall
LEADIN:
Tourists visiting the Berlin Wall are stepping back in time using augmented reality.
They are using an app called Time Traveler - that creates videos of historical events when a smartphone or tablet is pointed in the direction of a monument or building.
STORYLINE
It is August 15th 1961.
Conrad Schumann, a 19-year old People's Army soldier from East Germany, is standing guard at the newly built barrier separating East and West Berlin.
On the other side of the barrier a crowd has gathered. They are calling for the soldiers on the opposite side to defect.
Suddenly Schumann starts running and after a few steps he is next to the barbed wire separating East and West Berlin.
He takes a leap, machine-gun in hand, and escapes to the Western side - and with that action creates one of the most enduring images of the Berlin Wall.
The photo of Schumann in mid-air, taken by Peter Leibing, became world famous and has been used for decades to illustrate those first confusing days when the East German authorities surprised the world by cordoning off the West Berlin.
The temporary barrier of barbed wire soon became a wall, with guard towers and a so-called death zone controlled by snipers and landmines.
Now, 25 years after the wall fell on November 9, 1989, visitors to the Berlin Wall Memorial at Bernauer Strasse can use a new app to get a feel for Schumann's escape, and 9 other events from the 28 years that the wall divided the German capital.
The Timetraveler app, developed by Robin Hardenberg in cooperation with Munich-based Metaio, uses augmented reality technology to show the historical video and photos on smartphones and tablets.
With the help of GPS the app guides the visitors to 10 sites.
Once there, the user clicks activate augmented reality and sees a regular feed from the camera on the screen.
But shortly after a video or photo will appear on the screen, superimposed on the current live feed, creating a mix of old and new video.
Standing at the viewing platform at Bernauer Strasse, Hardenberg explains:
Time Traveller is an app that allows you to experience history at the place where it happened. Here for example we are at the Berlin Wall strip and you can see what happened when the Church of Reconciliation was destroyed, it is a kind of symbol of the godlessness of this place. And what is special is that you see it here, you don't see it as a film on the iPad, but rather you see it at the place where it happened. It is like a window to the past.
The app is available for 1.79 euro 9around USD $2) both on iTunes and on Google Play.
The Berlin Wall once encircled the whole of West Berlin.
It started off as a simple barrier made from barbed wire.
But throughout the years the construction was reinforced.
A concrete wall was built in 1965, and soon after a second wall inside the East German territory, which created the so-called death strip between the two walls.
The final version of the wall was built in 1975 and ran for 150 kilometres (93 miles) around West Berlin.
It was 3.6 meters (11.8 feet) high and made up of thousands of slabs of reinforced concrete.
On November 9, 1989, after months of protests and political changes in both Moscow and Berlin and confusion surrounding new travel directives for East German citizens, the wall was breached and then opened.
After the fall, most of the wall was broken apart and taken away.
Today there are only a few places left in Berlin where visitors can come close to the original wall structure.
The Bernauer Strasse memorial is one of the hot spots for the Wall tourists, and one of the reasons Hardenberg decided to focus the app on that area.
It is really for tourists but also for anyone who is interested in the history of Berlin, he says.
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Christian Mungai - Missions Conference 2019 [Ambassador]
Global Outreach Pastor at Mariners Church, Christian Mungai, speaks at Biola University's annual Missions Conference on March 21, 2019.
Missions Conference is a yearly event for all students led by Biola's Student Missionary Union. Learn more about what it’s like to be a Biola student at
Is Russia a Threat to the West?
The answer to this question is an unequivocal “Yes.” We address some of the many frightening Russian activities, both internationally and domestically. Russia, under Vladimir Putin and the Russian Orthodox Church, is a military and religious dictatorship. In this program, we are especially focusing on Syria, the Mediterranean, Ukraine, North Korea and Russia’s ongoing persecution of the Jehovah's Witnesses, and show how the world is speeding towards nuclear World War III.
Eugen Drewermann on US Airbase Ramstein (9/8/2017)
Eugen Drewermann, German theologian & peace activist
recorded Sept. 8, 2017
Reconciliation Church Kaiserslautern, Germany
Excepts from Drewermann's monumental speech as part of the German peace movement's evening event surrounding demonstrations for the closing of the US Air Base Ramstein a few miles west of Kaiserslautern (K Town).
The airbase is instrumental for the US drone program in Near East and Northern Africa.
Original:
Credits: NuitDebout Munich
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Virgin Mary converts Harvard Professor Part 3 (Jewish Convert to Catholic)
December 5, 2013: Sacred Heart Church in Prescott, Arizona. Roy Schoeman, Jewish convert to Catholicism, explains Judaism's role in Salvation History, including the roles of anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.
Have Roy speak at your parish:
Pilgrimage with Roy to Israel May 28 to June 7, 2019:
Visit his website: SalvationisfromtheJews.com
Salvation Is from the Jews: $16.96 (Online Book Discount)
Honey from the Rock:
Roy Schoeman grew up studying Judaism under the most prominent Rabbis in American Judaism. After receiving a B.S. from M.I.T. and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School, he taught at Harvard. His conversion to Catholicism led to a dramatic refocus of his activities. He later encountered the Virgin Mary!! In his own words: Yet every night before going to sleep, I would say a short prayer to know the name of my Lord and Master and God whom I had met on the beach. A year to the day after the initial experience, I went to sleep after saying that prayer, and felt as though I was woken by a gentle hand on my shoulder, and escorted to a room where I was left alone with the most beautiful young woman I could imagine. I knew without being told that she was the Blessed Virgin Mary. I felt entirely awake (and my memory is as though I had been awake), although I was dreaming. I remember my first reaction, standing there awed by her presence and grandeur, was wishing I knew at least the Hail Mary so that I could honor her! She offered to answer any questions I had. I remember thinking about what to ask, asking the questions, and her answers. After speaking to me a while longer, the audience was ended. When I woke the next morning I was hopelessly in love with the Blessed Virgin Mary, and I knew that the God I had met on the beach was Christ, and, and that all I wanted was to be as much of, and as good a, Christian as possible. I still did not know anything about Christianity, nor the difference between the Catholic Church and any of the hundreds of Protestant denominations. It took me another two years or so to find my way to the Catholic Church, guided by my love and reverence for the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Tortured in Ukraine Christians Living a Nightmare
Gurdjieff's music -Caucasian Dance/ Gurdjieff Ensemble/ duduk, kamancha, tar, dhol, santur, oud...
gurdjieffensemble@gmail.com
CD label: ECM records
The Gurdjieff Folk Instruments Ensemble was founded in 2008 by the Armenian musician Levon Eskenian with the aim of creating ethnographically authentic arrangements of the G.I. Gurdjieff/Thomas de Hartmann piano music. The ensemble consists of leading Eastern folk instrumentalists in Armenia playing duduk, blul/nay, saz, tar, kiamancha, oud, kanon, santur, dap/daf, tombak and dhol.
Gurdjieff is known to many in the West as one of the major spiritual figures of the 20th century. His extraordinary musical repertoire was based on the music he heard during his journeys in Armenia, the Caucasus, the Middle East and many parts of Central Asia, India and North Africa, where he witnessed a myriad of folk and spiritual music, rituals and dance traditions. Levon Eskenian has chosen and arranged those pieces that have roots in Armenian, Greek, Arabic, Kurdish, Assyrian, and Caucasian folk and spiritual music for Eastern folk instruments. This piece is a version of a Shalakho dance, which is very popular dance in the Caucasian regions of Armenia and Georgia. It is a group dance with both men and women. The middle part is the emotive,gracefull solo dance which is performed by a girl.
Excerpt from concert in yerevan,Armenia,organized by Naregatsi Art Institute.
Avag Margaryan-blul/nay,Meri Vardanyan Kanon, Emmanuel Hovhannisyan- duduk ,ArmenAyvazyan-Kamancha,Aram Nikoghosyan-oud,Vladimir Papikyan-santur,Davit Avagyan-tar,Mesrop Khalatyan-dhol,Levon Eskenian-artistic director
Reax to new pope, includes Holocaust survivor
Church of the Nativity, Bethlehem, West Bank
1. Exterior of Church of the Nativity, bells ringing
2. Nuns walking into church
3. Tilt of church interior
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Amjad Sabara, Pastor Church of Nativity:
We are very happy to have (Pope) Benedict XVI, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, as new pope because he will have a good continuity of Pope John Paul II. And from his knowledge, and he is an expert in philosophy and theology, would be a good master for the church because he would give the real identity of the Catholic church in all of the world.
5. Various of people standing at alter
6. Candles burning, pan to man lighting candle
7. People walking inside church
8. Religious figurine
Tel Aviv, Israel
9. Set up shot of Rabbi Meir Lau working at his desk
SOUNDBITE: (English) Meir Lau, Chief Rabbi:
I think that Cardinal Ratzinger - Pope Benedictus XVI - is one of the most greatest friends of Israel in the Catholic church. He was indeed in World War II involved as child, maybe later in the army and he escaped from there. I wouldn't judge about his biography, it's not in my hands, I know about the last 20 years - he was very close to John Paul II and the approach of friendship to the Jewish people in general and to the State of Israel in particular was a part of the attitude of both - the last pope and present one.
10. Rabbi Meir Lau working at his desk
Jerusalem, Israel
11. Mark Regev, spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, speaking on cell phone outside of Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs building
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Mark Regev, spokesman, Israeli Foreign Ministry:
Israel welcomes the election of the new Pope. We congratulate him on this election. We're sure that under his papacy we will continue to see a strengthening relationship between Israel and the Vatican and between the Jewish people and the Catholic Church.
Ramallah, West Bank
13. SOUNDBITE: (English) Saeb Erekat, Palestinian Chief Negotiator:
We welcome the election of His Holiness Pope Benedictus XVI. And we are sure that he will continue to exerting every possible effort to end the suffering and pain of the Palestinian people, to deliver them from occupation towards freedom and independence.
14. Erekat gets into car
STORYLINE:
Political and religious leaders in the Middle East offered a cautious welcome on Wednesday Pope Benedict XVI, praising him for his strong condemnations of anti-Semitism, but withholding judgement on his readiness to follow in the ground breaking footsteps of his predecessor.
Benedict, a German who served in the Hitler Youth, sets off alarm bells for many Israelis - the memory of six (m) million Jews murdered at the hands of the Nazi's remain painfully close to the surface.
In his memoirs, Benedict wrote of being enrolled in Hitler's Nazi youth movement against his will when he was 14 in 1941, when membership was compulsory.
In 1943, he was drafted into a Nazi anti-aircraft unit in Munich as a helper, a common fate for teenage boys too young to be soldiers.
He later built tank barriers at the Austria-Hungary border, and wrote that he escaped recruitment in the dreaded Nazi SS because he said he was a priest in training.
He deserted in April 1945 and returned home to Traunstein, where he was known for playing Mozart on the seminary's grand piano.
After U.S. Troops arrived in his town, Ratzinger was identified as a deserter and placed in a prisoner-of-war camp.
Meir Lau, Chief Rabbi, said from Tel Aviv that Benedict was one of the greatest friends of Israel in the Catholic church, and that he would not judge the new Pope on his biography.
Israelis widely admired Pope John Paul II for his unstinting efforts to promote Jewish-Catholic reconciliation.
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St. Mary's Church, Carlton. Bedfordshire
Filmed with Mavic Pro.
Music licensed by Epidemicsound.com
Titles: Reconcile by Peter Sandberg and Church Bell Sound FX
Visit Drone Seekers at
The History of the Church
Carlton Church is first mentioned in 1206, when Gerinus de Leigh held the right to appoint the priest. By that time the church had already been standing for 250 years.
The building was begun around 950, and originally consisted of a nave with a short chancel. By 1100 the west tower had been added. Evidence of the Saxon origin of the church can be seen in the exterior of the north wall of the chancel and lower windows in the tower.
In 1275 the south aisle was built, and in 1310 the north aisle and doorway were added. In 1330 the chancel was lengthened and the south chapel built. This chapel was later taken down and the windows re-used in the east wall of the south aisle and the south wall of the chancel, where the blocked up arch is visible. At this time also a chamber with a lean-to roof was built at the south-west corner against the tower and the wall of the south aisle. This was probably a priest’s house and the remains of a chimney can be seen at first floor level outside.
The 15th century saw more alterations to the church. A half-arch was made in the north arcade near the organ. This may have been a ‘squint’ allowing a better view from the north aisle. The clerestory was added, and also at this time the belfry stage of the tower was rebuilt. Diagonal buttresses were added and the spiral staircase inserted in the north-west corner. The present porch was rebuilt and replaces one that was a little to the east. The rood screen, also 15th century,would have supported a loft. The loft has been destroyed, but the chuch building as we see it now was complete.
Later centuries have seen changes only in furniture and fittings.Most of the nave pews were installed in the 16th century and the pulpit is 17th century, but on a modern base. The fine stained glass in the 14th century east window was made by F. X. Zettler of Munich in 1904. The organ dates from 1920. There is a story that local men serving in France during the First World War ran a lucrative pig farm in their spare time, and that the organ was purchased with the proceeds!
The tower contains six bells; the treble and second were cast by Taylors of Loughborough in 1997 and 1994 respectively; the third by Hugh Watts, 1602, and inscribed ‘Praise the Lorde’; the fourth by Taylors in 1868; the fifth was recast by Gillett and Johnston in 1920 and retains the old inscription ‘S. Marthe’. The tenor is now believed to have been cast by John Mitchel of Wokingham c.1490; it is dedicated to St. John and carries the inscription’ In multis annis resonet campana Johannis’. The bells are rung every Sunday before morning worship.
Recently extensive restoration work has been carried out on the exterior stonework. The north and south aisle roofs have been re-covered and work on the roof timbers can be seen from inside. The two windows that were formerly in the old south chapel have been restored as memorials.
Web:
Prof. Robert Weiner: The Origins of World War II
Robert Weiner, Jones Professor of History, lectures on The Origins of World War II as part of Lafayette College's Alumni Summer College. See alumnicollege.lafayette.edu for details.
British Prince Charles visits Orthodox Patriarchate of Belgrade
The Crown Price of the United Kingdom visited Orthodox Patriarchate of Belgrade and His holiness Belgrade Patriarch Irenaeus. 3/16/2016
Age of Anger: Pankaj Mishra
For more on this event, visit:
For more on the Berkley Center, visit:
March 2, 2017 | Political systems across the world have seen stunning upheavals in recent years, as voters fueled by anger and frustration have upset the established order. The historic Brexit vote, the election of Donald Trump, and the growing popularity of right-wing political parties across Europe serve as just a few examples of this global phenomenon.
Pankaj Mishra—one of the most original and incisive public intellectuals working in English today—came to Georgetown for a public conversation centered on his acclaimed new book, Age of Anger: A History of the Present. In the book Mishra links up the political anger in the United States, the United Kingdom, and in right-wing-friendly France to the anger in Turkey, India, and elsewhere, and proposes that all this anger has a common source: the resentment articulated by Rousseau and then by Nietzsche, the anger of “young provincials against a largely metropolitan civilization of slick movers and shakers that seemed to deny them an authentic and rooted existence.”
Mishra was in conversation with author and Berkley Center Senior Fellow Paul Elie, editor of Mishra’s books Temptations of the West and From the Ruins of Empire.
John McCain’s memorial at the National Cathedral
The Washington Post brings you live coverage and analysis of a national memorial service celebrating Sen. John McCain’s life at the National Cathedral in D.C. Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube:
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NUREMBERG “EXECUTION”/ english subtitles
At a small exhibition on the US military chaplains history, in a Lutheran seminary in the city of St. Louis of Missouri a very strange letter is exhibited. It was signed by the top commanders of the Third Reich! Göring, Frank, Kaltenbrunner, Speer, Keitel, Ribbentrop ... All were the defendants of the the International military tribunal at Nuremberg - 21 people!
The letter is addressed to the usual American homemaker Alma Gereke, the wife of pastor Henry Gereke, who was sent to Nuremberg to try to return the defendants to obedience.
The Nazi criminals were imploring the pastor's wife to let him stay with them until the end. And the end was one for all of them - the execution ...
Henry Gereke had never publicly spoken on his mission at the IMT. He pledged his word to remain tight-lipped about the events of those days. Why? This became known only now.
This is the first documentary about a priest who dared to enter the Nuremberg prison with an infeasible mission - to try to save the souls of those who had killed millions of people.
Did the Nazis feel repentance? What did they think about before the execution? What were their last words? How did they face death? Who, after all, helped Hermann Göring to quit the gallows?
Answers to these questions, as well as the terrifying confession of Niklas, the son of the Polish Butcher Hans Frank, Governor General of the occupied Poland, who has devoted his life to anathematize the memory of his father are revealed in the documentary film Execution.
Nationalism: A benefit for America? — with Rich Lowry and Colin Dueck | VIEWPOINT
BOOK — Age of Iron: On Conservative Nationalism
BOOK — The Case for Nationalism: How it Made Us Powerful, United, and Free
Nationalism has become a contentious topic in American politics, especially after the election of Donald Trump in 2016. But according to AEI's Colin Dueck and Rich Lowry, editor of National Review, nationalism is the oldest tradition in American politics and offers tremendous benefits to the United States. In their new books “Age of Iron” and The Case for Nationalism, Dueck and Lowry offer a broader perspective on nationalism and its impact on American domestic and foreign policy.
Subscribe to AEI's YouTube Channel
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For more information
Photo credits:
Twenty20
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#aei #news #politics #government #nationalism #trump #patriot
History: UKRAINE
Crimea:
Cossacks helped Russia get Crimea from Turkey 39:43
Donbas (East) 56:55
Crimea turned over to Ukraine 2:16:28
Russia 12:46 / 31:16
UKRAINE - THE BIRTH OF A NATION (2008) / A Jerzy Hoffman Film
1:34 Kyiv (401 - 500)
2:16 Byzantium (330–1453)
2:45 Princess Olga (890 - 969) adopted Christianity
3:28 Chersonesus in Crimea
4:06 Volodymyr the Great (958 - 1015)
4:29 Prince Yaroslav the Wise (978 - 1054)
4:39 Saint Sophia's Cathedral (1100)
5:31 Anna the Queen of France (1030 – 1075)
6:41 Volodymyr II Monomakh (1053-1125)
7:20 Yuri Dolgorukiy (1099 - 1157)
7:26 Moscow
7:37 The Mongols
10:16 The Principality of Galicia–Volhynia or Kingdom of Rus
10:49 Lviv
12:37 Ivan III of Russia (1440-1505)
12:46 The myth about Russia
13:07 Crimea
13:53 Roxolana (1502 – 1558)
15:20 serfdom (Polish oppression)
15:40 printing press
17:14 Zaporizhian Sich
18:33 Ukraine replaces the name Rus
18:40 cossack
20:15 Brest Union
20:18 The uniates
21:08 Hetman Sagaidachny (1570 - 1622)
23:05 Orthodoxy
23:28 Yarema Vyshnevetsky (1612 – 1651)
23:31 Catholicism
24:54 Bohdan Khmelnytsky (1595 – 1657)
30:04 The Pereyaslav Council -------------------------------------------------1654
34:39 Ivan Mazepa (1639 - 1709)
37:06 The Battle of Poltava on 27 June 1709
40:11 Zaporizhian Sich (1552-1709)
40:27 Solovki
French Revolution--------------------------------------------------------------------- 1789
47:03 Dumy - historical ballads
48:18 Greek Catholic Church banned
48:49 Kyiv University (1833)
49:48 The Order of Basilian Fathers
50:55 Taras Shevchenko (1814 - 1861) (age 47)
54:57 Blue and yellow banner
55:45 The Cyril and Methodius Brotherhood
56:32 national liberation movement
56:55 Crimean War ----------------------------------------------------- 1853 to 1856
57:07 Alexander II (1818 - 1881) abolished serfdom
57:26 city of Donetsk (1868)
58:56 Green wedge
59:23 Volodymyr Antonovych (1834 - 1908)
59:28 Mykhailo Drahomanov (1841-1895 )
1:00:42 Lesya Ukrainka (1871 - 1913) (aged 42)
1:02:13 The Shevchenko Scientific Society (1873 )
1:11:03 Mykhailo Hrushevsky
1:03:27 Ivan Franko (1856 - 1916)
1:04:22 History of Ukraine-Ruthenia
1:04:49 Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky (1865 - 1944) 1:45:42
1:06:31 World War I------------------------------------------------------------------1914
1:07:32 Dmitro Dontsov (1883 - 1973)
1:07:57 (1914) Russian occupation
1:11:24 Symon Petliura
1:11:24 West Ukrainian People's Republic
1:19:27 Ukrainian Galician Army
1:23:30 Nestor Makhno
1:30:48 The Russian famine ----------------------------------------------------1921
1:41:21 Ukr National Democratic Alliance, (UNDO)
1:42:20 Ukr Sich Riflemen
1:42:43 (UVO) Ukr Military Organization
1:42:51 Yevhen Konovalets
1:43:10 Dmytro Dontsov
1:44:01 The Organization of Ukr Nationalists (OUN)
1:44:52 (1933) Stepan Bandera head of OUN
1:47:07 Avgustyn Voloshyn
1:47:33 Melnyk's and Bandera's
1:39:06 collectivization (1939)
1:38:55 *** ???????????????????????????? ????????????????: !!! ???????????????????? 1:39:33
World War II ----------------------------------------------------------------(1939 - 1945)
1:51:24 The Nachtigall Battalion (Nightingale)
1:51:43 Independent Ukr State
1:44:50 Stepan Bandera (1909 – 1959) -----------------------------------1933
Between Hitler & Stalin: Ukraine in World War II
Wehrmacht Saves Innocent Civilians In Ukraine 1941
1:53:42 Babi Yar
1:55:40 partisan warfare
1:44:01 Organization of Ukr Nationalists (OUN)
1:57:42 Roman Shukhevych
1:58:37 Volyn
1:58:57 UPA - Ukrainian Insurgent Army
2:00:04 ethnic cleansing (1943)
2:02:32 SS Galicia Division
2:02:33 Banderavists (Bandera) split of OUN (former UVO) 1:47:26
2:02:25 Melnykovites (Melnyk)
2:02:57 SS Galicia crushed by the Red Army
2:04:51 Nikita Khrushchev
2:05:21 Joseph Stalin
1:39:56 RUSYN replaced the term Ukrainian
2:06:14 Gulag
2:06:31 Yalta
2:10:30 Operation Vistula (Polish: Akcja Wisła)
2:12:00 The Greek Catholic Church abolishment
2:12:21 Josyf Slipyj (1893 - 1984)
1:49:25 annexation of the Western Ukraine
2:16:33 turning Crimea over to Ukraine
2:18:25 Thaw (early 1950s to the early 1960s)
2:30:09 (April 26 1986) - Chornobyl disaster
2:35:30 Rukh - Movement
2:37:29 (1991) Declaration of Sovereignty of Ukraine
1:13:48 The Ukr People's Republic of 1918 - 1920
2:50:29 The Orange Revolution (2004)