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Rudolf II and Prague

The Imperial Court and Residential City as the Cultural and Spiritual Heart Od Central Europe

Parámetros

  • 392 páginas
  • 14 horas de lectura

Más información sobre el libro

Rudolf II of Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor, King of Bohemia and Hungary, was an extraordinary ruler, a monarch whose court occupied a central position in 16th-century Europe - yet he remained a shadowy and fugitive figure. The decades around 1600 saw sweeping cultural changes in Europe, with the waning of an old-world view and the beginnings of the 17th-century intellectual revolution. The author argues that the conflict which played itself out in the Hapsburg lands during these years was a political manifestation of the intellectual confrontation between the old guard and their preoccupation with the mystical, spiritual and hermetic sciences, and the rise of a more rational and empirical view of the world. Rudolf, as the embodiment of the old philosophy, failed to grasp this profound shift in the prevailing climate, and this failure ultimately led to his tragic downfall.

Compra de libros

Rudolf II and Prague, Eliška Fučíková

Idioma
Publicado en
1997
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(Tapa blanda),
Estado del libro
Muy Bueno
Precio
10,49 €

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Título
Rudolf II and Prague
Subtítulo
The Imperial Court and Residential City as the Cultural and Spiritual Heart Od Central Europe
Idioma
Inglés
Formato
Tapa blanda
Páginas
392
ISBN10
0500279861
ISBN13
9780500279861
Serie
Descripción
Rudolf II of Hapsburg, Holy Roman Emperor, King of Bohemia and Hungary, was an extraordinary ruler, a monarch whose court occupied a central position in 16th-century Europe - yet he remained a shadowy and fugitive figure. The decades around 1600 saw sweeping cultural changes in Europe, with the waning of an old-world view and the beginnings of the 17th-century intellectual revolution. The author argues that the conflict which played itself out in the Hapsburg lands during these years was a political manifestation of the intellectual confrontation between the old guard and their preoccupation with the mystical, spiritual and hermetic sciences, and the rise of a more rational and empirical view of the world. Rudolf, as the embodiment of the old philosophy, failed to grasp this profound shift in the prevailing climate, and this failure ultimately led to his tragic downfall.