#scala culture
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
I wanted to walk around Scala. I wanted to admire all the little canon worldbuilding details. I wanted to see all the different beautiful pieces of architecture they had set up, like the big gates, the towers, the arches, the plazas, all from different camera angles. I wanted to talk to the npcs and learn about the culture and what daily life is like in this era, how their systems work, what they complain about, what kinds of questions they might ask you. This is the first time weâve seen Scala with other people living in it. The beta was already so beautiful and rich with lore just waiting to be explored, and it still might be, but it wonât be the same if it isnât your own character and your own eyes experiencing the city

#khml#my posts#scala culture#holding onto overmorrow worldbuilding with a vice grip tears in my eyes#so much of it stems from what the beta showed#no matter what happens Iâll never forget how it felt to watch someoneâs beta playthrough and see scala come to life for the very first time#maybe the real missing link was the friends we made along the way
145 notes
¡
View notes
Text

đ NOUVEAUTĂ DOG COLLECTION : DĂŠcouvrez le PomĂŠranien ! đ
C'est officiel ! La 18áľ race de notre collection est arrivĂŠe, et c'est le magnifique PomĂŠranien Dog đž !
đ Très prisĂŠ Ă Paris, ce chien ne laisse personne indiffĂŠrent.
đś Quelle est VOTRE race prĂŠfĂŠrĂŠe ? Dites-le-nous en commentaire, et qui sait⌠elle pourrait ĂŞtre la prochaine de notre collection !
đ Commandez dès maintenant en DM. Ne tardez pas, les stocks sont limitĂŠs !
#artangelo2#t-shirts#spreadshirt#artists on tumblr#eugène stassin#tostadora#dogs#dog#typography#doggo#pomeranian#dogs of tumblr#doglover#cute dog#culture#teatro alla scala#piano#my sweet piano#spitz#german spitz
2 notes
¡
View notes
Text
On this postcard printed in Russia 1900 we see the great baritone Mattia Battistini (1856-1928).
Favourite of the Romanov's Family Mattia Battistini
Mattia Battistini was the most acclaimed singer of his time by the Russian aristocracy. He returned to Russia regularly for 23 seasons! Many times he have been in Odessa. An interesting story happened in our city was found in the diaries of the famour russian singer Yuriy Morfessi.
Mattia Battistini was born in Rome and brought up largely at Collebaccaro di Contigliano, a village near Rieti, where his parents had an estate.
A 22-year-old Battistini made his operatic debut at the Teatro Argentina, Rome, as Alfonso in Donizetti's La favorita, on 11 December 1878. During the first three years of his professional career he toured Italy, honing his voice and gaining invaluable experience by singing principal roles in such varied operas as La forza del destino, Il trovatore, Rigoletto, Il Guarany, Gli Ugonotti, Dinorah, L'Africana, I Puritani, Lucia di Lammermoor, Aida, and Ernani.
From 1892 onwards, Battistini established himself as an immense favourite with audiences at Russia's two imperial theatres in Saint Petersburg and Moscow: Mariinsky and Bolshoi. He returned to Russia regularly, appearing there for 23 seasons in total, and touring extensively elsewhere in Eastern Europe, using Warsaw as his stepping-stone.
Battistini recorded a lot and willingly; there are several dozen titles in his discography. These are not only arias from Italian operas - Verdi, Donizetti, Rossini; today you can listen to him performing Mozart, Weber and even Wagner. Battistini enjoyed the special favor of the royal Romanov family and became a favorite artist of the Russian nobility. The financial situation of Battistini was luxurious, any of his wishes were fulfilled. He traveled to Warsaw, Saint Petersburg, Moscow and Odessa like a prince, travelling in his own private rail coach with a retinue of servants and innumerable trunks containing a vast stage wardrobe renowned for its elegance and lavishness.
The singer's repertoire also included Russian music that was new at that time: in 1899 he performed in Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin on the stage of the Warsaw Opera House. Onegin performed by the recognised master of bel canto is an unexpected look at the music of Tchaikovsky for the modern listener.
He gave his last concert performance one year before his death, his voice was still in very fine condition. His career lasted almost 50 years!
An interesting story happened with the famous Russian singer of Greek origin Yuriy Morfessi during the Mattia Battistini's tour in Odessa.
Yuriy Morfessi wanted to become an architect, with the support of the Greek community he entered the school, but one day, returning home from classes, he noticed a large crowd on Primorsky Boulevard. People surrounded a strange apparatus with a bell, and the owner of this curiosity called out to the crowd: ââŹĹGreat Century's Wonder - a gramophone machine! It will record your voice, and whoever likes the recording will receive it for only 20 kopecks, which will make a step towards immortality, preserving his voice for posterity."
From the bell just sounded an anecdote with a stench, which was reveling in the big guy who was standing there and then who had just sounded that vulgarity, clearly anticipating the reaction of the descendants. Yuriy sighed, felt a few coins in his pocket, which he grabbed from breakfast in pencils, and handed the owner the gramophone. He put a brown plate on a rotating disk and turned the bell towards the next contender for immortality. Yura thought for a second what to say to the descendants, but did not say anything, and sang "The Weeping Willows Slumber", my mother's favourite romance. And when he finished, he felt that someone was pulling him to the side by the sleeve.
A short, elegant man said, Boy, you have a nice tone. It makes sense for you to see a specialist." The specialist turned out to be the famous Italian baritone Mattia Battistini, who was just on tour in Odessa. Battistini did not know the Russian language, and spoke delicious: "Bravissimo!"
From Yuriy Morfessi Diary:
Teachers, they directly advised: why do you need science, Morfessi? You will enter the theater, and life will teach you everything else. I myself was drawn to the theater ... I saved up money in order to listen to the operetta and the Italian opera that often came to us from the upper tiers of the gallery. Odessa was a very musical city, and who among the Italian stars did not tour with us: Marcella Zembrich, Mazini, Tamagno, Giraldoni and many others and, of course, the divine Battistini.
I remember my acquaintance with Battistini. Acquaintance is too loud, even blasphemous. With awe I stepped into the Londonskaya Hotel occupied by the king of baritones. You shouldn't tremble! A great artist, wrapped and caressed by world fame. I knew his biography. I knew that, unlike other Italian singers, Battistini was from an aristocratic family and in his youth served in the guard of his king. I also knew that many crowned heads of Europe, including our emperor, treated him with particular favor precisely because, being a great singer, he was also a man of high society.
After all this, my trepidation of a sixteen-year-old provincial youth is understandable. But the first impression dispelled all my fears. Battistini was charmingly simple with me. Sovereign simplicity, disarming and conquering. But there was something majestic about his manner. Many years later, remembering this meeting, after I got to St. Petersburg and saw the great light myself, I realized the simplicity of Battistini's evasion.
With a captivating smile, straightening the folds of the most wonderful business card - I have never seen one like this before - Battistini sat down at the piano, took a note and addressed me in French:
"Repeat!"
I, who had had time to listen to Battistini in a number of operas, took this note in his own style and spirit.
Removing his long, thin fingers from the key, the demigod looked at me in amazement.
"Young man, you have a rare imitative talent! You convey my voice with indescribable accuracy!
And, turning to my patron, Battistini continued: - He needs to go to Italy and go directly to the famous Cotoni. If he is even the second Cotoni, he will make himself a world name. Send it to Italy without wasting time! The wizard Cotoni will process his voice ...
I never got to Italy ... Everyday reality surrounded me from all sides, taking something, giving something in return. Where could one think of Italy! And here, in Odessa, my artistic career grew by leaps and bounds...
From: odessa-journal.com
#classical music#opera#music history#bel canto#composer#classical composer#aria#classical studies#maestro#chest voice#Mattia Battistini#baritone#Culture#Romanov's Family#King of Baritones#Royal Opera House#Covent Garden#La Scala#Teatro alla Scala#classical musician#classical musicians#classical history#history of music#historian of music#musician#musicians#diva#prima donna#poscard#antique postcard
1 note
¡
View note
Text
Highlight of the Day - 03.08.2024
Apart from the hot summer and the peak of holiday season, the world is abuzz with lots of developments. As the last 24 hours were full of several important news, we chose to share 3 current highlights for today. Kamala Harris the to-be-Democratic-Nominee for President of USA The highlight news of today is that Vice President Kamala Harris was able to collect enough Democratic Party delegateâŚ
#Actuality#Aerosmith Retires#Agenda 47#Amusement Park History#Brad Whitford#Cultural Milestones#Donald Trump#Dream on song#Elon Musk Legal Battle#Entertainment Updates#Harris vs trump#highlights of the day#Historic Events#Italy#Joe Biden#Joe Perry#Joey Kramer#Kamala Harris 2024#La Scala Theatre#learning by history#Legal News#Music Legends#Musical hits#Peace Out tour#Performing Arts History#Political News#President of USA#Project 2025#Rock And Roll Farewell#rock legends
0 notes
Text

they don't know I'm madly in love with a pic.
#basilica di santa Maria in Ara Coeli#scala dell' Arce Capitolina#roma#italy#santa margherita#marco benfial#âMorte di Santa Margherita da Cortonaâ#gothic#gotico#art#gothic art#culture#rome
1 note
¡
View note
Text
24H Ă Milan, en Italie

View On WordPress
#Castello Sforzesco#CathÊdrale de Milan#Cuisine milanaise#Culture italienne#DÊcouvrir Milan#Duomo#Galerie Vittorio Emanuele II#Italie#ItinÊraire Milan#La Cène de LÊonard de Vinci#Milan#Milan en une journÊe#Milan la culture#Milan la mode#Teatro alla Scala#Tourisme à Milan#Visite touristique#Voyage de 24 heures
0 notes
Text
This year (2024) the Opera season will open with the play La Forza Del Destino once again by Giuseppe Verdi. If you want to know more about the Opera, look here. You can watch it, as every year, on Raiuno on December 7th at 5:45 PM (GMT+1) [link here- you will need an Italian vpn to watch]. As for past year, you may listen to it on Rai Radio3 and watch it on Raiplay for 15 days after the end [link above are valid this time too].
7-8 Dicembre
Today (7 dicembre) is Milanoâs patron day, SantâAmbrogio, and the town is plenty of little-cozy-Christmas-like markets: these are called âObej Obejâ (it sounds like âobeyâ repeated twice) and are pretty famous in Italy. This name was given as a reminder of the time when the papal herald entered Milan and started giving gifts to the kids, and these kids yelled âoh bej oh bej!â that in Milanâs dialect means âoh nice oh nice!â.
Tonight will be also celebrated the opening of the Opera season at the theater La Scala, again in Milan. Itâs generally a huge party with many famous people, both political and not, followed by many TVs (but itâs not broadcasted âliveâ, you have to be there to see it). This year the chosen play is âAndrea ChĂŠnierâ.
Christmas lights and decorations mostly start showing up today and tomorrow (8 dicembre) - the Immacolata Concezione holiday (a religious holiday, but also a National holiday): people, staying home from work, start putting decorations in their houses and also Christmas shopping begins for real.
#curiositĂ curiosities#italy#italian#italiano#random italian stuff#culture#tradition#la scala#prima della scala#opera#plays#theatre#verdi#obej obej#sant'ambrogio#lombardy
26 notes
¡
View notes
Text
ALL OF THOSE VOICES
Louis Tomlinsonâs feature length documentary
⢠Louisupdates Tumblr:
âIt hit me like a ton of bricks. I was not prepared for it, not at all.â [x]
âIt had always been in my mind that it would be cool if we werenât the standard boyband that got given songs and sang them.â [x]
âLife always throws shit at you. Yes, Iâve had more to deal with than most people my age. But then, when the natural things happen in life, when things werenât going my way, I couldnât deal with it. I was like, Iâve already had so much to deal with in my life, so when am I going to start winning?â [x]
Louis at CCME with Liam Payne, & on the Late Late Show 2019 [x]
Louis plays Premios Telehit in Mexico City 2019, and Louisâ family describes Louisâ relationship with his mother Johanna [x]
Louis conversing with his family about the transition from breaking into the music industry to taking charge of his own life; rehearsing with voice coach Helene Horlyck for tour; clips from the Scala benefit concert for War Child in February 2020; and clips from the first Louis Tomlinson World Tour concerts in Barcelona and Madrid, March 2020, before the pandemic brought everything to a stop. [x]
Louis spends time with son Freddie in Los Angeles, including a magical moment flying a kite on the beach. âWhen youâre running with it, it looks really good, you should have a look! âCuz sometimes youâre just running forward, and youâre missing all the action!â [x]
Louis describing writing Faith In The Future in Mexico during lockdown, & the first LTWT22 concert, on 1 Feb 2022 in Dallas, Texas [x]
Louis starts to record his new album at Wendyhouse Studios in London [a repeat, x]
Louis in the studio with Theo Hutchcraft, recording his single, Saturdays [x]
Louis starts the Louis Tomlinson World Tour in February 2022. First stop: Dallas. [x]
Fans camping for shows [x]
Louis being one of the lads when touring on the road. [x]
16th March 2022, Los Angeles, USA. For the first time Freddie is coming to see his dad performing on stage. [x]
Louis works on Faith In The Future while on his first world tour. [x]
Louis and team start the tour in Iceland at the Blue Lagoon [x]
âItâs become a bit of a thing, for some reason, Iâve started challenging people to races. âCuz I used to be quick when I was about 16-years-old, and obviously fourteen years later, Iâm not as quick as maybe I think I am.â [x]
In Poland, Louis finds out he has a fracture in his right arm that will need to be immobilized (it wonât be the last time). [x]
LTWT22: from Doncaster to Latam [x]
Louis arrives to start tour in Latin America! And LTHQ interviews some experts on Latam fan culture who are not from South America. [x]
Louis takes in the successful Latam leg of LTWT and takes the band for an outing in Brazil. [x]
Louis and the band bond in Brazil. [x]
Louis and LT band sit down to listen to the final minutes of the new album (and the adorable Mr. Dinnadge). [x]
AFHF 2022: MALAGA [x]
AFHF MALAGA, and the sublime, unreleased Change [x]
One Direction comes to an end. [x]
Louis marvels how he started LTWT with venues of â2000 capâ in the USA and ended with 30,000+ in Milan (3.9.2022). [x]
The End [x]
⢠AOTV TikTok:
part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, part 6, part 7, part 8, part 9, part 10, part 11, part 12, part 13, part 14, part 15, part 16, part 17, part 18, part 19, part 20, part 21, part 22, part 23, part 24, part 25, part 26, part 27, part 28
⢠TOKYO PREMIERE (13.3.2023): Tumblr
⢠MEXICO CITY PREMIERE (20.3.2023): Tumblr
⢠LONDON PREMIERE (13.5.2023): Insta, Tumblr
INSTAGRAM TEASERS:
27.3.25: âIt was so fucking fun.â
28.3.25: âI was like, well if Iâm not gonna fucking sing, then what else, what else can I do for this band? ⌠It had always been in my mind that it would be cool if we werenât the standard boyband that got given songs and sang them.â
29.3.25: âWhere I left One Direction was Iâd come off the stage feeling like⌠a God.â
30.3.25 âThis is my first headline show. Ten songs with you guys! I just want to say thank you. The rain has been fucking awful. Thank you for staying. Letâs have a good time! Iâm going to be singing a few of my singles, a few of my new ones.â Louis at CCME in Madrid, 2019.
31.3.25 âThereâs always been a fantastic bond between Louis and his mum.â
2.4.25: A look at Louis Tomlinsonâs debut solo show at Scala, London - February 2020
3.4.25: Louis starts to record his new album at Wendyhouse Studios in London
5.4.25: âI hear a lot about when they have a tour bus, they convert the back lounge into a bedroom for them. If they want to do that, thatâs fine, but Louis didnât do that. We had the back lounge as a back lounge. He just had a bunk like everyone else.â
6.4.25: âIt was a really nice feeling going from not touring at all, to what felt like every leg of the tour in terms of size, getting bigger and bigger and bigger.â
7.4.25: âI never had this luxury of playing Doncaster in the band. From the first two songs I was out there, it just felt so f**king special.â
8.4.25: âIt feels so good to be back in these places because Iâm lucky enough to have people here who want to see meâ
9.4.25: âBringing my mates along means sharing those moments and remembering not to take any of it for granted.â Louis and his team helicopter to a lush escape aboard a Brazilian yacht.
11.4.25: âStanding there today, It hit me hard. This is everything Iâve ever worked for. Everything Iâve ever wanted.â
13.4.25: Creating âFaith In The Futureâ whilst on tour.
14.4.25: âWhatâs been so nice about this tour is feeling the chemistry bubbling between us as a band... Having these moments of togetherness makes the show better.â
15.4.25: âGetting rid of my self-doubt and embracing my confidence naturally leads to better writing because it means youâre willing to be brave.â
16.4.25: âWhen Iâm on stage, the energy in the room is undeniable. Itâs pure passion and overwhelming support.â
17.4.25: Louis Tomlinson on The Late Late Show with James Corden, Los Angeles â October 2019.
19.4.25: Louis Tomlinson and Niall Horan backstage before playing the same festival in Mexico.
20.4.25: Louis gets ready for his first solo tour with vocal rehearsals.
23.4.25: âPart of the magic was that you were going through this mind altering situation but thatâs what made it feel amazing.â
38 notes
¡
View notes
Text

Amber necklace sixth century B.C.,
Hallstatt culture, Wierzbnica, Poland.
Photography by BPK, Scala, Florence
#art#history#design#style#archeology#sculpture#amber#necklace#poland#wierzbnica#hallstatt culture#jewellery#jewelry#fashion
517 notes
¡
View notes
Text
hi please consider this late night thought I had:

#my art#khml#ephemer#I always joked about how daybreak town pride parades must go hard#that carries over into scala :)#happy pride đ#timeless child#my posts#scala culture
236 notes
¡
View notes
Note
Hi Ale,
Since youâre Italian, can you explain why some of the Italian ballet stars arenât as famous as the Russian or American dancers? Eg Virna Toppi, Susanna Salvi, Nicoletta Manni?
The only Italian dancers whoâve basically made themselves international stars in the ballet world by are/were Ferri, Fracci, Bolle and now Tissi.
I honestly think that it itâs because of two reasons:
1. how they market themselves. American dancers use social media to get big (Isabella Boylston, Skylar Brandt, Tiler Peck) and for Russia itâs basically based on if you align yourself with Putin policies (Polunin, Zakharova, Gracheva, Shipulina is married to a vocal supporter, I think Zhiganshina posted a pro-Russia thing too?) or not (Smirnova, Osipova)
None of the Italian dancers really have a way to get themselves known in the international world imo. Italy is known for opera, food, and painting, I wouldnât see ballet at La Scala unless there was a Russian there. (Side note: I loved how La Scala didnât invite Zakharova for their recent Swan Lake, but they hired Smirnova insteadđitâs your loss, Sveta!)
2. I hate saying this, especially during the war, but Russia is basically the hot spot of ballet right now because of their rigorous training, the quality of good dancers, and sink or swim mentalities. Most people regardless if theyâre in the ballet world donât really see Italy as a ballet hotspot. Russia is THE place for ballet. Same with their ice skating, gymnastics and rhythmic gymnastics. They put the best time and effort into those whoâve given up their childhood to train.
Is there any other reasons why Italian stars arenât big worldwide?
Hmm I have a lot of mixed thoughts to your points here.
As someone who's currently in Italy, Roberto Bolle is absolutely a household name. Nicoletta Manni and to a slightly lesser extent, Timofej Andrijashenko are both quite popular and well known. Manni is everywhere, even more so after their proposal at the Arena di Verona went viral. You can see her in advertisements, on the posters of La Scala, and frequently in the news. Nicoletta was just titled as "Officer of Merit" of the Italian Republic and publically recognized by our president, Sergio Mattarella. A few days later, she received the "Women of the Year" award by a promiemnt womens rights group called "Associazione Nazionale Donne Elettrici".
Italy has a diverse and robust culture and ballet at La Scala has historically been a part of that. Many Italian dancers and arts organizations are not as social media crazy as in other countries, we're more concerned with the art form and preserving its nature and longevity - not advertising it as something it's not or playing it up to match fickle trends. The historical importance is why La Scala has been a cultural center of high arts for centuries now, so many international stars speak so highly about it and desire to perform here- ballet, opera, and orchestra. Also, disrespectfully, if you wouldn't go see the ballet La Scala without a Russian headliner, then let someone else have your ticket. You don't know what you're missing.
2. I actually don't think Russia is the hotspot for ballet currently. The quality of training has declined at both BBA and VBA, and both of their main companies are being drastically mismanaged under politically messy leadership. The quality of good dancers remains, but most are from an older era. Furthermore, the training in Russia is quickly becoming dated, their dancers are not graduating with the skills to succeed in a repertoire that goes beyond Petitpa (and often lately, even the Petipa leaves a lot to be desired)
More importantly, ballet in Russia is not evolving or innovating. There are so few premieres with merit nowadays. A decent Coppelia and a stolen Pharoah's Daughter and some unremarkable, dated neoclassical pieces. Russian ballet has not taken off during the war, it's dying. MT's and BT's licenses to perform works are expiring left and right, BT has been performing Ratmansky's work without permission and credit to bolster their repertoire. Furthermore, no foreigners are coming to create commissions, many talented Russian choreographers have left the country such as Ilya Zhivoi and we're long past the golden age of Soviet innovation on stage.
In my opinion, the current hotspots are where new works are being created to great acclaim, and ballet is finding new audiences and new heights. The UK, with the Royal, English National, Akram Khan, Wayne McGregor, Matthew Bourne, Rambert, and fantastic curation by Sadlerâs Wells. Canada, with the National Ballet's exciting rep, Medhi Walerski and Ballet BC and their collaborations with Ăcole supĂŠrieure de ballet du QuĂŠbec, Crystal Pite's Kidd Pivot. Germany And then of course, New York with Kyle Abraham, Lauren Lovette, and Robert Battle at Paul Taylor, Yin Yue and her company YYDC, GALLIM, and the multitudes of creation spaces like ABT's Incubator, DANCE LAB NYC, and that's before we even get to the commercial scene.
42 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Headcanon: the number 7 is considered a holy and lucky number in Scala society. People believe that if you incorporate it into your daily life, it will provide you with protection and prosperity.
This belief is so commonplace and has existed for so long now that it's not just reserved to the culture, it's ingrained in a lot of regulations and laws too. Not everybody believes in the idea, but it's widely accepted as just a normal part of life, with few people questioning where it came from, why it's here, and if it's even true.
This is also why it's common practice in Scala for Keyblade wielding schools to require exactly seven students per class. Aside from the rule that dictates that this be the case, it's simply believed that a class is more likely to be successful and pass their Mark of Mastery exam if there are seven students.
Becoming a Keyblade wielder is a highly sought after thing due to their high status in Scala society, and the criteria to be accepted into a school is pretty strict, so finding exactly seven students per class is rarely ever an issue.
48 notes
¡
View notes
Text
In 1920, Syria Palestina was a Roman-named colony or region, not a country, (aka Palestine), stretching from Iraq to southern Syria, and of course, there was no country called Jordan. The word Palestine was 100% derived from the Hebrew name for the Philistines. There is no evidence of a written language left by the philistines and the only name that they were known by was the name given to them by the Hebrews at the time. The evolution of the word went something like this:
פ×׊âפ××׊ת××â×ר׼ פ×׊תâץ×ר×× ×¤×ץ××× ×/פ×׊ת×× ×âפ×ץ×××/פ×׊ת××
PaLaShâplishtimâthe land of palesetâSyria Palestina (the name given to the land of Israel and Judea as a punishment by the Roman)â- Palestine
PaLaSh is the Hebrew root word for invade meaning we called the sea fairing invaders by their actual name, invaders
Important to know that the Arabs absolutely DENIED ANY RELEVANCE and would not ascribe and meaning re: "Palestine" for themselves.
Arab nationalists in the post-WWI period ADAMANTLY rejected the designation. Arab spokesmen continued to insist that the land was, like Lebanon, merely a fragment of Syria. On the grounds that it dismembered an ideal unitary Arab state, they fought before the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry and at the United Nations. The Arab historian Philip K. Hitti informed the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry that âthere is no such thing as Palestine in history.â
In 1937, Awni Bey Abdul-Hadi, founder of the first Palestinian Arab political party, testified to the Peel Commission, "There is no such country as Palestine. 'Palestine' is a term the Zionists invented. There is no Palestine in the Bible. Palestine is alien to us."
In May 1956, Ahmed Shukairy, who became the first head of the Palestine Liberation Organization (at a time when Jordan had annexed the "West Bank" and Egypt controlled Gaza), declared to the United Nations Security Council, âIt is common knowledge that Palestine is nothing but southern Syria.â
In February 1970, Prince El Hassan bin Tala of Jordan, stated to the Jordanian National Assembly that "Palestine is Jordan and Jordan is Palestine; there is one people and one land, with one history and one and the same fate." Seven months later, the PLO attempted to take over Jordan, lost, and were unceremoniously, kicked out.
In 1977, PLO Executive Committee member Zahir Muhsein stated, "The Palestinian people do not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for our continuing struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. ⌠In reality there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese."
One might argue that this particular group of Arabs established, sometime in the mid 1960s, a political identity as "Palestinians," when Arafat returned from strategic partnership meetings with the Soviets communists who were attempting to gain a larger foothold in the region, and advised him how to use "Palestine" identity as a cudgel against Israel.
What they are NOT is "ancient" inhabitants of the region which, under Ottoman rule, was also dubbed "Syria-Palestine." What they are NOT is any sort of distinct ETHNIC groupâlike the Judeans (Judea/Samaria/Israel), the Phoenicians (Lebanon), the Kurds, the Druze, or the Circassians. They are Arabs, sharing the language, culture, religion, cuisine, ethnic group, etc. of the people of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia. Prior to the 1960s, before the PLO was created, there were ZERO Arabs self-identifying as Palestinians. During the 19 years that Jordan controlled the so-called "West Bank" (Judea and Samaria, which had been cleansed of Jews by the Jordanians) and when Egypt controlled Gaza, there was no movement to create a "Palestinian" state.
Attached is a photo of the Palestine Symphony Orchestra in 1936, which consisted of 73 jewish musicians, and conducted by none other than Arturo Toscanini (born in Parma, father was a tailor). Toscanini was the music director at La Scala, before spending spent 7 years conducting the New York Metropolitan Opera (1908-1915) and the New York Philharmonic (1926-1936). He lived out his latter years in NYC, about a 1/2 mile from where I lived for a decade from 2005-2015 in Riverdale (Bronx), which is now called Wave Hill, a non-profit cultural institution and botanical garden, located on 26 acres adjacent to the Hudson River.
#syria palaestina#peel commission#judaism#israeli#israel#secular-jew#jewish#jerusalem#diaspora#secular jew#secularjew#islam#12 tribes of israel#samaria#judea#judean#rome#hadrian#philistines#kurds#phoenician#riverdale#bronx#toscanini#israel philharmonic symphony#palestine symphony orchestra#symphony#orchestra#syria#roman occupation
52 notes
¡
View notes
Text
thesis vii. the monster stands at the threshold... of becoming.
-
jeffrey jerome cohen, âmonster cultureâ / backstage at the magic flute at the metropolitan opera house, NY, circa 1905 / "opera house" by thomas rowlandson and auguste charles pugin / the philadelphia metropolitan opera house before and after renovation / porgy and bess in rehearsal at the met, dir. james robinson / tosca act 1 original set design by adolf hohenstein / tosca at the san fransisco opera, dir. shawna lucey / wozzeck at the opera bastille dir. william kentridge / carmen dir. juan guillermo nova at the sng maribor / kids music cafe at the sydney opera house / don giovanni dir. robert carsen at la scala / madama butterfly dir. matthew ozawa at the detroit opera / the isango ensemble's edition of treemonisha dir. mark dornford-may / m. butterfly dir. james robinson at the santa fe opera / die meistersinger von nĂźrnberg dir. barrie bosky at the bayreuth festival / rigoletto dir. david mcvicar at the royal opera house / the view from the stage at the margravial opera house, photographed by klaus frahm
92 notes
¡
View notes
Text
us: scala is a beautifully diverse world that cannot be easily compared to any region in this world, especially when you take its immense cultural differences through the ages into account
also us: lol Scalans Are British (actively ignoring the ones with other accents)
#sky says stuff#this happens when americans play xenoblade also so i mean. many such cases but at least we're joking#how long did it take people to realize nia was welsh and not scottish. how many other charas' accents have been boiled down to Just British#i didnt intend to rant about xeno in the tags this litwrally just hit me as i was tagging#sources and systems#age of myths#scala
13 notes
¡
View notes
Text
Demon culture is very interesting to me. These demons are selfish, greedy and their whole social structure is based on power. Yet we don't see demons fight for power or doing something untoward someone to get something they have. A lot of powerful demons don't seem to be abusing their power to push around weaker demons. The only indication of this is the many ear tribe. But you know what happened with them? They were given to a student for a scala, a scala which in the goal was founding a country for them were they can support each other and have some modicum of freedom from being just tools to powerful demons.
When they're too stress they fall into their evil cicle, were they can become aggressive. This was so prevalent that they built systems to relieve that stress (devidols, theme parks ect). The fact we don't know much of evil cycle out of pseudo stuff like Iruma's evil cycle and what we saw of Kalego's breifly is sad to me (he cares so much).
That is not even going into the return to origin and demons that want to return to origin. These faction of demons are so fixated on how the demon realm was that they want to destroy the current demon realm. And it might seem that demons back then ate humans? Now I'm thinking of when or if humans and demons coexisted together or when humans passed thru the demon real. How did they become mythic creatures?
But anyway moving on
The government of the demon realm is very interesting itself. They have the demon king and the 13 crowns as well as the demon boarder patrol. Now we know that their hasn't been a demon king in years. They waited so long to apoint anyone or find a way to find someone suitable. The only reason things got moving is because the demon real was falling out of control. The demon king is lead by the king maker, guiding them on how to become the ruler and how the demon world works. Yet apparently if the demon king doesn't want the king maker around then they don't have them around, like what? And it's clear that the position is important and hold great power before it fell into obscurity. The boarder patrol is supposed to protect the demon real and keep the human realm and theirs closed. Yet we clearly see that demons in the boarder patrol have different ideas on what they should protect the demon realm from.
Man, I don't know where I was going with this. I guess I just wanted to ramble. I love Iruma go read the manga if you can. And if you want to support Nishi Osamu more they have another manga called "Ichi the Witch" go read it, it's good.
#m!ik#mairimashita iruma kun#mairimashita! iruma kun#welcome to demon school! iruma kun#ramblings#Analysis? Maybe who knows. Not me#I love Iruma and it should be talked more in manga and anime space
8 notes
¡
View notes