Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution.

Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 335 pages of information about Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution.

30.  Mr. John J. Ennett (Six Essays, London, 1891) has excellent pages on this aspect of medieval architecture.  Mr. Willis, in his appendix to Whewell’s History of Inductive Sciences (i. 261-262), has pointed out the beauty of the mechanical relations in medieval buildings.  “A new decorative construction was matured,” he writes, “not thwarting and controlling, but assisting and harmonizing with the mechanical construction.  Every member, every moulding, becomes a sustainer of weight; and by the multiplicity of props assisting each other, and the consequent subdivision of weight, the eye was satisfied of the stability of the structure, notwithstanding curiously slender aspects of the separate parts.”  An art which sprang out of the social life of the city could not be better characterized.

31.  Dr. L. Ennen, Der Dom zu Koln, seine Construction und Anstaltung, Koln, 1871.

32.  The three statues are among the outer decorations of Notre Dame de Paris.

33.  Mediaeval art, like Greek art, did not know those curiosity shops which we call a National Gallery or a Museum.  A picture was painted, a statue was carved, a bronze decoration was cast to stand in its proper place in a monument of communal art.  It lived there, it was part of a whole, and it contributed to give unity to the impression produced by the whole.

34.  Cf.  J. T. Ennett’s “Second Essay,” p. 36.

35.  Sismondi, iv. 172; xvi. 356.  The great canal, Naviglio Grande, which brings the water from the Tessino, was begun in 1179, i.e. after the conquest of independence, and it was ended in the thirteenth century.  On the subsequent decay, see xvi. 355.

36.  In 1336 it had 8,000 to 10,000 boys and girls in its primary schools, 1,000 to 1,200 boys in its seven middle schools, and from 550 to 600 students in its four universities.  The thirty communal hospitals contained over 1,000 beds for a population of 90,000 inhabitants (Capponi, ii. 249 seq.).  It has more than once been suggested by authoritative writers that education stood, as a rule, at a much higher level than is generally supposed.  Certainly so in democratic Nuremberg.

37.  Cf.  L. Ranke’s excellent considerations upon the essence of Roman Law in his Weltgeschichte, Bd. iv.  Abth. 2, pp. 20-31.  Also Sismondi’s remarks upon the part played by the legistes in the constitution of royal authority, Histoire des Francais, Paris, 1826, viii. 85-99.  The popular hatred against these “weise Doktoren und Beutelschneider des Volks” broke out with full force in the first years of the sixteenth century in the sermons of the early Reform movement.

38.  Brentano fully understood the fatal effects of the struggle between the “old burghers” and the new-comers.  Miaskowski, in his work on the village communities of Switzerland, has indicated the same for village communities.

39.  The trade in slaves kidnapped in the East was never discontinued in the Italian republics till the fifteenth century.  Feeble traces of it are found also in Germany and elsewhere.  See Cibrario.  Della schiavitu e del servaggio, 2 vols.  Milan, 1868; Professor Luchitzkiy, “Slavery and Russian Slaves in Florence in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries,” in Izvestia of the Kieff University, 1885.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Mutual Aid; a factor of evolution from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.