Mainz
Mainz , city (1994 pop. 185,487), capital of Rhineland-Palatinate, W Germany, a port on the E bank of the Rhine River opposite the mouth of the Main River. Its French name, also sometimes used in English, is Mayence. The city is an industrial, commercial, and transportation center. Chemicals, pharmaceuticals, machinery, glassware, and musical instruments are produced; the city is also a trade center for Rhine wines. Mainz is one of the great historical cities of Germany. It grew on the site of the Roman camp of Maguntiacum, or Mogontiacum (founded 1st cent. BC). The city was made (746-47) the seat of the first German archbishop, who was St. Boniface (c.675-754). The later archbishops acquired considerable territory around Mainz and in Franconia, on both sides of the Main, which they ruled as princes of the Holy Roman Empire. Very early they received a vote in the imperial elections and had precedence over the other electors ; they crowned the German kings. From the 16th cent., with the emperors-elect, the archbishops-electors were, ex officio, archchancellors of the Holy Roman Empire. Under the rule of the archbishops-electors Mainz flourished as a commercial and cultural center. Johann Gutenberg (c.1397-1468) lived in Mainz, which he made the first printing center of Europe. Occupied in 1792 by the French, the city was ceded to France by the treaties of Campo Formio (1797) and Lunéville (1801), and the archbishopric was secularized and reduced to a diocese in 1803. The last archbishop, K. T. von Dalberg, became (1806) prince-primate of the Confederation of the Rhine. The Congress of Vienna made (1815) Mainz a federal fortress of the German Confederation and awarded it, with Rhenish Hesse, to the grand duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt. The city was made (1816) the provincial capital of Rhenish Hesse. It was (1873-1918) a fortress of the German Empire. Mainz was severely damaged during World War II, but was largely restored and rebuilt after 1945. Noteworthy structures in the old inner city include the six-towered Romanesque cathedral (consecrated 1009; restored 19th cent.); the Renaissance-style electoral (archiepiscopal) palace (17th-18th cent.), which houses an art gallery and a museum of Roman and Germanic antiquities; and the Church of St. Peter (18th cent.). The Univ. of Mainz was founded in 1477, was discontinued in 1816, and was reestablished in 1946 as the Johannes Gutenberg Univ. In 1945 the city's suburbs on the right bank of the Rhine were transferred to the state of Hesse.
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Humanism and the Culture of Renaissance Europe.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 12/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...number of synthetic presentations of humanism, but none as "historical" as this...relatively detailed narrative history of humanism, one which takes into account the numerous...traditions, the existence and nature of civic humanism, the question of whether humanism was...
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Heidegger, humanism, and the destruction of history.
Magazine article from: The Review of Metaphysics; 3/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Gestalt of the worker; but rather the humanism of the Western philosophical tradition. For Heidegger, humanism lies at the root of the reification...world. Heidegger's attacks against humanism have come under renewed scrutiny, especially...
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Humanism unmodified.
Magazine article from: The Humanist; 11/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; Humanism is a progressive lifestance that, without...humanitarianism. In familiar usage, the word humanism can mean different things to different...Association distinguishes the lifestance of Humanism from other usages by uppercasing the word...
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'Religious humanism' and the dangers of semantic distortion.
Newspaper article from: Free Inquiry; 9/22/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...I re-visited the essay "What Is Humanism?" by Frederick Edwords. Edwords...Humanist, has presented this treatment of humanism to various groups since 1989. (2...emergence of contemporary naturalistic humanism, along with some problems that attend...
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Humanism and Suffering. (Faith and Reason).
Newspaper article from: Free Inquiry; 3/22/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...humanist response to suffering be? Does humanism have a credible and adequate response to suffering? I hope to show that humanism has the resources for an adequate...reasons may make it necessary. WHY HUMANISM NEEDS A RATIONAL PERSPECTIVE Why...
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On humanism past & present.
Magazine article from: Daedalus; 9/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...there, or can there be, any place for humanism in the world of the twentyfirst century...the broad general question of whether humanism both as a concept and a substantive ideal...course of human affairs. In the West, humanism first came to birth in Greece during...
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Relational and transcendental humanism: exploring the consequences of a thoroughly pragmatic humanism.
Magazine article from: Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development; 9/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...relational and transcendental elements of humanism are considered. Although the relational component of humanism is extraordinarily valuable, the author argues that the transcendental portion of humanism should be abandoned. The implications...
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Why is religious humanism?(Defining Humanism: The Battle Continues)
Newspaper article from: Free Inquiry; 9/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Decaffeinated coffee? That's like religious humanism." As a secular humanist I am sometimes tempted to view religious humanism that way, as little more (or less...first reading his "What Is Religious Humanism?" I was surprised how often Olds...
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Introduction: beyond religion.(Defining Humanism: The Battle Continues)
Newspaper article from: Free Inquiry; 9/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; The question "Is secular humanism a religion?" has been debated for...vociferously insist that "secular humanism is a religion." Thus, they seek...expression of the "religion of secular humanism," and they advocate a voucher system...
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10 myths about secular humanism.
Newspaper article from: Free Inquiry; 12/22/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...they are. Have you been told secular humanism is a conspiracy by the filthy rich to...leaders claim. They portray secular humanism as an insidious cancer eating away at...good and decent. Think this "secular humanism" sounds too bad to be true? You're...
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Humanism
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Science and Religion
Humanism The term humanism over the past several centuries of Western thought has been used to express two different concepts. It is not too much to say that humanism in its original form created the intellectual foundation of the Renaissance...
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Humanists and Humanism
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
HUMANISTS AND HUMANISM HUMANISTS AND HUMANISM. Humanism was the dominant intellectual movement among the educated classes of Europe from the Renaissance to the seventeenth century. The term reflects the belief that certain academic subjects known...
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humanism
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology
humanism A very wide-ranging set of philosophies...mankind is man’. Most commonly, humanism involves a rejection of religions which...x2019; ( C. W. Reese , The Meaning of Humanism , 1945 ). Humanism appears in many forms...
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‘humanism’
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
‘humanism’ is the term conventionally...traditional learning. Renaissance ‘humanism’ originated in Italy: even...and church contacts with Italy that humanism spread to England in the first half...
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Humanism, the New
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Literature
Humanism, the New, philosophical and critical...but later adopted different standards. Humanism and America (1930), a symposium by...answered by the symposium The Critique of Humanism (1930), and also by Santayana's The...
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