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Dragonrouge's Journal


Dragonrouge's Journal

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7 entries this month
 

Alphaville

10:35 Jan 25 2009
Times Read: 1,092






A fragment from Alphaville by Jean luc Goddard about love.

COMMENTS

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Pepper
Pepper
16:09 Jun 05 2009

I love the French films from the 1960s. I became interested when Tarentino began making references to them like in his Band aparte production company. I also like the race throught he Louvre in the movie "The Dreamers" which like the one in the old film.





 

Grotesques of Notre Dame

23:28 Jan 18 2009
Times Read: 1,103






This is for MO!

:P

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Dracula Orchid

22:25 Jan 13 2009
Times Read: 1,104


Welcome to my Orchid Garden, enter if you dare!



In the damp, dark, creepy corners of the graveyard, you may not only find the famous Count, but his namesake as well -- Dracula vampira! If there ever was a flower that Count Dracula could grow, it would have to be one of Dracula species. Like the Count, they hate sunshine.

Actually, this genus is called Dracula not because they are related or reminiscent in someway to vampires. "Dracula" means "Little Dragon." Their appearance includes strange patterns, hairy flowers with very long tails, and even funny "faces" one can find in many of the flowers. D. diabola, the hybrid, Dracula 'Jester' and Dracula inaequalis (syn.: Dracula carderi) are three examples where, if you look closely, you will see a face looking back at you! The "eyes" are produced by tiny petals and the large "noses" are the lips of the flower.

Dr. Carlyle Luer created this strange and intriguing genus in 1978. Prior to this time they were included with the Masdevallia genus. There are approximately 90 species found in the Dracula genus.

Let's go into the damp shadows of the greenhouse and see what Draculas we can find. Of course, the very first one has got to be Dracula vampira. The large flowers and dramatic striking color has made this a very popular Dracula to grow. The flowers are barred with a deep dark maroon color that appears to be nearly black. Because of this attribute, I listed this species in my article about Black Orchids. The tiny petals look like bizarre little eyes staring at you.

We search further, and find D. bella with flowers looking like spiders. Its purplish-brown accents against a yellow background are very striking. A bonus to this orchids' exotic bloom, it is one of easier Draculas to grow.

The next one we find is Dracula chimaera which has some of the largest and hairiest blooms of this genus. Blooms can reach two feet in size (including the long tails). The blooms can be from yellow to almost a brown depending the exact species. The "eyes" look like they are starring at you as you walk by like Count Dracula looking for his next victim! Looking above us, there are a few more of the strange and gothic-looking Draculas.



I guess by now you are saying, "How can I grow these?" These are not for everyone because they can be difficult to grow. Draculas are not the type of orchid you typically can grow in your home.

The environment required is best created in a greenhouse. However, if you can provide them the requirements they need, you will be rewarded with some of the most fascinating orchids in the graveyard. Like Count Dracula, they hate direct sunlight, like a cool environment, and like to hang from the ceiling.

Provide a shaded area for them year round (light levels between 400 and 650 foot-candles). Bright light will burn the fragile slender leaves.

With the shade, comes the coolness like Count Dracula's castle.

Daytime temperatures should not be over 78 °F (25°C). Ideal is 60° to 75° (15°-23 °C) with a minimum night temperature of 50 °F (12 °C). An average of 60 °F (15 °C) should be maintained. Fans and misting systems will help maintain these temperatures. A relative humidity of 70% to 90% is ideal. They enjoy a spray from above with rainwater once a day if possible. Watering is extremely critical since these orchids have minimal water storage.

Most Draculas should be placed in hanging baskets lined with Sphagnum moss, Osmunda or tree-fern chunks or mounted on cork slabs with moss to allow the descending flower spikes to emerge from the bottom of the orchid. However, there are other Draculas that can grow in a pot because the flower spikes grow upwards instead of plunging downwards. Dracula chimaera is just one example of the upward spike type. The blooms do not last long, but the orchid produces buds in a continuing sequence during its blooming cycle.

If you take on the challenge of growing these wonders of the night, I am sure you will find them intriguing to raise.





Photobucket

COMMENTS

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THE CADAVER SYNOD: STRANGEST TRIAL IN HISTORY

13:00 Jan 13 2009
Times Read: 1,142


by Donald E. Wilkes, Jr.



***** Published in Flagpole Magazine, p. 8 (October 31, 2001). *****





Photobucket



Jean-Paul Laurens, Le Pape Formose et Étienne VII

("Pope Formosus and Stephen VII"),

1870

Note that the latter is now called Stephen VI.








One thousand one hundred and four years ago a criminal trial took place in Italy, a trial so macabre, so gruesome, so frightful that it easily qualifies as the strangest and most terrible trial in human history. At this trial, called the Cadaver Synod, a dead pope wrenched from the grave was brought into a Rome courtroom, tried in the presence of a successor pope, found guilty, and then, in the words of Horace K. Mann's The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages (1925), "subjected to the most barbarous violence."



[...]



Eleven hundred years ago the papacy was going through an era which, John Farrow tells us in his Pageant of the Popes (1942), "shroud[ed] the papacy with gloom and shame." The period from around the middle of the 9th century to around the middle of the 10th century is often referred to as the iron age of the papacy. This period, according to Richard P. McBrien's Lives of the Popes (1997), "was marred by papal corruption (including the buying and selling of church offices, nepotism, lavish lifestyles, concubinage, brutality, even murder) and the domination of the papacy by German kings and by powerful Roman families."



[...]



During the iron age of the papacy pope succeeded pope with bewildering rapidity. In the 94 years from 872 through 965 there were 24 popes; and during the nine years between 896 and 904 there were no less than nine popes.



[...]



In the iron age of the papacy, according to Matthew Bunson's The Pope Encyclopedia (1995), the powerful families that dominated Rome not only arranged to have their supporters elected pope, but also "had pontiffs ... deposed, and killed to advance their political ambitions ... or as vengeance for some action taken by the pope that offended them or inconvenienced some plan or plot." As a consequence, of those 24 popes who held office from 872 to 965, seven--nearly one-third--died violently or under suspicious circumstances. Five popes were assassinated in office, or deposed and then murdered. John VIII, the first pope to be assassinated, was poisoned by his entourage; when the poison did not act quickly enough, his skull was crushed by blows from a hammer. Both Stephen VII and Leo V were deposed, imprisoned, and strangled. John X was deposed, imprisoned, and suffocated by being smothered with a pillow. Stephen IX was imprisoned, horribly mutilated by having his eyes, nose, lips, tongue and hands removed, and died of his injuries. Two other popes died in circumstances strongly indicative of foul play: Hadrian III was rumored to have been poisoned, and John XII, the sources tell us, either died of a stroke suffered while in bed with a married woman or was beaten to death by the woman's outraged husband.



The iron age of the papacy produced a number of unfortunate "firsts" for the papacy. As noted above, the first papal assassination took place when John VIII was murdered; this was on Dec. 16, 882. In 896 Boniface VI became the first (and only) person to be elected pope after having previously been twice degraded from holy orders for immorality. In 904 Sergius III became the first (and only) pope to order the murder of another pope; pursuant to his order, Leo V, who previously had been deposed, was strangled in prison. In 931 John XI became the first (and only) illegitimate son of a pope to be elected pope; his father was Sergius III. In 955 John XII became the first (and only) teenager to be elected pope; he was 18 at the time.



[...]





Photobucket



Pope's chair, Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano, Roma, Italy,

the place where the Cadaver Synod occurred





~~~***~~~




The Cadaver Synod occurred sometime in January 897 in the Church of St. John Lateran, the pope's official church in his capacity as Bishop of Rome. The defendant on trial was Formosus, an elderly pope who after a reign of five years had died April 4, 896 and been buried in St. Peter's Basilica. (According to P. G. Maxwell-Stuart's Chronicle of the Popes (1997), the name Formosus means "good-looking" in Latin.) The trial of Formosus was ordered by the reigning pontiff, Stephen VII, who had been prodded into issuing the order by a powerful Roman family dynasty and other anti-Formosus political factions, and who apparently also was personally motivated by what The Oxford Dictionary of Popes (1986) calls a "near-hysterical hatred [of Formosus]." Although Formosus had been, according to McBrien, "a man of exceptional intelligence, ability, and even sanctity, he [had] made some bitter political enemies ... including one of his successors, Stephen VII."



No trial transcript of the Cadaver Synod exists. Nonetheless, it is reasonably clear what happened. Sitting on a throne, Stephen VII personally presided over the proceeding. Also present as co-judges were a number of Roman clergy who were there under compulsion and out of fear. The trial began when the disinterred corpse of Formosus was carried into the courtroom. On Stephen VII's orders the putrescent corpse, which had been lying in its tomb for seven months, had been dressed in full pontifical vestments. The dead body was then propped up in a chair behind which stood a teenage deacon, quaking with fear, whose unenviable responsibility was to defend Formosus by speaking in his behalf. The presiding judge, Stephen VII, then read the three charges. Formosus was accused of (1) perjury, (2) coveting the papacy, and (3) violating church canons when he was elected pope.



The trial was completely dominated by Stephen VII, who overawed the assemblage with his frenzied tirades. While the frightened clergy silently watched in horror, Stephen VII screamed and raved, hurling insults at and mocking the rotting corpse. Occasionally, when the furious torrent of execrations and maledictions would die down momentarily, the deacon would stammer out a few words weakly denying the charges. When the grotesque farce concluded, Formosus was convicted on all counts by the court. The sentence imposed by Stephen VII was that all Formosus's acts and ordinations as pope be invalidated, that the three fingers of Formosus's right hand used to give papal blessings be hacked off, and that the body be stripped of its papal vestments, clad in the cheap garments of a lay person, and buried in a common grave. The sentence was rigorously executed. (The body was shortly exhumed and thrown into the Tiber, but a monk pulled it out of the river.)



Stephen VII's fanatical hatred of Formosus, his eerie decision to convene the Cadaver Synod in the first place, his even eerier decision to have Formosus' corpse brought into court, his maniacal conduct during the grisly proceeding, and his barbaric sentence that the corpse be abused and humiliated make it difficult to disagree with the historians who say that Stephen VII was stark, raving mad.



The Cadaver Synod was the cause of Stephen VII's prompt and precipitous downfall. The appalling trial and the savage mistreatment of Formosus's corpse provoked so much anger and outrage in Rome that within a few months there was a palace revolution and Stephen VII was deposed, stripped of his gorgeous pope's clothing and required to dress as a monk, imprisoned, and, some time in August 897, strangled.



Three months later another pope, Theodore II, whose pontificate lasted only 20 days, all in the month of November 897, held a synod which annulled the Cadaver Synod and fully rehabilitated Formosus. Theodore II also ordered that the body of Formosus be reverentially reburied. Therefore, according to Joseph S. Brusher's Popes Through the Ages (1980), the corpse was "brought back to [St. Peter's Basilica] in solemn procession. Once more clothed in the pontifical vestments, the body was placed before the Confession [the part of the high altar in which sacred relics were placed] of St. Peter's. There, in the presence of Pope Theodore II, a Mass was said for the soul of Formosus, and his poor battered body was restored to its own tomb."



The next pope, John IX, whose pontificate lasted from 898 to 900, also nullified the Cadaver Synod. At two synods convened by John IX, one in Rome, the other in Ravenna, the pronouncements of Theodore II's synod were confirmed, and any future trial of a dead person was prohibited.



Incredibly, however, this was not the end of disputes about the legality of the Cadaver Synod.



Sergius III, who was pope from 904 to 911, reversed the decisions of the synods of Theodore II and John IX by convening a synod which quashed their invalidations of the Cadaver Synod and reaffirmed Formosus's conviction and sentence. Sergius III even went so far as to place an epitaph on the tomb of Stephen VII which lauded that evident madman and heaped scorn on Formosus. According to The Oxford Dictionary of Popes, Sergius III was a "violent hater of Formosus" and had been elected pope by an "anti-Formosan faction." In fact, Sergius III, while a bishop, had actually taken part in the Cadaver Synod where he was one of the clergy coerced into serving as co-judges with Stephen VII. Sergius III, it will be recalled, was also the only pope to order the murder of another pope, and also the only pope to father an illegitimate son who became a pope. It is no wonder, therefore, that historians such as Farrow describe the pontificate of the murderer Sergius III as "dismal and disgraceful."



Although the decrees of Sergius III's synod marked the last formal pronouncement by the Roman Catholic Church on the lawfulness of the Cadaver Synod (which in Latin, the language of the Church, is officially known as the synod horrenda), today there is a nearly unanimous consensus among scholars and theologians, both within and outside the Church, that the Cadaver Synod was an illegal monstrosity and that Formosus stands entirely vindicated, cleared of all the charges against him. On the other hand, it is hardly surprising that, as McBrien notes, "there has never been a Pope Formosus II, although Cardinal Pietro Barbo had to be dissuaded from taking the name in 1464. He took the name Paul II instead."



Although the Cadaver Synod is frequently mentioned in various history books, it has found its way into only one great piece of literature, English poet Robert Browning's masterpiece The Ring and the Book, a huge poem consisting of 21,116 lines of verse. Browning had a comprehensive understanding of the Cadaver Synod because his own father, Robert Browning, Sr., had, according to The Poetical Works of Robert Browning (1998), published by Oxford University, "become an expert in the conflict-filled lives of the popes in the late ninth and early tenth centuries." Having done extensive historical research in the libraries of Paris, the elder Browning "knew all about the cadaver synod of 897, when the corpse of Pope Formosus was brought into open court and abused and sentenced ... by his successor, Stephen VII, resulting in a controversy that ran through several pontificates." While The Ring and the Book was being composed the elder Browning had presented to his poet son the results of this historical research, which filled forty notebooks, and included "a list of many interesting narratives, beginning with 'The remarkable trial of the dead body of Formosus.'"



The story of the Cadaver Synod occupies only 134 lines of The Ring and the Book, yet Browning was still able, with amazing accuracy and astounding conciseness, to recount the events of the trial as well as the basic facts about the deposition and murder of Stephen VII, the endeavors of Theodore II and John IX to rehabilitate Formosus, and the efforts of Sergius III to affirm the judgment of the Cadaver Synod.

COMMENTS

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ManzanaOscura
ManzanaOscura
06:25 Jan 14 2009

Some dark sins of the Church.... this is very creepy.



and... after all... Vlad is still being the bad one?



Best regards and... thanks a lot for sharing.





Dragonrouge
Dragonrouge
01:55 Jan 17 2009

See?

I always thought that Vlad was the cute guy!

;)



Thank you, the most wonderful lady!

*takes an elegant bow and kisses her hand glancing to her black eyes*





 

Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám

13:19 Jan 09 2009
Times Read: 1,157


Photobucket



Elihu Vedder's Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám



COMMENTS

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FORBIDDEN FRUIT

12:30 Jan 09 2009
Times Read: 1,104






~ a love perfume ~





Photobucket





As light and innocent

as your first time should have been.

The fresh scent of lotus

hidden behind lightly scented flowers,

amber,

and citrus.



COMMENTS

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OF COURSE I AM

20:05 Jan 05 2009
Times Read: 1,161


What is your demon type?

FALLEN ANGEL
FALLEN ANGEL
Formally a servant in the kingdom of heaven, your search for answers beyond your conventional teachings has brought onto you a loss of innocence. enlightened, you strike back and defect, turning your white wings black in exchange for moral freedom. your thirst for individuality and power is what drives you most. your motto: "better to reign in hell than to serve in heaven". remember, black is not a color of evil,but a color of protection...you are probably hard to get close to.
How do you compare?
Take this test! | Tests from Testriffic

COMMENTS

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ImmortalLegacy
ImmortalLegacy
20:56 Jan 10 2009

The Fallen Angel way cool..

*you are probably hard to get close too" wow hits you on the spot.. but for the lucky that does..

*hugs the demon*








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