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August 1, 2025
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Western Cultural History Timeline
Category:
Andere
Wurde aktualisiert:
13 Apr 2020
0
0
568
Autoren
Created by
Nathan
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Ereignisse
Christianity Made Official Religion Of The Roman Empire
A Modest Proposal 1729: A satirical work by Jonathan Swift highlighting the injustices inflicted upon Ireland by the British Empire.
Perioden
Berlinghiero Berlinghieri 1175-1236: A famous Italian artist during the Middle Ages renowned for his iconsitic works of art.
Jan van Eyck 1389-1441: A renowned artist from Netherlands who nearly perfected the practice of oil painting.
Socrates: 469BC - 399BC: An Ancient Greek philosopher, often remembered as the father of modern thought.
Julius Caesar 11-44BC: A renowned Roman general and politician whose actions led to the fall of the Roman Empire.
Ambrose of Milan 339-397: Introduced antiphonal psalmody and hymns to monks.
Tertullian 155-225: A famous Christian author from Carthage, also one of the first apologeticists.
Aristotle: 184BC - 322BC: A Greek philosopher nicknamed "the father of western philosophy."
Thomas Aquinas 1225-1274 An Italian friar, priest, philosopher, and powerful theologian.
Charlemagne 742-814: Also known as Charles the Great, Charlemagne was a king of the Franks from 768 until his death, and united much of western and central Europe.
John Wycliffe 1320-1384: An important figure in the development of the Protestant faith as well as a professor at the University of Oxford.
Saint Francis 1182-1226: An Italian Catholic friar, deacon and preacher. Founder of the men's Order of Friars Minor, the women's Order of Saint Clare, and the Third Order of Saint Francis.
Albrecht Dürer 1471–1528: A renowned artisan known for his versatility. He worked in painting, woodcutting, and drafting.
Michelangeo 1483-1520: Italian sculptor, painter, and architect who is famous for carving “David."
Rembrant Harmenszoon van Rijn 1606-1669: A famous Dutch artist known for his exceptional, uncompromising realism.
Leonardo da Vinci 1452-1519: An Italian polymath who furthered a variety of fields such as art, architecture, science, and mathematics.
Plato 428-347 B.C.: Founder of the Platonist school of thought.
Martin Luther 1483-1546: A German seminal figure best known for his list of Ninety-five Theses.
Handel 1685-1759: A Baroque composer known for his operas and concertos.
Bach 1685-1750: A German composer with influence equal to that of Handel.
Alexandre Vinet 1797-1847: A professor of theology who stood among the stream of Reformers.
John Locke 1632-1704: One of the most influential Enlightenment thinkers. He secularized Presbyterian tradition.
Jerome 347-419: A priest, theologian, and historian.
Augustine of Hippo 354-430: A theologian and philosopher whose publications influenced the development of western philosophy.
Johannes Vermeer 1632 - 1675: Often known as Durer's rival, who specialized in still life and scenes from every day activities.
Thomas Cole 1801-1848: An American landscape painter who captured the theme of the western expansion.
Winslow Homer 1836-1910: A western expansionist artist who focused on maritime subjects.
Charles Wilson Peale 1741-1827: An American artist best known for his remarkable portraits of key American figures during the American Revolution.
Winston Churchill 1874-1965: The prime minister of the UK from 1940-1945 and 1951-1955, who led the UK to victory during WWII.
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn 1918-2008: A Russian historian who criticized Stalin and various political ideaologies.
Eric Hoffer 1902-1983: An American political philosopher who commented on the idea of an authoritarian elite within the government.
Francis Crick 1916-2004: A biophysicist who strongly advocated for the government to implement and control genetic engineering within society.
Claude Debussy 1862-1918: A French musical composer that opened the door to the fragmentative style of music.
Jackson Pollock 1912-1956: An American painter and prominent driving force in the abstract expressionist movement.
Friedrich Nietzsche 1844-1900: A German philosopher who attempted to undermine the Western ways of life and morality. He would eventually go insane and die after realizing that without God, there is only chaos.
Søren Kierkegaard 1813-1855: A Danish philosopher who had a major impact on existentialism and humanistic ways of thought.
Louis Pasteur 1822-1895: A French chemist who demonstrated the impossibility of the spontaneous generation of life.
Paul Gaugin 1848-1903: A French painter and follower of Rousseau who found the idea of "the noble savage" to be an illusion.
David Hume 1711-1776: A philosopher who questioned the cause-and-effect concept and would have a strong influence on German and British philosophy.
Rene Descartes 1596-1650: A French mathematician, scientist, and philosopher who abandoned scholastic Aristotelianism in favor for mind-body dualism.
Omar Khayyam 1048-1122: An Arabic scholar who calculated the length of the solar year and pushed the limits of algebra further than ever before, opening the door to the development of modern science.
Karl Barth 1886-1968: The man whose first commentary ushered theological existentialism into philosophy.
Martin Heidegger 1889-1976: A German philosopher who tried to apply existentialism to the area of non-reason in philosophy.
Jean-Paul Sartre 1905-1980: A well-known existentialist who believed that everything is absurd unless authenticated by an act of will.
Bertrand Russel 1872-1970: A British philosopher crucial in the development of the analytic movement in Anglo-American philosophy.
George Wald 1906-1997: An American biochemist who attempted to explain through biochemistry how man was a product of chance.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1770-1831: A German philosopher who emphasized the centrality of state.
Immanuel Kant 1724-1804: A German philosopher who helped influence the modern philosophical view of idealsim.
Marquis de Sade 1740-1814: A French nobleman whose deification of nature gave rise to "sadism" and further illustrated why nature should not be used a moral standard.
Jacob Bronowski 1908-1974: A Polish mathematician who argued that we should not focus on discovering the past and the origin of man, but instead pursue autonomy and the future.
Charles Darwin 1809-1882: An English naturalist who founded the scientific theory of evolution by natural selection. His scientific views would forever influence man's perspective on humanism and the origin of man.
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