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Writing about Catholic scientists and ideas that feed my own Catholic fiction

After Christmas reading

December 27, 2022 catholicfictioncatholicscienceLeave a comment

I've been reading The Medieval Machine (The Industrial Revolution of the Middle Ages) by Jean Gimpel published by Penguin in 1975. I found it on my bookshelves during Christmas cleaning, a leftover from my Catholic scientists project. Dante lived in the middle of the period that Gimpel is describing, maybe 1100 to 1400. Gimpel basically [...]

Posted in Dante

Dante and the Annunciation again

December 24, 2022 catholicfictioncatholicscience1 Comment

Here is Saint Bernard encouraging Dante to look at Mary, the Queen of Heaven. Look now into the face that unto Christ    Hath most resemblance; for its brightness only    Is able to prepare thee to see Christ.” On her did I behold so great a gladness    Rain down, borne onward in the holy minds    Created through that altitude to [...]

Posted in Uncategorized

Dante and the Annunciation

December 23, 2022 catholicfictioncatholicscienceLeave a comment

I think that the Annunciation appears more often than anything else in the Divine Comedy. Here are just two examples... Purgatory Canto 10 The angel who came down to earth with tidings of the peace so many years wept for in vain, that op'd the heavenly gates from their long interdict, before us seem'd, in [...]

Posted in Dante

Saint Lucy and her feast

December 20, 2022December 20, 2022 catholicfictioncatholicscienceLeave a comment

Last week I pointed out that Saint Lucy's feast day (December 13) is celebrated differently in Sweden and in Sicily. Sicily has processions and food, but Sweden has candles and breakfast in bed. Generally (meaning if you look it up on Google), this Swedish idea is attributed to the "fact" that Saint Lucy's feast day [...]

Posted in APOD, Gregorian calendar

Dante and Saint Lucy

December 16, 2022 catholicfictioncatholicscienceLeave a comment

Saint Lucy's Feast is on December 13. It is celebrated in Sweden with young girls wearing wreaths in their hair and serving cinnamon buns to their family early in the morning. In Syracuse, in Sicily, in Italy where she lived, it is celebrated very publicly and over several weeks. But people want her to be [...]

Posted in Dante

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