Greco-Latin culture: Difference between revisions

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In the [[Apocalypse of St. John]], the Epistle to the church of [[Thyatira]] refers to the Greco-Roman period.
In the [[Apocalypse of St. John]], the Epistle to the church of [[Thyatira]] refers to the Greco-Roman period.


[[Category:World ecolution]]
[[Category:World evolution]]
[[Category:Earth evolution]]
[[Category:Earth evolution]]
[[Category:Cultural epochs]]
[[Category:Cultural epochs]]
[[Category:Greco-Latin culture]]
[[Category:Greco-Latin culture]]
[[de:Griechisch-Lateinische Kultur]]
[[de:Griechisch-Lateinische Kultur]]

Revision as of 16:09, 15 March 2021

Rudolf Steiner: Greece and the Oedipus Motif, pastel 1914

The Greco-Latin culture or Greco-Roman culture (747 BC - 1413 AD), the Age of Aries, was the fourth post-Atlantean cultural epoch, during which primarily the intellectual or mind soul was educated, especially in a guiding manner, by the Greeks and Romans. It is divided into the classical antiquity (roughly from Wikipedia:8th century BC to about Wikipedia:600 AD) and the Middle Ages (approximately until the 15th century). The vernal equinox was then located in the constellation of Aries, so it is also called the Aries Age. As the most important event, the earthly life of the Christ and the Mystery of Golgotha, falls into the time of the intellectual soul culture.

In the Apocalypse of St. John, the Epistle to the church of Thyatira refers to the Greco-Roman period.