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Church Moves Ahead G’day and welcome to Partakers and our series Church Moves Ahead, where we look together at the history of the early church, and in particular its persecution. We are taking brief excerpts from an ancient book, Foxes Book of Martyrs. This excerpt is from Chapter 2 - The Ten Primitive Persecutions - The Seventh Persecution, Under Decius, A.D. 249. Cyril, bishop of Gortyna, was seized by order of Lucius, the governor of that place, who, nevertheless, exhorted him to obey the imperial mandate, perform the sacrifices, and save his venerable person from destruction; for he was now eighty-four years of age. The good prelate replied that as he had long taught others to save their souls, he should only think now of his own salvation. The worthy prelate heard his fiery sentence without emotion, walked cheerfully to the place of execution, and underwent his martyrdom with great fortitude. The persecution raged in no place more than the Island of Crete; for the governor, being exceedingly active in executing the imperial decrees, that place streamed with pious blood. Babylas, a Christian of a liberal education, became bishop of Antioch, A.D. 237, on the demise of Zebinus. He acted with inimitable zeal, and governed the Church with admirable prudence during the most tempestuous times. The first misfortune that happened to Antioch during his mission, was the siege of it by Sapor, king of Persia; who, having overrun all Syria, took and plundered this city among others, and used the Christian inhabitants with greater severity than the rest, but was soon totally defeated by Gordian. After Gordian's death, in the reign of Decius, that emperor came to Antioch, where, having a desire to visit an assembly of Christians, Babylas opposed him, and absolutely refused to let him come in. The emperor dissembled his anger at that time; but soon sending for the bishop, he sharply reproved him for his insolence, and then ordered him to sacrifice to the pagan deities as an expiation for his offence. This being refused, he was committed to prison, loaded with chains, treated with great severities, and then beheaded, together with three young men who had been his pupils. A.D. 251. Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem, about this time was cast into prison on account of his religion, where he died through the severity of his confinement. Julianus, an old man, lame with the gout, and Cronion, another Christian, were bound on the backs of camels, severely scourged, and then thrown into a fire and consumed. Also forty virgins, at Antioch, after being imprisoned, and scourged, were burnt. Right mouse click or tap here to save this Podcast as a MP3.
This week (8/16 & 8/18) on ART ON THE AIR our whole show features an entertainment power couple, Lorrissa Julianus, a live event performer, actor, published scriptwriter, artist, and C J Julianus, producer/director of live theater and movies sharing their artistic journey together also discussing their indie film, “The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater.” Our Spotlight is on the 4th Annual NWI Superstar singing competition that supports the Wounded Warrior Project with its Executive Producer Robert Head. Tune in on Sunday at 7pm on Lakeshore Public Media 89.1FM for our hour long conversation with our special guests or listen at lakeshorepublicmedia.org/show/AOTA, and can also be heard Fridays at 11am and Mondays at 5pm on WVLP 103.1FM (WVLP.org) or listen live at Tune In. Listen to past ART ON THE AIR shows at lakeshorepublicmedia.org/show/AOTA or brech.com/aota. Please have your friends send show feedback to Lakeshore at: radiofeedback@lakeshorepublicmedia.org Send your questions about our show to AOTA@brech.com LIKE us on Facebook.com/artonthairwvlp to keep up to date about art issues in the Region. New and encore episodes also heard as podcasts on: NPR, Spotify Tune IN, Amazon Music, Apple and Google Podcasts, plus many other podcast platforms. Larry A Brechner & Ester Golden hosts of ART ON THE AIR. https://www.lakeshorepublicmedia.org/show/art-on-the-air/2024-07-09/art-on-the-air-august-18-2024
Gálvölgyi János Kossuth- és Jászai Mari-díjas színművész, parodista, érdemes művész, a Halhatatlanok Társulatának örökös tagja 1992-ben akkor volt a Friderikusz Show vendége, amikor politikailag kikezdték a Julianus barátról szóló film remekbe szabott paródiája nyomán, amit persze Gálvölgyi nemigen vett a szívére. Aztán persze ő is kapott hideget, meleget, ami továbbra sem izgatta különösebben a kiváló művészt - és hosszú távon neki lett igaza, mert akármennyi bírálat is érte - később különösen a Heti hetes-beli megnyilvánulásai miatt -, mindezek nemigen tudták kikezdeni Gálvölgyi máig kitartó, hallatlan népszerűségét. Hogyan támogathatja a munkánkat? Legyen a patronálónk, és a támogatása mértékétől függően egyre több előnyhöz juthat: https://www.patreon.com/FriderikuszPodcast Egyszeri vagy rendszeres banki átutalással is segíthet. Ehhez a legfontosabb adatok: Név: TV Pictures Számlaszám: OTP Bank 11707062-21446081 Közlemény: Podcast-támogatás Ha külföldről utalna, nemzetközi számlaszámunk (IBAN - International Bank Account Number): HU68 1170 7062 2144 6081 0000 0000 BIC/SWIFT-kód: OTPVHUHB Akármilyen formában támogatja munkánkat, köszönjük! Kövessenek, kövessetek itt is: youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FriderikuszPodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/FriderikuszPodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/friderikuszpodcast Anchor: https://anchor.fm/friderikuszpodcast Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3blRo2g Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3fc7A7t Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3hm2vfi Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/hu/show/1000256535
De Romeinse keizer Constantijn de Grote legaliseerde het christendom in 313, een beslissing die enorme invloed heeft gehad op de westerse geschiedenis. Het had echter ook anders kunnen lopen. Want toen Constantijns neefje Julianus keizer werd probeerde hij deze beslissing terug te draaien. Het heeft hem de bijnaam de Afvallige opgeleverd, en hij is door de eeuwen heen neergezet als een ultieme slechterik. In deze aflevering zal besproken worden in hoeverre dat terecht is. Daarbij zal het onder andere gaan over Julianus' achtergrond, welke antichristelijke maatregelen hij nam en in hoeverre hij succesvol was met zijn aanpak. Vragen, opmerkingen, suggesties, tips of tops? Mail geschiedenismetsjaak@outlook.com, of stuur een DM via instagram of facebook.Geschiedenis met Sjaak steunen? Dat kan geheel vrijblijvend via fooienpod
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In the final episode of our series on Julian the Apostate, we follow Emperor Julian as he marches east to make war against Rome's traditional rivals- the Sassanids, and as he meets his ultimate fate on a Mesopotamian battlefield. We then briefly recap Julian's historical legacy and the fate of Roman paganism. Email me Follow me on Twitter Like the show on Facebook Watch the show on YouTube Visit the eBay store Support the show on Patreon Works Cited Bowersock, G.W. Julian the Apostate. Harvard University Press, 1997. Gibbon, Edward. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Vol. 1-3, Everyman, 1993. Julianus, Flavius Claudius. The Works of Emperor Julian. Literary Liscencing LLC, 2011. Marcellinus, Ammianus. The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus. Benediction Classics, 2011. Murdoch, Adrian. The Last Pagan. Inner Traditions, 2008. Cover Image: Statue of Emperor Julian, displayed at the Louvre Museum in Paris Opening Theme: Symphony No. 9 in E minor, "From the New World", Op. 95, B. 178 by Antonín Dvořák Closing Theme: "The Passage of Time" by Richard Beddow
A Hetek Univerzumadásaiban a 25 éves évfordulójához érkezett lapunk legemlékezetesebb cikkeiből válogatunk, egy-egy aktuális témához kapcsolódóan. Grüll Tibor ókortörténész szerint Nagy Sándor mindössze tizenhárom év alatt (i. e. 336–323 között) végrehajtott hódításait már a kortársak is az egész világ meghódítási kísérleteként értékelték. Az athéniak a következő szavakkal vezették be egyik ekkoriban hozott rendeletüket: "Alexandrosznak, a thébaiak legyőzőjének, egész Ázsia és a lakott világ többi részei leigázójának, aki a helléneket az őket körülvevő félelmekből és nagy veszélyekből megszabadította" A makedón hadvezér valóban nem kisebb dologról álmodozott, mint az egész világ meghódításáról, és az emberiség egyesítéséről. Nagy Sándor ugyanakkor azt is felismerte, hogy az általa képviselt civilizációt védelmezni kell azokkal a keleti barbár erőkkel szemben, amelyek – mai fogalommal – nem akarják alárendelni etnikai kultúrájukat a nyugati értékeknek. Velük szemben védekezni akart, és ezt képviselte a Kaukázusban tervezett gigantikus vaskapu. Alexandroszt ugyan korai halála megakadályozta ennek megvalósításában, de az elképzelés évezredeken keresztül fennmaradt a mai napig. Az erről szóló történeti forrásokat a Julianus barátai című blog gyűjtötte össze, ezekből következik most egy válogatás. A korábbi adások linkjei (az ezekhez kapcsolódó cikkeink elérhetőségét a Hetek archívumból az adott podcast leírásában találhatják meg)
In this episode of our series on Julian the Apostate, we follow Julian as he is christened as Caesar (junior co-emperor) by his cousin Constantius and subsequently dispatched to Gaul to halt a barbarian invasion and restore stability to the troubled province. Email me Follow me on Twitter Like the show on Facebook Watch the show on YouTube Visit the eBay store Support the show on Patreon Works Cited Bowersock, G.W. Julian the Apostate. Harvard University Press, 1997. Gibbon, Edward. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Vol. 1-3, Everyman, 1993. Julianus, Flavius Claudius. The Works of Emperor Julian. Literary Liscencing LLC, 2011. Marcellinus, Ammianus. The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus. Benediction Classics, 2011. Murdoch, Adrian. The Last Pagan. Inner Traditions, 2008. Cover Image: Statue of Emperor Julian, displayed at the Louvre Museum in Paris Opening Theme: Symphony No. 9 in E minor, "From the New World", Op. 95, B. 178 by Antonín Dvořák Closing Theme: "The Passage of Time" by Richard Beddow
In our first episode on the life and times of the man known to history as Julian the Apostate, we first take a look at the state of the Roman Empire in the 4th Century to better understand the circumstances that led to Julian's rise to power, and the reasons why his reign is considered so historically significant. Support the victims of the attack at Michigan State Email me Follow me on Twitter Like the show on Facebook Watch the show on YouTube Visit the eBay store Support the show on Patreon Works Cited Bowersock, G.W. Julian the Apostate. Harvard University Press, 1997. Gibbon, Edward. The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Vol. 1-3, Everyman, 1993. Julianus, Flavius Claudius. The Works of Emperor Julian. Literary Liscencing LLC, 2011. Marcellinus, Ammianus. The Roman History of Ammianus Marcellinus. Benediction Classics, 2011. Murdoch, Adrian. The Last Pagan. Inner Traditions, 2008. Cover Image: Statue of Emperor Julian, displayed at the Louvre Museum in Paris Opening Theme: Symphony No. 9 in E minor, "From the New World", Op. 95, B. 178 by Antonín Dvořák Closing Theme: "The Passage of Time" by Richard Beddow
00.00: Az esztendő mérkőzése. 02.00: A brazil-olasz vb-döntő, teljes egészében, színesben. 07.30: Láttad volna Bácsi Sanyit, öreg! 09.00: A 444 hivatalos Pelé-nekrológja. 11.00: Megőrülsz: a brazil zászló sárgája a Habsburg-házat jelképezi!44!! 12.00: Telstar labda. 13.00: A mostani vb labdája, az Al Rihla, mellyel Bede Márton megcsillogtatta technikai tudását . 18.00: Utószilveszteri ivós játék: minden “érdektelen Pelé”-re egy feles! 19.30: Armstrong, a néger űrhajós a Holdra száll. 20.40: Mémmagyarázó rovat: Salt Bae-Betlehem. 21.10: Na, Polt Péter miért nem indított eljárást Farkas Flórián ellen? 22.15: A Deathlist tippjei az év halottjaira. 25.45: A Wikipedia tényleg értelmezhetetlenül hosszú 2022-es halállistája. 26.00: Black Stalin, a híres calypsoénekes, és egy chutney-soca válogatás. 27.30: Kézellenállás, mi?! Egyes, leülhet! 30.00: Karácsonyietetés-trauma. 32.00: A hasnyálmirigy emésztőenzimeket termel – hát teszi a dógát… 36.20: Mikor volt ebben az országban probléma valakinek az étvágyával?! 39.40: A 44%-os élelmiszerinflációval milyen élményeid voltak? 46.30: Az ársapkákkal volt egy kis baj, de hamarosan jön a fellendülés (2024-ben). 50.30: Újra izgalmas a hátizsákos turizmus! Kiszabadult a sorozatgyilkos! És jó a róla készült Netflix-sorozat. 55.05: Elhangzik, hogy az élet a legjobb forgatókönyvíró! 56.10: A Glass Onionon felkúrtad magad? Aranybulla trélerét láttad? Rákay Filip magnum opusa. (Julianus barát 1991, Honfoglalás 1996, Hirtling István.) 60.00: Molnár Gábor, a magyar vadászirodalom nagy alakja. 62.00: Podkasztajánló: Képtelen Krónika Benyovszky Móricról. És a Vivát Benyovszky című 1957-ös tévésorozat eredetileg csehszlovák, aztán szlovák címszereplője, Jozef Adamovic. 62.30: Ligeti Lajos, a nagy orientalista kiállítása. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CONVERSATIONS WITH CALVIN WE THE SPECIES New: CLIMATE OPTIMISTS (Everything NOT fine) Panel: YOUTH and CLIMATE CHANGE and Beyond. Sat. June 4 2022 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scudTM3YUZQ ** Ten hugely diverse in thought and journey panelists explore youth and climate change and MUCH more. Check panel notes. Well worth your time. Please subscribe to channel and share. CLIMATE: “It's now or never” THUMBNAIL Photo by Peter Burdon on Unsplash #climatechange #environmentalist #genz PANEL TOPIC NOTES: Puerto Rico and increased hurricanes; HOPE; Environmentalists know too much; faced with losing 20% of population; This upcoming generation smarter, climate conscious; Scotland just banned single use plastics; NJ banned plastic bags; Rutgers banned all tobacco on campus; Mostly women are present at climate protests; Survey of 10,000 between 16 and 25 in 10 countries, ¾ say FUTURE is frightening. EDUCATION IS THE KEY; CORAL is 1% of ocean bottom and coral accounts for 25 to 40% of world's fisheries. LOST ½ of world coral. WHO FEEDS 700 million people that require seafood for their daily sustenance; ** AUDIO: SPOTIFY http://spoti.fi/3bMYVYW GOOGLE PODCASTS http://bit.ly/38yH3yP Edits by Claudine Smith- Email: casproductions01@gmail.com PANELISTS: ** CLIMATE OPTIMISTS PANELISTS (1)NEIL KITCHING (Scotland), Climate, Energy Specialist. Author, "Carbon Choices;" Univ. of Edinburgh; Poverty Alleviation LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/neil-kitching-55833314/ (2) J.L.TORRES (NY) Writer; Professor; Puerto Rican Gadfly; USC, PhD (English Language, Lit) Author, ‘Migrations' LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/j-l-torres-b086ba52/ (3) GRACE AGNEW; Novelist, (Sanctuary) (A new novel on CLIMATE CHANGE ); Retired; Special Advisor for Strategic Initiatives and Analytics, Alexander Library, Rutgers University LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/graceagnew/ (4) SAMANTHA WALDRON; Environmental Scientist at AES, LSRPA & BCONE (AP) International Humanitarian making a positive global impact. Rutgers LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/samantha-m-waldron/ (5) DR. DAVID VAUGHN; Founder of Plant a Million Corals. https://plantamillioncorals.org/ (6) CLAUDINE SMITH; Rutgers Senior, Media & Journalism, Women's Track and Field Star, Video Editor. LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/claudinesmith-cashh/ (7) CLAUDE LARSON; "A Teen's Guide to Finding Personal Success;" Author; Educator; Artist; U of Delaware, BS. Ed; Marygrove College, MS, Ed. Website: claudeblarsonllc.com (8) WAJID HASSAN; Metaphysics, Author, “The Struggle for World Sanity;” Contacts: www.wajidauthor.com (9) C.J. JULIANUS: is a long-time director and producer of live theater throughout Chicago area, established Binary Star Pictures, LLC in 2018. Binary Star Pictures: binarystarpictures@gmail.com (10) CALVIN SCHWARTZ, Journalist, novelist, host, You Tube, Conversations with Calvin; We the Species LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/calvin-schwartz-866a805/
Filmmakers talk SPRINGSTEEN and His Influence on Their Art with CJ Julianus, John Harper Philbin and Calvin Schwartz CONVERSATIONS WITH CALVIN WE THE SPECIES Filmmakers talk #SPRINGSTEEN and His Influence on Their Art with CJ Julianus, John Harper Philbin https://www.youtube.com/c/ConversationswithCalvinWetheSpecIEs 143 Interviews. GLOBAL #DEI Amazing People. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE ** Filmmakers talk SPRINGSTEEN and His Influence on Their Art with CJ Julianus, John Harper Philbin and Calvin Schwartz YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMCqPPFqb24&t=2594s C.J. JULIANUS: is a long-time director and producer of live theater throughout Chicago area & along with his wife, muse, partner-in-crime, Lorrisa Julianus, estab Binary Star Pictures, LLC in 2018. Their 1st effort romantic action comedy, "The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater" C.J. began career in entertainment business while in Navy, discovered by a casting dir while stationed in Miami mid-1980s. From there, began appearing in commercials, tv, & in print. Upon his return to Chicago area, he re-started theatrical career, performing with a variety of companies. Binary Star Pictures, LLC is accepting script submissions in anticipation of producing feature films on a yearly basis. CONTACTS: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8929055/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1 Binary Star Pictures: binarystarpictures@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/mistressmaneatermovie/ The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater IMDB Trailer: https://www.imdb.com/video/vi4120297497?playlistId=tt9763402&ref_=tt_pr_ov_vi Complete IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9763402/ ON TUBI: bit.ly/tubimmm ON PRIME: bit.ly/mistressmaneater YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/Qyz6dI3fTpY ** ** ** ** JOHN HARPER PHILBIN: This Illinois, native started making films in 1970s with parents' Super-8 camera. After graduating with a bachelor's degree in film fr U of Iowa in 1979, he spent 3 yrs in Chicago, 2 in NYC, and 6 in LA working as a video editor & camera operator. He continued to write & direct indie films on the side, including _The Law of Nature (1986)_ a doc about Yosemite Natl Park rangers that aired nationally on PBS in 1986. Since 1997, he's been an assoc prof of film at Grand Valley State U in Michigan. After making ten award-winning narrative shorts, Philbin produced & directed 1st feature-length film, To Live and Die in Dixie (2008), which went on to win 2 Best Feature awards CONTACTS: DRIFTLESS (2020, 75 min) is an adventure drama about modern-day park rangers on the 4th of July weekend during a state government shutdown. It's currently streaming on Tubi, IMDbTV, Vudu, Prime, and others. Or, with the free HIPSTR app, you can also see it on AppleTV, Roku and many others. https://www.hipstr.tv/ TO LIVE AND DIE IN DIXIE (2008, 85 min) is a courtroom drama about a murder on a college campus in the 1980s. It's free on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/45526453 and features Bruce Springsteen's song, "The Fuse." ** AUDIO: SPOTIFY http://spoti.fi/3bMYVYW GOOGLE PODCASTS http://bit.ly/38yH3yP ** #rutgers #film #singersongwriter #nutrition #climatechange #genz #metaphysics #aging #womenshealth CLIMATE UPDATE: “IT'S NOW OR NEVER” Latest IPCC climate change report finds 'irreversible' impact of global warming The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its second chapter on the impact of climate change. Many of the impacts of global warming are now simply "irreversible," the UN's latest assessment found.
It's always fun when I have two guests on at once. It's also unique for me when I get to tell said guests, "Hey, I saw your movie!" And the police don't get involved! Such was the case this time around for your Sherpa. Before the interview, we had a lively discussion about New York pizza, versus Chicago pizza . Unfortunately, I couldn't find either one on a map. Curse you, lack of Social Studies skills! But as you will plainly hear, "The Adventures of Mistress Maneater" is clearly not your run-of-the-mill romantic comedy. Which is what CJ and Lorrisa set out to do. And succeeded, unlike me with those Social Studies skills. Having seen it, I can tell you that you're in for a fun ride. And it won't matter how tall you are (well, if you're an adult...)! But this was a fun one with a married couple who truly love what they do. Keep an eye on these two, Rebels...I see more fun rides in the future. Thanks for coming on the show! Follow "The Adventures of Mistress Maneater" on social media (Better yet, watch the movie on Amazon Video or TubiTV!): Next week, it's off to the Misfit Room, for "Too Many Podcasts!" It's a great chat with Paul Maglietta of "The Misfit Faction" podcast network. PLUS-the debut of "Sherpa Samples"!* (* No relation to the late Junior Samples of "Hee Haw" fame.) You can hear this podcast on the Helium Radio Network Fridays at 8:30 AM EDT, on Channel 1, Life Improvement Radio. Follow the show on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok at @Sherpalution, and check out my website, sherpalution.com , for older episodes, Sherpa Sheets, and Spotify playlists. You'll also find the link to "The Tee Sherpa Shop". Podcast merchandise!! Email me at jimthepodcastsherpa@gmail.com. #VivaLaSherpalution! Publicist Extraordinaire: Steven Joiner Music Credits/Voiceovers: Bruce Goldberg ( aka Mr. Bruce) Other Voices: The Sherpalu Studio Players If you'd like to support the show with a donation, (You know, like with money?) feel free to click here. No pressure. I'll just hold my breath the entire next episode if you don't. But seriously, the free option is to leave a nice review on my website or Apple Podcasts. Thanks for listening! You can subscribe and listen to this show on vurbl.com , sherpalution.com . or any podcast app, like Goodpods, or website listed on sherpalution.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jim-the-podcast-sherpa/message
C.J. and Lorrisa Julianus are a married couple who've released a movie titled The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater. C.J. is the director/producer and Lorrisa is the screenwriter/editor and star. It's a romantic comedy with some spice thrown in. We talk about the beginning of the story idea, the experience of working with your life partner, the value of doing more than one job on a creative project, and the importance of patience while you wait for success. Find out more on IMDb https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9763402/The Brainwave Podcast is produced and presented by WindWord Group Publishing and Media. Please visit our website at https://www.windwordgroup.com to sign up for our newsletter and receive regular information about upcoming guests, new releases, and special gifts for regular listeners and readers. Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/brainwavepodcast)
On this episode we have the great C.J. & Lorries Julianus in the hot seat to talk to us about their newest movie "The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater" which is currently on Amazon Prime. Check it out and don't forget to look out for more feature films from them in the future.
Lorissa and CJ, who have been working in film, television, and theater for quite a while. They took the next natural step and wrote, performed, and directed a romantic comedy called The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater. Right now you can see it on Amazon Prime (with a 4.5 out of 5 rating), Tubi, and many other streaming applications. They are friendly, positive, and loaded with great information on how they went about making an independent film that looks like a million bucks. We had so much fun talking with these two professionals and they were very generous with their knowledge and advice. And once you've listened to this podcast, you'll want to go watch this awesome flick. Here is the link to watch it on Amazon Prime. https://www.amazon.com/Misadventures-Mistress-Maneater-Lorrisa-Julianus/dp/B091JG64WD/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2JY3CVNSFFXDJ&keywords=the+misadventures+of+mistress+maneater&qid=1646953918&sprefix=the+misadventures+of+mistr%2Caps%2C102&sr=8-1Ad for True Fictions "Buy Me a Coffee" site where listeners can support the show. The money we get will be used to keep creating episodes of True Fiction and True Fiction's Kino Club. Thanks in advance for your support.Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TrueFiction)
CONVERSATIONS WITH CALVIN WE THE SPECIES A Compelling Conversation with a #Chicago Power Couple!! ** https://www.youtube.com/c/ConversationswithCalvinWetheSpecIEs 131 Interviews. GLOBAL Reach. #DEI. Earth Life. Amazing People. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE ** LORISSA & C.J. JULIANUS; Actor, Writer & Director, “The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater” (Much more than you'd expect! Streaming Amazon Prime, etc.); IN DEPTH, INTROSPECTIVE; the making of a film, continuity, special effects, #spirituality screenwriting, fourth wall, art history, #Springsteen & surrendering expectations. YouTube: ** CONTACTS (A) https://www.facebook.com/mistressmaneatermovie/ The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater IMDB Trailer: https://www.imdb.com/video/vi4120297497?playlistId=tt9763402&ref_=tt_pr_ov_vi Complete IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9763402/ ON TUBI: bit.ly/tubimmm ON PRIME: bit.ly/mistressmaneater YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/Qyz6dI3fTpY ** *** **** CONTACTS (B) LORISSA JULIANUS IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm3185774/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/lorrisa.julianus C.J. JULIANUS IMDB: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8929055/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1 Binary Star Pictures: binarystarpictures@gmail.com ** LORISSA JULIANUS “is a SAG-AFTRA actor, scriptwriter, and producer. Her historical plays have been produced internationally and she graduated as Columbia College Chicago's youngest graduate of record. She is a performance capture actor in Warner Brothers game franchises, including Mortal Kombat, Injustice (DC Comics), The Lord of the Rings Online, and Harry Potter: Wizards Unite. Other credits include independent feature films, and guest starring on Chicago PD and The Bold & the Beautiful. On stage and screen, she is known best for witty comedy, period pieces, roles requiring accents, and stage combat roles. CJ JULIANUS “ is a long-time director and producer of live theater throughout the Chicago area, and along with his wife, muse, and partner-in-crime, Lorrisa Julianus, established Binary Star Pictures, LLC in 2018. Their first effort, the romantic action comedy, "The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater" is currently in post-production and will be released in early 2020. C.J. began his career in the entertainment business while in the U.S. Navy, having been discovered by a casting director while stationed in Miami, FL in the mid-1980s. From there, he began appearing in commercials, on television, and in print. Upon his return to the Chicago area, he re-started his theatrical career, performing with a variety of companies. The culmination of his theater work was when he established Theatre-on-the-Hill in Bolingbrook, Illinois as a premium destination for actors who wanted to perform in rarely staged productions. *** AUDIO: SPOTIFY http://spoti.fi/3bMYVYW GOOGLE PODCASTS http://bit.ly/38yH3yP edits by Claudine Smith- Email: casproductions01@gmail.com
Lorrisa and CJ Julianus are a married couple who founded Binary Star pictures. Their first movie, The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater, is available now. In this episode of Hungry Trilobyte, we look at how the two made the call to create this film and how they set themselves and their project apart. — See Show Notes at www.AaronBossig.com Follow me on Twitter - @AaronBossig Podcast logo and graphics by Marcie London www.MarcieLondon.com - @MarcieLondonArt
"Keletre, magyar! Tekints keletre! Ott lelsz te dicső, nagy rokon felekre!" 2017-ben Koltay Gábor Julianus barátjaként kerekedtünk föl, hogy mint az esti tábortűznél napmeséket regélő, Papageno-jelmezbe öltözött vándorok, a magyar turanizmus nyomaira bukkanjunk Dévénytől Tokióig, Gül Baba türbéjétől Makovecz Imre munkásságáig, a keletről gondolkodó Ady Endre "ős Kajánjától" Kozsó "Szomorú szamurájáig". A kalauzunk Ablonczy Balázs történész, a "Keletre, magyar!" című könyv szerzője volt. A beszélgetés résztvevői: Ablonczy Balázs Csunderlik Péter Édes Balázs A Régen minden jobb volt a Tilos Rádió hátrafelé nyilazó történelmi műsora: https://www.facebook.com/regen.minden.jobb.volt
In todays episode i sat down with the power couple behind the indie movie sensation the Misadventures of Mistress Maneater. This amazing duo talk movies, writing directing and relationships with me. we go in-depth on the process of the script and the movie making process, Also work life balance for creatives and relationships. Please do me a favor and check out there movie and listen to there passion for art and filmmaking! http://bit.ly/mistressmaneater https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9763402/?ref_=tt_urv thanks again for all Dannylize this use this link for support https://linktr.ee/Dannylizethis --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dannylizethis/message
SEASON TWO CONTINUES! (Please share/subscribe/rate) CJ and Lorissa Julianus are true power couple filmmakers! They have create a wild film “The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater” It's a Mystery-ROMCOM with lovable characters that have a different kind of backstory! Fun movie. Ed Hartman's Wild-World of Film and Music! SEASON 2: EPISODE 3: MEET THE MISTRESS AND THE MANEATER (CJ AND LORISSA JULIANUS) All Links: (Apple, Spotify, Anchor, YT, etc.) https://linktr.ee/edhartman Ed Hartman's Wild-World of FIlm and Music! SEASON 2: EPISODE 3: MEET THE MISTRESS AND THE MANEATER (CJ AND LORISSA JULIANUS) Produced by Ed Hartman “The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater” https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9763402/ https://www.indierights.com/ Opening: Energy Cycle Ed Hartman ©Olympic Marimba Records Closing: Rivertrance Ed Hartman ©Olympic Marimba Records Recordings available for sale: https://edhartmanmusic.com/ Thanks, and write if you get work! ©2021 8th Sense Productions, LLC --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ed-hartman/support
Hello, fellow lushes! This episode we are joined by Lorissa and CJ Julianus. They are the couple behind the movie The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater. Lorissa wrote the script and stars in the movie and CJ directed it. They talk with us about the making of their independent rom-com. Marie Asner of Kansas City Film Critics Circle describes it as "The way a great rom-com should be!". It's available on Amazon Prime, Tubi TV and more. Go check it out! You can find the movie on Instagram @mistressmaneatermove and on Facebook at The Misadventures of Mistress Maneater. Check us out @dimplesandthebeard on Instagram, Cocktails with Dimples and The Beard on Facebook and Cocktails with Dimples and The Beard on YouTube. Thanks for listening! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dean-bann0/message
A NER Patyomkin páncélosa, az ElkXrtuk bemutatása alkalmából a rendszerváltás utáni magyar kurzusfilmekről beszélgetett a Régen Minden Jobb Volt Alkotói Munkaközösség: Julianus barát (1991), Honfoglalás (1996), Hídember (2002), Sorstalanság (2005), ElkXrtuk (2021). A beszélgetés résztvevői: Balázsy István Csunderlik Péter Dékány László Laska Pál A Régen minden jobb volt a Tilos Rádió hátrafelé nyilazó történelmi műsora: https://www.facebook.com/regen.minden.jobb.volt
Click on our app BLOG to see the video to it (though it's no big deal)CALLING ON ANGELSJane Sieberry and KD LangSanta Maria, Santa Teresa, Santa Anna, Santa SusannahSanta Cecilia, Santa Copelia, Santa Domenica, Mary AngelicaFrater Achad, Frater Pietro, Julianus, PetronillaSanta, Santos, Miroslaw, Vladimir and all the restA man is placed upon the steps and a baby criesHigh above you can hear the church bells start to ringAnd as the heaviness, oh, the heaviness, the body settles inSomewhere you can hear a mother singThen it's one foot, then the other as you step out on the roadStep out on the road, how much weight, how much?Then it's how long and how far and how many timesOh, before it's too late?Calling all angels, calling all angelsWalk me through this one, don't leave me aloneCalling all angels, calling all angelsWe're tryin', we're hopin' but we're not sure howOh, and every day you gaze upon the sunset with such love and intensityWhy?It's ah, it's almost as if you could only crack the code then you'd finally understandWhat this all meansOh, but if you could, do you think you would trade in allAll the pain and suffering?Oh, but then you'd miss the beauty of the light upon this earthAnd the, and the sweetness of the leavingCalling all angels, calling all angelsWalk me through this one, don't leave me aloneCalling all angels, calling all angelsWe're tryin', we're hopin' but we're not sure howCalling all angels (calling all angels), calling all angels (calling all angels)Walk me through this one, don't leave me alone (walk me through this one, don't leave me alone)Calling all angels, calling all angelsWe're tryin', we're hopin', we're hurtin', we're lovin'We're cryin', we're callin' 'cause we're not sure how this goes
Had you a bird’s eye view of the Eurasian steppe in 1236, you could have watched an unparalleled sight. Perhaps more than 100,000 mounted warriors spread out in vast columns converging upon the Kama River, followed with nigh on one million horses, goats, and sheep at some distance behind; thousands of carts, some small enough to be pulled by a single ox, to those so large they required full teams of oxen. Mounted on these carts were spare weapons and arrows, specialists and engineers in siege technology and the tools they needed to build their fearsome machinery, and on the largest carts, royal Mongols gers, round felt tents to house the many princes leading the army. Their very movement changed the landscape, politically and ecologically. The nomadic Turkic peoples who inhabited the steppe fled before them; new roads were cut, others formed by the very passage of ten thousand horses stripping bare the grassland; to avoid lengthy detours in order to stay on schedule, rivers were blocked and diverted to accommodate the great carts. This was an army with one purpose: to conquer everything as far as the hooves of Mongol horses would take them. This was the Great Western Invasion, Mongol princes from across the dynasty collected and hurled as a great spear westwards, which in the coming years would land deep into Europe. I’m your host David, und this is… The Great Western Invasion is perhaps the most famous campaign of the Mongol Empire. It’s a campaign of big names and big personalities: Batu, Mongke, Guyuk and the great commander Subutai. It’s a story you likely know the broad strokes of already, the bloody conquest of the Russian principalities culminating in the famous battles of Liegnitz and Mohi. It’s generally presented as the master stroke of Subutai’s strategic genius,commonly said that the Mongols would have driven right to the shores of Britain if hadn’t been for the untimely death of Ogedai Khaan at the end of 1241, forcing them to withdraw to elect his successor. It’s a great story and quite cinematic, but one which barely conveys any of the complexities of the great invasion, and one ripe with exaggerations and myths. Over the next episodes we’re going to try to change your view of the invasion, including as many of the intricacies and historiography of it as we can to provide a fuller understanding of the campaign, and a better, though more nuanced, respect for Mongol military success. Mongol knowledge of the west came through an offshoot of the invasion of the Khwarezmian Empire, when Jebe Noyan and Subutai Ba’atar led an army through the Caucasus and onto the steppe, where they fought with the nomadic Turkic Cuman-Qipchaq tribes, an army of the Rus’ principalities on the Kalka River, and the Volga Bulghars, the mercantile masters of the Volga River’s trade routes. We covered this in a previous episode, so check that out for the specifics. Though popularly portrayed as a reconnaissance in force, it was a hard fought campaign resulting in the death of Jebe Noyan and Mongol defeats or narrowly won victories. The defeats demanded Mongol retaliation, as did the loss of a top commander- it’s easy to imagine Subutai personally wanting to avenge himself and his fallen friend, as Jebe may have been a mentor to him. The foes encountered in the west had shown themselves fierce fighters, and the Mongols left with an impression that overwhelming force was needed for further campaigning in the region. The Cuman-Qipchaqs, a loose confederation of Turkic tribes inhabiting the steppes from the borders of Hungary past the Caspian Sea, were a particular issue. Nomadic enemies, similar in lifestyle to the Mongols themselves, were perceived as their greatest threat. Not only could they more readily flee Mongol armies than any sedentary foe, thus continuing to be a threat, but they were likewise skilled horse archers. If united under a charismatic leader as Chinggis Khan had done with the Mongol tribes, the Cuman-Qipchaqs could directly challenge Mongolian hegemony in the steppe. In the Mongolian universalist ideology which developed at the end of Chinggis Khan’s life, everything beneath Eternal Blue Heaven was the Mongols to rule. The fact that these foes had fought the Mongols, at times even besting them, was a state of open rebellion that the Great Khan could not allow. Subutai had withdrawn from the western steppe over 1224, but that was not the final Mongol encounter in the west before the great invasion. Modern Kazakhstan was by then the ulus of Jochi, the territory granted to Chinggis Khan’s eldest son. As Jochi had died in 1225, the appanage was now headed by Jochi’s second son, Batu- this was the territorial beginnings of the later Golden Horde. From the Jochid ulus, the Mongols had a forward base to attack their foes within the Volga steppe. The closest foe was the Volga Bulghars, a distant Turkic relation to the Bulgarians who gave their name to the empires on the Danube in Southeastern Europe and the Balkans. Controlling the meeting point of the Volga and Kama Rivers, their influence extended to the Urals in the east, and to the borders of the Rus’ principalities in the west. Dominating the fur trade and other exports from the local Finno-Ugric population like the Mordvins and Bashkirs, Volga Bulgharia was a major trade centre, the stopping point between the Rus’ principalities and Khwarezmian Empire. At least, it had been until Chinggis Khan wiped the Khwarezmian Empire from the map. With extensive contacts in Khwarezm and the Qipchaq tribes of the region, the Volga Bulghars were well informed of the fall of Khwarezm and approach of Subutai in 1223, and defeated him on the Volga River that year. Despite this victory, they were not left in a great position. The most powerful Rus’ princely state, that of Vladimir-Sudzal’, was encroaching on Bulghar territory and competing for control over the Mordvins, making one of the Mordvin principalities their vassal. The Bulghars tried to appease the Rus’ through peace negotiations, hoping to focus their efforts for a Mongol return. It proved fruitless. In 1229 with Ogedai’s ascension came the second Mongol attack, in which Mongol forces seized the steppe from the Ural River to the Volga, overrunning the Bulghars’ border guards. This attack was led by the commanders Koketei and Sonitei, though it’s commonly suggested that this Sonitei may have been a misspelling of Subutai in the source. If it was Subutai, he was soon recalled to aid Ogedai and Tolui in the final conquest of the Jin Dynasty. The 1229 attack caused a great displacement of tribes, fleeing deeping into Bulghar territory to escape the Mongols. Another attack came in 1232, spending the winter in Bulghar country but were unable to move onto their capital. Relatively smaller armies had undertaken these two offensives; with significant forces dispatched under Chormaqun to finalize conquests in Iran and accompanying Ogedai, Tolui and Subutai to destroy the Jin, as we have covered in our previous episodes, major resources were unavailable to attack Bulghar. Victory over the Jurchen Jin in 1234 changed this, freeing up troops to divert elsewhere. Most of the Mongol army and its auxiliaries were pulled back within weeks of the final victory over the Jin, though some forces remained on the border due to an attack from the Song Dynasty. Despite Song attacks, Ogedai ordered only minor offensives against them for the time being; the west had to be dealt with. In 1235 a great quriltai was held in Mongolia to which the available princes of the dynasty were invited. In classic Ogedai fashion upon their gathering an entire month was spent in feasting, drinking and celebrating; gifts and loot were handed out from the treasury; the laws and ordinances of Chinggis Khan were read out again. After this imperial bender, it was time to get to business. Ogedai’s son Qochu was ordered to hold the frontier with the Song Dynasty, while the rest of the available forces were to be taken west. The Mongol leadership was under the impression that the western end of the continent was home to fierce foes. Ogedai’s only surviving full brother, Chagatai, had been collecting information for him. In the Secret History of the Mongols, Chagatai gave this warning to Ogedai: “The enemy people beyond consist of many states, and there, at the end of the world, they are hard people. They are people who, when they become angry, would rather die by their own swords. I am told they have sharp swords.” Chagatai's idea was that this should be a unified effort with all branches of the dynasty -that is, from the lines of Chinggis Khan’s four sons with Borte- contributing troops. This was agreed to. While the western campaign is sometimes depicted as a side show, the sources inform us that the chief figures of the third generation of Chinggisids were present. A number of Jochi’s numerous children, especially his most important sons Orda, Batu, Shiban and Tangqut, were to be present. From Chagatai’s line were Buri and Baidar, Buri his grandson via Moetugen, Chagatai’s beloved favourite who had died in the Khwarezmian campaign. Ogedai’s own sons Guyuk and Qadan represented him, and from the line of the late Tolui was his eldest, Mongke, and Mongke’s half-brother Bojek. If some of these names sound familiar to you, it's because these were among the most prominent Chinggisids of the next decades: Batu, founder of the Golden Horde, with Guyuk and Mongke to be Great Khans in the years after Ogedai. Kolgen, a son of Chinggis Khan from a secondary wife accompanied them, as did the most famous of all Mongol generals, Subutai. While Batu was the lead prince and it was ostensibly his territory they were expanding, Subutai was to hold overall command. Ogedai wished to lead this army himself, but was talked out of it by the assembly- it was deemed too dangerous an expedition, and Ogedai’s health may have already declined past being fit for such a trek. Each of these princes brought the troops attached to their households and appanages, resulting in a massive and diverse army. Common estimates range from 100,000-150,000 men- largely Mongolian and Turkic horse archers, but with an important contingent of Chinese siege engineers. Representatives of other conquered peoples joined them- Tanguts, Uighurs, Khitan, Jurchen, already conquered Qipchaqs and perhaps even Central Asian Iranians. A mainly cavalry army, speed, maneuverability and overwhelming firepower was its strength, taking advantage of the seemingly unlimited grassland and pasture of the great Eurasian steppe. We know at one point in the quriltai it was considered to send a vast army of Chinese along with them, but this idea was talked down: Yelu Chucai declared they were unfit to the climate and long march. A moment must be given to what the strategic goals were. The Qipchaq and Bulghars were obviously targets, with the Rus’ to be punished for allying with them. In general, the western steppe was to be conquered, but beyond that? It’s often said the famous European component of the invasion was an afterthought, little more than a raid, but there is some suggestion that Hungary was a definite target right from the beginning. Most Mongol imperial sources discuss Hungary, or rather, their garbled name representing the Kingdom, as a target from the outset. In the 1220s the Hungarian King, Bela IV, who we will meet in our next episodes, had declared himself King of the Cumans. The Hungarian Kingdom wanted to expand its control over and convert the neighbouring Cumans to Christianity. It’s possible rumour made it down the steppes that the Hungarian King was not the Cuman King in name only, but the actual lord of the Cuman tribes in fact. For the Mongols, who saw the Cuman-Qipchaqs as enemies, this made their “king” a major foe. As they moved west they likely gained more accurate information on him, but in distant Mongolia it was hard to correct that. Beyond that, we have statements from the likes of Friar Julian, who will be introduced below, stating in 1236 that the Mongols intended on attacking Rome. So the army, representing the four branches of the Chinggisid dynasty, had a goal to essentially conquer everything westwards, specifically intending on Europe as a part of this. After the quriltai, the princes returned to their ordus, [or-doos] to assemble their forces: the various armies marched separately, setting out in spring 1236 to unite on the Kama River on the edge of Volga Bulghar territory. We are provided an absolutely fascinating perspective from an Hungarian Dominican friar who traveled through Volga Bulgharia on the eve of the Mongol invasion. Called Julian, or sometimes Julianus, he had been sent to find the Hungarians who remained in their old homeland. In a journey that took him across the steppe, through the Rus’ principalities, and Volga Bulgharia, he arrived east of Volga Bulgharia in what he called Magna Hungaria - “great Hungary,” inhabited by a Ugric people whose language, Julian was astonished to find, was mutually intelligible with his own, despite the 400 years since the Magyars had separated from them to enter the Pannonian Basin. These were the Bashkirs, related to the modern people of the same name in Russia’s Bashkortostan, though the modern descendants have been thoroughly turkicized. More relevant for us, Julian was in Magna Hungaria and Volga Bulgharia while Mongol armies gathered on the Kama River only a few days away. There is a sense that the Bulghars were quite aware of the strength of the Mongol army and the approaching terror, but lacked the manpower to repulse such a horde, leaving them to watch helplessly. During his time there, Julian encountered Mongol envoys moving ahead of the main army with demands of submission. Julian departed before the Mongol attack on Bulghar, and we are provided no specifics on the fall. The Bulghar cities were well fortified, their army of fine repute, but they had been weakened in recent years by conflict with the Rus’ and Mongols. Over winter 1236, their capital cities were destroyed and the state of Volga Bulgharia ended. While there, Friar Julian heard that Saqsin, a Turkic city along the lower Volga, had already fallen to them. Indeed, it seems the Mongols made to secure the steppes around the northwestern Caspian before moving onto the Volga Bulghars. This was a region inhabited by the Qipchaq-Olberli-Qanglis of the Cuman-Qipchaq confederation, who had fought the Mongols several times. We have little specific details of this, except for one episode. Many Cuman-Qipchaq peoples fled west before the Mongols, while others submitted, with limited resistance by one individual in particular. This was Bachman of the Olberli Qipchaqs. The ruler of a territory along the Ahktuba, a branch of the lower Volga, Bachman emerged sometime in the late 1220s and early 1230s, trying to organize against the Mongols. The leading Cuman-Qipchaq chiefs had fallen to Jebe and Subutai during their campaign in 1222-1223, leaving few in the Qipchaq steppe with the following or influence to rise up. According to the Yuan Shih, dating from the early Ming Dynasty, part of Subutai’s specific instructions had been to strike down this Qipchap chief. Before the fall of Volga Bulgharia, Subutai advanced with the vanguard ahead of the main and scattered Bachman’s army, somewhere along the Caspian Sea, capturing Bachman’s wife and sons. Subutai then turned back for the Kama River to await the main army before moving onto the Bulghars. Bachman was reduced to irregular warfare with a small following, striking at Mongol parties while fleeing southwards. In early 1237 as the main army under Subutai continued on from the ruins of Volga Bulgharia, Mongke and his half brother Bojek were despatched to hunt Bachman down, each travelling down a bank of the Volga. Finding an old woman left behind by Bachman’s troops who pointed them after him, Mongke and Bojek cornered Bachman on an island in the river. Heaven showed its favour when the winds picked up and pushed the water back to reveal a ford. Crossing rapidly, Mongke and Bojek’s army fell upon the unprepared and outnumbered Bachman, destroying the remnants of his men. Bachman was captured, asking only for the final honour to be killed by Mongke’s own hand. Mongke instead had Bojek cut Bachman in half, essentially putting an end to any form of organized Cuman-Qipchaq resistance to the Mongol advance. After Bachmann’s death, Mongke and Bojek marched back across the steppe to rejoin the main army, which had stayed busy. The Bashkirs had been dispersed and subjugated, Volga Bulgharia destroyed, the next target being the Mordvins, another Ugric people still extant today, giving their name to the Russian republic of Mordovia. The Mordvins were divided into two principalities; once both under Volga Bulgharian influence, the western had since fallen under the domination of the Rus’. The eastern principality submitted to the Mongols and provided troops; the western made the mistake of resisting and was crushed. This left the Mongols on the borders of the Rus’ principalities. Halting on the Voronezh River in late summer 1237, Batu and Subutai waited to allow Mongke and Bojek to rejoin them, finalizing their plan of assault, sending envoys to demand submission and waiting for the rivers to freeze in order to cross them. The Rus’ principalities were the divided heirs to the Kievan Rus’; still linguistically and culturally a part of the same heritage and the Riurikid dynasty, but politically each principality was an independent entity. In the 1230s, the most powerful was the northeastern principality of Vladimir-Suzdal’ under the Grand Duke Yuri Vsevolodovich. While the Volga Bulghars had made efforts to prepare for the Mongol return, it seems the great slaughter on the Kalka River did nothing for the Rus’, who chalked it up to another attack, though a destructive one, by the various nomads of the steppe. Few rumours of the Mongols had reached the Rus’ in the following years, and their return was sudden and unexpected. For Batu’s force, the closest Rus’ principality was Ryazan, which bravely, but foolishly, refused to submit. The Princes of Ryazan, Murom and Pronsk sent an army against the Mongols, at the start of winter 1237, which was destroyed near the Voronezh River, the Rus’ horsemen pierced by Mongol arrows. On December 16th, 1237, Batu’s armies arrived outside Ryazan, surrounding the city with a stockade. On the 21st of December, the city’s wooden walls were breached by catapult and battering ram, the Mongols pouring in. In the words of the Chronicle of Novgorod, the Mongols “killed the Knyaz and the Knyaginya and men, women, and children, monks, nuns and priests, some by fire, some by the sword, and violated nuns, priests’ wives, good women and girls in the presence of their mothers and sisters.” The slaughter was total and indiscriminate. Grand Duke Yuri was unable, or unwilling to help. Some historians such as Alexander Maiorov have suggested based on the Laurentian Chronicle that Yuri had actually accepted a Mongol demand for submission, having sent back their envoys with gifts. In the Chronicle, Roman Igorevich, the brother of the Prince of Ryazan fled with his druzhina bodyguards, hotly pursued by Mongols, making his way to Kolomna on the Oka River. There he was unexpectedly supported by the commander- an officer of Grand Duke Yuri- who tried to help him. The Mongols won the battle, but one of their generals was killed- Kolgen, a son of Chinggis Khan. The killing of a Chinggisid prince was always cause for horrific retaliation, and even if Yuri had accepted submission, or at least hoped to avoid violence, it was too late. The consequence of Kolgen’s death was the rapid assault and sacking of numerous cities across the northern principalities over spring 1238, among them a small town called Moscow on the 15th of January. Grand Duke Yuri fled north, his capital of Vladimir falling on February 7th, his family killed in the process. On the 4th of March , Yuri and a small force was caught on the Sit’ River by the Mongol Noyan Boroldai. Yuri was captured and suffered a horrific death the sources could only allude to Only at Torzhok and Kozel’sk did resistance last weeks. Kozel’sk in particular was a bloody affair, aptly defended under its young prince Vasilko. Batu was unable to force the city for almost two months. At one point a wall was breached and the Mongols rushed it, only to be repulsed. Only when Qadan and Buri arrived with reinforcements was the city to be taken. Before the city fell in May 1238, the citizenry rushed from the gates in an unexpected charge, taking the Mongols by surprise and inflicting heavy casualties, destroying catapults and killing the sons of three commanders before the Mongols overcame them. According to the Galician-Volhynian Chronicle, the Mongols came to call Kozel’sk “the evil city,” and none dared mention it in their presence. Of the major cities of the northern principalities, only the republic of Novgorod escaped slaughter with the timely submission of its prince, Alexander Nevsky, perhaps aided by the spring melt turning the approaches to the city into marsh and hamphering Mongol advances. Nevsky is most famous today as the victor over the Teutonic Knights at Lake Peipus in 1242, a small victory the Rus’ clung to in an era of devastation. With the onset of warmer weather around May 1238, the Mongols withdrew from northern Rus’ to rest men and horses and take stock of their efforts. Why did the Rus’ fair so poorly? From December 1237 to May 1238, the Mongols took the major cities of the northern principalities with few holding out longer than a couple of days. We can boil it down to two main factors. The first being the matter of defenses and weaponry. The defenses of the Rus’ cities were mainly logs on top earthworks, with towers few or non-existent and stone works rare. For catapults designed to bring down the great pounded earth walls of China, such walls provided little defense. Mongol siege techniques were simply far advanced beyond that of the Rus’, where sieges were generally blockades to starve out the inhabitants and catapults exceedingly uncommon. Defenders behind the city walls had nothing to compare to the range of Chinese catapults, leaving them only able to watch as the walls were battered down from afar. Cities and fortresses were, unlike Europe, built on level and approachable ground, making them easy to surround, advance to, and easy to strike with siege machines. The other cause for the swift Rus’ defeat was the deep fragmentation of the principalities. Princely conflict was tense in the years building up to, and even during, the Mongol invasion, princes keen to watch their neighbour take the force of the Mongol assault, only to be surprised when they were struck next. In comparison, the Mongols had a mostly unified and effective leadership- though their own princely antagonisms were about to begin to rear their heads. Mongol army units were able to cooperate and move independently from hundreds of kilometres apart, kept in contact with a series of messengers and set timelines to meet. Rather than a massive assemblage moving altogether, the Mongol army split into contingents led by their princes and commanders, units of 1000 darting across Rus’. The sensation within the cities must have been that they were totally surrounded, new parties of Mongols riding to and fro daily, their numbers seemingly endless. Like the cities of the Khwarezmian Empire, the Rus’ cities were basically each left to their own defense, allowing the Mongols to always isolate the enemy and enjoy local superiority in numbers despite the fierceness of the Rus’ garrisons. By the time Batu ordered the withdrawal for summer 1238, northern Rus’ was devastated. Archaeologically the evidence of the slaughter of men, women and children has sadly corroborated Rus' accoutnts, though the destruction was not as total as commonly portrayed, as Rus’ princes still had military and economic power to continue fighting each other in the following years. Their ability to offer an effective military resistance to the Mongol Empire was broken, and it would be well over a century before the Rus’ could provide a direct military challenge to Mongol forces. Still, not all the principalities were destroyed in this first wave: the south and far western principalities like Chernigov, Kiev, Galicia and Volhynia had not yet been targeted, and the Cuman-Qipchap inhabited steppe between the Caspian and Black Seas still needed to be conquered, the next tasks for Batu and Subutai after their break for summer 1238, and the topic for our next episode, so be sure to subscribe to the Kings and Generals podcast and to continue helping us bring you more outstanding content, please visit our patreon at www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. Thank you for listening, I am your host David and we will catch you on the next one!
Check in with Julianus Soter post CCP Faction War updates and changes. Appearing: Silver Suspiria (Mecha Enterprises Fleet [Federation Uprising]) Julianus Soter (Leader GMVA) Off camera: Content Guide: How did the Champions of Low Sec event impact Low SEC and FW? To no one’s surprise SNUFF reforms and wins, how has their activity been? Rebalance of LP from FW missions and increased LP earned from kills – has this been gamed at all? – has encourage more fighting? Battleship passes, including new terrain on the map with a battleship plex – how does this shape system control? Battleship changes in...
So close to the tourist trail, yet so far, Libya sits on the Mediterranean yet has been isolated for decades by poverty, dictatorship and civil war. But should peace return, Leptis Magna is the jewel in Libya's crown: potentially the largest and best preserved Roman city in the Mediterranean. With a resplendent forum, theater, basilica, harbor, amphitheater, and especially, a colossal arch, Leptis is an unvisited gem. Leptis' golden age came under the leadership of local-boy-made-good Septimius Severus. To help tell the story of how a lad from Leptis became ruler of the "known world," Rob and Jamie from the Roman Emperors: Totalus Rankium podcast stop by. Not only do we talk about Severus and the disastrous emperor who preceded him (Didius Julianus), but we also discuss Severus' evil son Caracalla. Evil. Oh so evil. No discussion of Libya would be complete without discussing the cuisine: a blend of North African and Middle Eastern, highlighted by couscous. This isn't your store-bought fluffy cardboard; we'll be properly steaming it this time.
Ettevõtluskeskkonnast Ülar Maapaluga – LHV Podcast 02 2018 Meie teises podcastis arutleb LHV ettevõtete panganduse juht Indrek Nuume Ülar Maapaluga ettevõtluskeskkonna hetkeseisu teemadel. Fookuses on krediiditurg ja regulatsioonid ning nende mõju majandusele. Ülar Maapalu on ettevõtja, Baltikumi suurima krediidihaldusfirma Julianus juht ja omanik, kes oma ettevõtmiste kaudu oskab hästi majanduse tervist kraadida. Finantsteenuseid pakub AS LHV Pank. Tutvu finantsteenuste tingimustega aadressil www.lhv.ee ja küsi nõu meie asjatundjalt.
Second of the knockout round. This week, Valentian and his bears v Otho and his toupee v Caligula and his crazy v Julianus and his fear. Also: we look at Opprobrium Crazium: who were the sanest and the craziest emperors?
Subscribe via: iTunes | Google Play | RSS C.J. Julianus is a veteran actor, speaker, and theatre director, a tireless champion and performer's advocate dripping with altruism and self-deprecation. Show Notes I've personally worked with CJ on multiple projects, and have learned a lot from the experience. Give a listen, and you will too. Like this episode? Subscribe, rate, and review it on iTunes. If you appreciate what we're doing, please consider supporting us through the Patreon.
Subscribe on: iTunes | Google Play | RSS Meet the cast of Cold Reboot as we discuss the production and behind-the-scenes. In this episode: Chanda Davetas, Ruth Kaufman, C.J. Julianus, Kat O’Connor, and Michael Coorlim. Show Notes Episode 10 Cold Reboot was adapted from the novel by Michael Coorlim. Produced by Kat O’Connor and Michael Coorlim. Associate Producer is Bill Bullock. Synesthesia Theatre is only possible due to support from listeners like you. Want to help us make Season 3 a reality? Support us on Patreon: Support Synesthesia Theatre Our cast's upcoming projects: Chanda Davetas ChandaDavetas.com Ruth Kaufman Heavens to Betsy Redemption Way Batteries Plus ad RuthTalks.com RuthKaufman.com What would Bernie Sanders Do podcast Synesthesia Theatre theme music by Stav Drieman. Learn more at StavMusic.com. Questions? Comments? Follow us on Facebook or Twitter. Like this episode? Subscribe, rate, and review it on iTunes, and tell your friends. It keeps us high in the rankings so more listeners can find us. Want to write for us? Find out more here. Join our mailing list for news, announcements, and an exclusive audio drama download. Synesthesia Theatre is a Burning Brigid Media production, copyright © 2017. All rights reserved.
700+ nominations have been tabulated, and voting is now open for the 2016 Audio Verse Awards. We are incredibly pleased that our hard-working cast and crew have gotten this recognition. And we would love your support in seeing us through the next steps! Voting is open to the public, and the first round of voting has begun, and closes at 11:59pm PDT on November 6. During this time YOU have a chance to make your voice heard. If you thought Iron Horses Can't Be Broken was exceptional in any of the categories below, then let the internet know and vote at audioverseawards.net! Vote for Our Cast & Crew! Please read the voting instructions carefully, and be aware that since there are many categories to vote for, and you must vote in every category, voting will take around 30 minutes. If you'd like to review nominees in categories we're not up for, you can check out their master list of nominations, or their nominee showcase, both with links to the shows. We were nominated in these categories: Best Original Composition in a Long form, Large Cast Production: Synesthesia Theatre theme music Best Original Anthology/Variety Show: Synesthesia Theatre Best New Original, Long Form, Large Cast, Ongoing Production: Synesthesia Theatre Best Audio Engineering of an Original, Ongoing, Long Form Production: Kat O'Connor, Michael Coorlim, and Bill Bullock for Iron Horses Can't Be Broken Best Writing of an Original, Long Form, Large Cast, Ongoing Production: Michael Coorlim for Iron Horses Can't Be Broken Best Original, Long Form, Large Cast, Ongoing, Dramatic Production: Iron Horses Cant be Broken Best Actress in an Original Ensemble Role for a Long Form Production: Amanda Meyer, as Florence Bartleby Kat O'Connor, as Sarah Bartleby Best Actress in an Original Leading Role for a Long Form Production: Deborah Craft, as Iron Horse Song Marshall, as Aldora Fiske Best Actor in an Original Ensemble Role for a Long Form Production: Bill Bullock, as Parker Doug Schuetz, as Luther Koning Sean Francis, as Chester Best Actor in an Original Leading Role for a Long Form, Large Cast Production: C.J. Julianus, as Governor Robert Koning James Sparling, as Alton Bartleby Whew, that's a lot! Five finalists in each category will move on to the Finals based on the number of votes they receive, and the last round of voting will also be open to the public for a final two weeks. There are lots of nominees for the first round, so competition will be stiff. As always, you can also support us by telling your friends about us, about Iron Horses and Synesthesia Theatre, and about the voting periods for the Audio Verse Awards. We think it would be great for our cast and crew to get some well-deserved recognition. Thank you! Support Our Co-Artists with Your Vote
In the year that held 5 possible emperors, only one would come out on top! Who would was anyone's guess... Well, sort of... No one expected Julianus to last. And Pertinax obviously was upsetting too many Praetorians. Oh, and Albinus clearly was not in a strong enough position without the backing of the German legions. And as for Niger, well he just needed to get a bloody move on! But still, the empire was up for grabs and one man saw a way to take it, re-mould it and hand it to the next generation with pride...
Zenobia, an original musical written by Bolingbrook’s Lorrisa Julianus and composed by Angela Salvaggione of Joliet. Rob interviews Lorrisa who played the lead and Craig Engel, the director. This production premiered at the Bolingbrook Performing Arts Center. The show, which starred Julianus as the title character, is based on the real life of the warrior Queen of Palmyra (a metropolitan oasis in ancient Syria). In the story, a slave girl, torn between her vigilante master and the prince of Syria, is catapulted to royalty and threatens Rome’s terrifying emperor—her unknowing father.
Zenobia, an original musical written by Bolingbrook’s Lorrisa Julianus and composed by Angela Salvaggione of Joliet. Rob interviews Lorrisa who played the lead and Craig Engel, the director. This production premiered at the Bolingbrook Performing Arts Center. The show, which starred Julianus as the title character, is based on the real life of the warrior Queen of Palmyra (a metropolitan oasis in ancient Syria). In the story, a slave girl, torn between her vigilante master and the prince of Syria, is catapulted to royalty and threatens Rome’s terrifying emperor—her unknowing father.
The Romans formed a big part of the Early History of Gwent, particularly Caerleon (Castra Legionis) the Rome of Britannia. By the second century King Lucius invites more missionaries-Doctor Medwy-turns up with three others, which Pope Eleutherius called for. (See blog post on Michaelstone y Fedw http://www.maryinmonmouth.blogspot.com Caerleon has its own Church with a holy Bishop Amphilbus, all of whom are killed in a presecution. We are not sure of which but the Tredunnock tombstone of St Julius Julianus, though buried in the Roman way was to theEast. The National Museum of Wales have authenticated it to the 2nd-3rd century AD so earlier than Diocletian's persecution. Julius and Aaron were both citizens of Caerleon, the whole church was massacred, but they are Roman citizens were allowed to die with swords in their hand. We learn Julius died on the Banks of the Usk next to where the Mansion used to be, the Mansion which was built with stone from his chapel, but seemed to have become disused, possibly because of endless Danish attacks which occurred when the Romans had left. It is even possible he may have been reburied at Tredunnock. Aaron was buried just over the first bridge on the Llanhennock Road in an area still called St Aarons. We then make a jump to the death of Alban, also mistimed by Bede and finally to the attacks of the Danes occurring periodically to the end of the Milennium. We still have to deal with the Saxons in Gwent, which we shall do tomorrow! Feedback about Xmas or Christmas. Mediaeval pre protestant minced pies! vetoed by Oliver Cromwell so make some tonight!!Feedback about Mary in Monmouth and plea to make it include more of Wales. 'Watching you' Fiction by Lynnette Rees,Wild Rose Press, The Book Depository (Amazon) 'My Heart is restless' Theresa Jane Mycock http://www.myheartisrestless.blogspot.com
After-action report for A Land Fertile In Tyrants 0:39 - My group and I sit down to discuss our recently concluded Post-Roman Britain game, played using The Riddle of Steel and Burning Wheel, Revised. 1:31 - Folks introduce themselves: Roy, who played Julianus, the Armorican centurion Sarah, who played Cata, Julianus' sister and wife of the Celtic chief of Weith Keith, who played Aeron, a soldier and the eldest surviving bastard son on the chief Ted, who played Taryn, a desparate warrior with nothing left to lose Christina, who played Paulinus, a Christian priest and brother to the chief 5:38 - We discuss our favorite moments from the game. 20:05 - We talk about system issues raised by our experiences. 34:13 - I ask what could have been better. 44:43 - Ryan, who played Cuhlinn the bard, shows up and tosses in a few more ideas. 47:17 - We wrap up with our final thoughts on an amazing game. --PaulDiscuss this episode in the HG,WT forum
Check in with Julianus Soter post CCP Faction War updates and changes. Appearing: Silver Suspiria (Mecha Enterprises Fleet [Federation Uprising])... Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/talking-in-stations/supportSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/talking-in-stations/donations