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The Dark ages were largely caused by the great Christian builder and despot, Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian in 529 CE when he banned philosophy and science, calling them paganism.
The last home of philosophy was at the Neoplatonic Academy of Athens where Proclus (411-485) sought to reduce to a kind of system the whole mass of philosophic tradition, until in 529 CE, the teaching of philosophy at Athens was forbidden.
Of course Justinian is just an icon of what was typical Christian thinking.
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oh so your whole point in the end is that the medieval
wait, man fuck that, just get fucking naked
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I want to fuck your brains out.
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@dornrslein. Hm that is an unusual categorisation. I normally see the term dark ages used for the period of my interest, the early medieval period from the fall of the Roman empire until the 11th or 12th century, depending on the culture or discipline you follow. Late Antiquity would be just before this, with Gregory the Great just at the borders? Yes, you could say it quicker, but hotforwords makes a very good case for intelligence (and linguistics) is sexy once more.
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@BuzzBas They do that a couple of times..
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Learned something and saw your boobs move.. Productive Day!
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@BuzzBas they have a slight stretch lol
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If you do your homework, The root word of Evil is transgress. Hence, not to follow rules or laws.
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bias you mean



It would have taken less than a minute to say that the word "evil" is not in "medieval" and that the word "medieval" comes from two latin words medi(um) "middle" + æv(um) "age." The roundabout way it was explained only reinforces the idea that the Middle Ages was a time of great unrest, which it was no more than any other time. It actually stabilized a time of greater unrest, which is called Late Antiquity (the Dark Ages). I'm a history teacher, but certainly not as pretty as you are!
dornroslein 3 years ago 10
Shes FIT
&
her tits are AMAZING :o
azaboy2 2 years ago 4