"Regarding the lasciviousness of Charles the Frank, it seems to have run in the
bloodline before and after his reign and clearly illustrates a non-royal vestige
of karmic clinging unknown to truly royal personages such as Asoka. There is no
reason to believe, as the author of this essay states, that Carolingians were
any less racially bastardized."
You may have missed, among others, the paragraph where it is written in black
and white that he shared "his obsession with women and his legendary
lustfulness... with the late Merovingians, most of the kings of the Carolingian
dynasty, and, for that matter, with most Valois and most Bourbons."
--- In evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com, Asdfasdsfdas Sfsdf <andreforcordelia@...>
wrote:
>
> Perhaps the last remnants of Saxon autonomy lie in the unique "Plaatdeutch"
dialect of the region.
>
> Witikind was followed by a slew of noble Saxon rebels who had no ambition for
the "Judeo-Christian" empire of the south, such as Henry the Lion, who, Guelph,
was only pro-clerical out of opposition to the Reichtag at the time. Be that as
it may, Duke Henry also helped displace the old tribal elder-Saxon freeman class
and reduced them to serfs, a phenomena mentioned in this essay.
> http://www.amazon.com/Nyklot-Wendish-Crusade-Heaven-ebook/dp/B005FCAHFG
> The Berger class, who probably emerged after the Black Death when labor was
more expensive, paved the way for savings and more capitalistically-intensive
trades to take root in towns. It seems to have been modeled on the old tribal
elder patterns to a certain extent of natural liberty/private property yeoman
philosophy. Both kernals of the technological and philosophical changes to come.
>
>
> Regarding the lasciviousness of Charles the Frank, it seems to have run in the
bloodline before and after his reign and clearly illustrates a non-royal vestige
of karmic clinging unknown to truly royal personages such as Asoka. There is no
reason to believe, as the author of this essay states, that Carolingians were
any less racially bastardized then their predecessors.
>
> The Court clerics of his time only appeared more masculine and heroic than the
sobbing Jewish prophets because, unlike the former, they were praising a living
system that empowered and fed them, and not weeping for a fallen, exaggerated
past while enslaved in exile. An insightful view on the latter phenomena exists
in Schlomo Sand's "Invention of the Jewish People"
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Evola <evola_as_he_is@...>
> To: evola_as_he_is@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Monday, December 26, 2011 12:41 AM
> Subject: [evola_as_he_is] A Jewel of the Papacy