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GERMANS WANT TO GERMANIZE KOPERNIK (COPERNICUS)! OUTRAGE!


Bratwurst Boy 12 | 11,831
13 Jul 2009 #541
You mention football again and we're not pals anymore! :)

*clamps hands over mouth quickly*
Filios1 8 | 1,336
13 Jul 2009 #542
now Germany forced Austria???

Thats correct. Without the very aggressive stance shown by the Germans towards the Russians, (change of policy when Kaizer Wilhelm came into power) and their full fledged support for Austria, Austria began to feel an air of cockiness, as showcased in their unrealistic demands to Serbia.

Had Germany pursued a more moderate course of action, and perhaps been more open to peace discussions like the British, Austria would have not had the guts to move into Serbia for fear of Russian retaliation.

But then again, Germany was as eager to show off their new navy as Austria was to invade the Balkans.
Bratwurst Boy 12 | 11,831
13 Jul 2009 #543
Thats correct. Without the very aggressive stance shown by the Germans towards the Russians, (change of policy when Kaizer Wilhelm came into power) and their full fledged support for Austria, Austria began to feel an air of cockiness, as showcased in their unrealistic demands to Serbia.

See what I mean?
For some it's ALWAYS the Germans...
ZIMMY 6 | 1,601
13 Jul 2009 #544
German communications satellite Kopernikus:

It's a nice gesture that Germans named a communications satellite after a Pole.
Crow 155 | 9,025
13 Jul 2009 #545
Harry

You're Jewish

wait. Harry you are Jewish? A British Jew? English Jew, eventualy?

Tell me Harry, wtf you Jews needed to allayed yourself with Saudi Arabia, Albania, Croatia, Bosnian mujas, with Germany, England, France, Turkey and complete NATO and EU Borg, against Serbians?

Just look how idiotic alliance you formed just to get rid of Serbians. You are no more but bunch of creaps marouding all over Balkan and hunt Slaveno-Serbian people.

We Serbs helped you Jews as much as we could in WWII. Many Serbs risked their lives to save some Jew or some Jewish family. Shame on you Harrymane and on your pervert kind.

I never regreted for Serbs helped you Jews, for we never had serious anti-Jewish sentiment in Serbia or in Serbian lands all over the Balkan. I can only regret for Serbs trusted you. You are not better then Saudis or Iranians or Turks or fu**** germany or trecherous France, USA and England. You just appear to be different but, you very well understand each others when comes the time to deal with Slavs. You are all same, monstruous intruders.

there is no need for you to even exist.

i believe you Harry. I believe you

BUT, we shall see
PlasticPole 7 | 2,648
13 Jul 2009 #546
It's a nice gesture that Germans named a communications satellite after a Pole.

This is a step in the right direction. Germans should name more things after Poles to acknowledge the contributions Poles have made over the years.

@ Crow...isn't Star Trek created and produced by members of your mortal enemies?
TheOther 6 | 3,674
13 Jul 2009 #547
It's a nice gesture that Germans named a communications satellite after a Pole

They might even rename it to "Kopernik" when it reenters the atmosphere... ;-)
Crow 155 | 9,025
14 Jul 2009 #548
@ Crow...isn't Star Trek created and produced by members of your mortal enemies?

mortal enemies?? i don`t have mortal enemies (except in bussines, eventualy). But, Borg is Borg, in a movie and in a real life.

This is a step in the right direction. Germans should name more things after Poles to acknowledge the contributions Poles have made over the years.

True. Germans should rename Germany into Western Poland to acknowledge Polish contribution to its very existance.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
14 Jul 2009 #549
BB has some good points, though. Still, in PIFL, the position of the father takes precedence over the mother.
Nathan 18 | 1,349
14 Jul 2009 #550
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolaus_Copernicus#Death

"The astronomer's grandfather, Lucas Watzenrode the Elder, was a decided opponent of the Teutonic Knights.[56] In 1453 he was the delegate from Toruń at the Grudziądz conference that planned an uprising against the Teutonic Knights"

His grandfather also supported financially the struggle against the Teutonic order even though he was German. So point about Copernicus' fight against T-guys doesn't convey his belonging to Polish origin.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolaus_Copernicus#Death

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy states: "Thus the child of a German family was a subject of the Polish crown."[65]
Ok.
PlasticPole 7 | 2,648
14 Jul 2009 #551
Nathan, that sounds like Germans who wish to be Polish so we call them Poles.

Now that that's settled.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
14 Jul 2009 #552
Not at all, PP. You could wish to be Canadian or Australian but you'd still be American in the absence of any meaningful change.
Crow 155 | 9,025
14 Jul 2009 #553
But, what if you are native american Apache and some native Australian aboriginals or Canadian escimos say that it sound crazy that you as Apache want to become subject of Australia or Canada. What then? Apache could be confused

on the end, i think that nobody gives a flying sh** for dilemmas of native Australian, Canadian or American
PlasticPole 7 | 2,648
14 Jul 2009 #554
Seanus, Where is the proof Copernicus clung to teutonism or Germanity? I don't see it. His father was Polish, also. His mother's side of the family were German but fought Teutonism. Sounds like they were more Polish than German.

If you were to show me proof his family supported the teutons and were anti polanism I could say he was German but that isn't the indication so why turn him into something he isn't just to satisfy certain people who can't even go back in time and ask him what he would prefer to be called "German" or "Polish"? Or is the correct term "Prussian"?
Seanus 15 | 19,674
14 Jul 2009 #555
PP, he didn't need to cling to it. He wrote in German which is significant. Germans would fight Teutonism if it wasn't the right regime for them, that means nothing.

Copernicus may have resisted due to maternal pressure. Look at the Bosnian Serbs fighting with Serbs with no connection to Bosnia. They may have clung to one at the expense of the other but, in reality, they were both.

I guess the key question is, 'what's in a label?'. He is Polish by label but you could have been born in China to American parents. Are you still Chinese if you move back to America and study there for some time with a settled intention to stay?

I ask you, what is the deciding factor?

Crow, tha Apache must know his heritage and identity. Feeling isn't the decisive factor but it is one of them.
PlasticPole 7 | 2,648
14 Jul 2009 #556
He wrote in German which is significant.

He writes in German because that's what he knows. I write in English does that make me British? What does the language itself mean? His mother was a German woman and spoke to him in German so he learned it. I learned English growing up because that's what everyone around me spoke but I am American.

One thing we must all ask ourselves: What does language make us? Just because you are fluent in a language...does it make you that nationality or culture?
Torq
14 Jul 2009 #557
"Thus the child of a German family was a subject of the Polish crown."

This is a true sentence if you replace "German" with "Silesian".
Seanus 15 | 19,674
14 Jul 2009 #558
PP, he was born 7 years into the changeover to Polish status. If his family deemed it so important for him to be a Pole then why was German all he knew? Language is not the deciding factor either. I can express myself quite well in 2 other languages than my L1 but does that make me natives of those countries, no. You are right but I didn't argue that language was the decisive factor.

Settled intention and meaningful connections are. The latter must be weighed according to the prevailing climate and the totality of factors. So I ask again, the majority of his work was in Polish or German?
PlasticPole 7 | 2,648
14 Jul 2009 #559
I'm not sure about it, Seanus, because I cannot ask Copernicus what he thinks of Poles and of Germans and which he would identify with and why. I am sure if I could I would get an interesting answer and it wouldn't be so simple as "Why, Prussian, of course!" He might have been anti German because of Teutonism and negated everything German despite that.

Disgusted by Teutonism, he might be critical of Germans for accepting it, kind of like Nietzsche was critical of Prussia and identified with Poles and claimed Polish ancestry even though there isn't any.
Seanus 15 | 19,674
14 Jul 2009 #560
Exactly, now you're talkin!! PIFL lawyers have wrangled over this and come to no definitive conclusion either way. Many have betrayed their countries or taken other sides but that doesn't wipe out their roots and history. BB is on shaky ground as I believe the parents issue, esp the father, to be highly important. If I went to China and really felt Chinese, that wouldn't make me Chinese.
Harry
14 Jul 2009 #561
Sounds like they were more Polish than German.

There's the crux of the issue: Copernicus was neither purely Polish nor purely German. However, while most Germans seem to be willing to share him with Poland, very few Poles are willing to return the favour.

Interestingly, if Copernicus was born today, he would not qualify for Polish citizenship. His father wouldn't have been Polish by birth and that would mean that Nicolaus wouldn't be either.
Sokrates 8 | 3,345
14 Jul 2009 #562
Settled intention and meaningful connections are. The latter must be weighed according to the prevailing climate and the totality of factors. So I ask again, the majority of his work was in Polish or German?

In Latin, also Sean Kopernik could speak Polish from day 1 given that his family hailed from Kraków.

As for his name its not germanized, its latinized, it was the fad of these times to have a latinized name for most academics regardless of nationality.
Harry
14 Jul 2009 #563
also Sean Kopernik could speak Polish from day 1 given that his family hailed from Kraków.

Do you have any proof at all that Copernicus could speak Polish?

BTW: his family were not "from Krakow". His father was born there but neither of his grandparents were. This fact, combined with his mother being German-born to German parents, means that he would not now be able to claim a Polish passport by right.
1jola 14 | 1,879
14 Jul 2009 #564
means that he would not now be able to claim a Polish passport by right.

You are applying 21st century code to the 16th century. Too much sun?
Bratwurst Boy 12 | 11,831
14 Jul 2009 #565
In Latin, also Sean Kopernik could speak Polish from day 1 given that his family hailed from Kraków.

Even Krakau had lot's of Germans. It was a city of the Hanseatic League after all.
How do you think papa Kopernikus spoke with his wife Barbara Watzenrode?
And how did the children converse with their uncle Watzenrode who took them in later?

Any evidence at all that Kopernikus spoke polish?

You are applying 21st century code to the 16th century. Too much sun?

Well...the Poles do!

There is not much polish about the Koppernighs but alone the fact that he was born in a then polish town let's Poles fight tooth and nail over him.

Regardless that he stems from german background and his family lived in a german town (before the peace of Thorn).

THAT is 21th century nationalism at it's worst!
Sokrates 8 | 3,345
14 Jul 2009 #566
More on Kopernik.

What we know about Kopernik is that he did write his letters in Latin and German but that doesnt prove anything since Poland at the time used Latin as its official law/trade/nobility language.

However a very significant fact that justifies Poles claiming he spoke Polish is the fact that he written Polish peasant names correctly when writing on the goods of the Warmian Bishop, given that Western chronicles and writers regularly made mistakes and misspellings in difficult second names (all Teutonic Chronicles) thats a pretty big argument and if he could write in Polish he could definitely speak it.

As for Koperniks fathers side of the family it originated from Silesia (which was a multicultural region at the time) but his family resided in Kraków for at least 3 generations, he spoke and wrote Polish, had a Polish name and Polish citizensship as well as a Polish merchant coat of arms so he's undisputedly Polish and for several generations too.
Bratwurst Boy 12 | 11,831
14 Jul 2009 #567
but his family resided in Kraków for at least 3 generations,

A city of the Hanseatic League with lots of Germans!

he spoke and wrote Polish, had a Polish name and Polish citizensship as well

Any link for that? But I have one for you: newadvent.org/cathen/04352b.htm

...In 1497 Nicolaus was enrolled in the University of Bologna as of German nationality and a student in canon law..

How come he took the german nationality if his fathers had been polish (as you say)!

so he's undisputedly Polish and for several generations too.

From a german family, who spoke and wrote german, who took german nationality for studies...what a Pole!
Sokrates 8 | 3,345
14 Jul 2009 #568
A city of the Hanseatic League with lots of Germans

Oh please, it was a Polish capital, next thing you know you're going to make a city with 80% Polish population built by Poles and being a Polish capital into a German one, of course it was a member of the league, the league couldnt afford not to have it since it was a gateway to all of Eastern Europe, btw Germans at their peak made up 6% of the population, thats not a "lot".

Any link for that?

The guy lived and made business in a predominantly Polish city, so did his grandfather and his great grandfather unless the guy was tugging an interpreter everywhere he went then yeah he spoke Polish, especially since he used a Polish name.

Interestingly enough Kopernik never signed his letters in German, ever, his signature Copernicus is pure Latin, some German guy (dont remember the name) introducted Kopernikus in 18century.

How come he took the german nationality if his fathers had been polish (as you say)!

How do you figure he took the then non-existent "German nationality"? He signed his works in Latin, he studied in Poland and could write Polish second names with whats an apparent understanding of gramatics, was the subject of the Polish crown and had a father who's family came from then predominantly Czech Bohemia and lived in Kraków for generations.

From a german family

Got any proof of that claim? There is no definite source that would confirm that Koperniks father had German roots, he definitely could not speak German, since he was a businesman in a Polish city he had to speak Polish and Latin to even do business.

who took german nationality for studies...

As far as i know Kopernik studied in Kraków, Poland and in Italy, his main preoccupation in Toruń was astronomy and fighting Germans for the Polish king.
1jola 14 | 1,879
14 Jul 2009 #569
THAT is 21th century nationalism at it's worst!

No, BB, Poles considered him Polish in the previous ceturies also.

Why don't you put him on your banknotes?

z
Bratwurst Boy 12 | 11,831
14 Jul 2009 #570
Another try of denying german past and history in what is now Poland?
First Danzig and now Krakau?

Just read that: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krak%C3%B3w#Golden_age

....The 15th and 16th centuries were known as Poland's Złoty Wiek, the Golden Age.[12] Many works of Polish Renaissance art and architecture were created there during that time,[13][14] including ancient synagogues in Kraków's Jewish quarter of Kazimierz, such as the renowned Old Synagogue.[15] During the reign of Casimir IV, various artists came to work and live in Kraków, and Johann Haller established a printing press in the city[16] after Kasper Straube had printed the Calendarium Cracoviense, the first work printed in Poland, in 1473.

Etc., etc., etc.....lot's of Germans in this city of the Hanseatic League.
Stemming from Cracow is so not a killer argument for being polish!

And again just for you: newadvent.org/cathen/04352b.htm

...In 1497 Nicolaus was enrolled in the University of Bologna as of German nationality and a student in canon law

THAT is a killer argument!

No, BB, Poles considered him Polish in the previous ceturies also.

Well...Kopernikus considered himself as a German...that counts more if you ask me!

Why don't you put him on your banknotes?

Well...we have Euros now and I think you will lose his banknote too once you join the Euro....

PS: A German brings printing to Poland...any comments on that?

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