Examples of courtly love in the following topics:
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- Romance is the expressive and pleasurable feeling from an emotional attraction to another person, and is associated with love.
- In the context of romantic love relationships, romance usually implies an expression of one's strong romantic love, or one's deep and strong emotional desires to connect with another person intimately.
- The conception of romantic love was popularized in Western culture by the concept of courtly love.
- Romantic love is contrasted with platonic love which in all usages precludes sexual relations, yet only in the modern usage does it take on a fully asexual sense, rather than the classical sense in which sexual drives are sublimated.
- The conception of romantic love was popularized in Western culture by the concept of courtly love.
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- The 1250s saw a major change in Italian poetry as the Dolce Stil Novo (Sweet New Style, which emphasized Platonic rather than courtly love) came into its own, pioneered by poets like Guittone d'Arezzo and Guido Guinizelli.
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- Royal and noble courts saw the development of chivalry and the ethos of courtly love.
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- By 1393, she was writing love ballads, which caught the attention of wealthy patrons within the court.
- Christine's participation in a literary debate, in 1401–1402, allowed her to move beyond the courtly circles, and ultimately to establish her status as a writer concerned with the position of women in society.
- Written in the 13th century, the Romance of the Rose satirizes the conventions of courtly love while critically depicting women as nothing more than seducers.
- Her early courtly poetry is marked by her knowledge of aristocratic custom and fashion of the day, particularly involving women and the practice of chivalry.
- Her early and later allegorical and didactic treatises reflect both autobiographical information about her life and views and also her own individualized and humanist approach to the scholastic learned tradition of mythology, legend, and history she inherited from clerical scholars and to the genres and courtly or scholastic subjects of contemporary French and Italian poets she admired.
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- Vijayanagar era architecture can be broadly classified into religious, courtly, and civic architecture.
- The courtly architecture of Vijayanagar was generally made of mortar mixed with stone rubble and often shows secular styles with Islamic-influenced arches, domes, and vaults.
- Describe the key features of religious, courtly, and civic architecture of the Vijayanagar Empire
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- Passionate love is an emotional love that is mostly expressed in a physical manner; it is a love that is shared between people who are intensely enamored with each other.
- Companionate love, on the other hand, is best defined as passionate love that has settled to a warm enduring love between partners in a relationship; in Sternberg's terms, it is comprised of intimacy and commitment.
- Romantic love derives from a combination of the
intimate and passionate components of love.
- Love assumes many forms, and time and culture both have an effect on the love formed in a relationship.
- Culture plays a strong role in love and relationships.
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- Bronze and ivory objects had a variety of functions in the ritual and courtly life of the Kingdom of Benin.
- As a courtly art, their principal objective was to glorify the Oba—the divine king—and the history of his imperial power or to honor the queen mother.
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- Rococo style in painting echoes the qualities evident in other manifestations of the style including serpentine lines, heavy use of ornament as well as themes revolving around playfulness, love and nature.
- Themes relating to myths of love as well as portraits and idyllic landscapes typify Rococo Painting.
- Watteau's signature soft application of paint, dreamy atmosphere and depiction of classical themes that often revolve around youth and love is evident in his work 'Pilgrimage to Cythera. '
- The work employs serpentine lines, a reasonably pastel palette and themes of love indicative of Rococo artwork.
- 'Pygmalion and Galatee' is indicative of Etienne Maurica Falconet's Rococo style in its depiction of lighthearted love, including a cherub indicating its predisposition to mythology.
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- This was the experience of Mildred and Richard Loving, who married in 1958 in Washington D.C., a district in the US that no longer had a law against interracial marriage.
- Bazile, told the Lovings during their trial for miscegenation that, 'if God had meant for whites and blacks to mix, he would have not placed them on different continents. ' He also seemed to take pride in telling the Lovings, "as long as you live you will be known as a felon. " The Lovings eventually contacted the American Civil Liberties Union, who took their case to the Supreme Court in 1967, resulting in Loving v.
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- In America, ideal values include marriage and monogamy based on romantic love.
- But in reality, many marriages are based on something other than romantic love: money or convenience, for instance.
- None of this is to say that monogamous marriages based on romantic love do not exist.
- An example of an ideal value is the idea of marriage and monogamy based on romantic love .
- While monogamous marriages based on romantic love certainly do exist, such marriages are not universal, despite our value ideals.