Monday, 17 June 2024

Alphons Mucha - Slav Patriot, Mystic and Art Nouveau Master


The Celebration of Svantovit on Rügen (1912)
Alphonse Mucha and Art Nouveau: 100 years after its creation, his work is still a balm for a world in upheaval

Some readers might have been surprised to see me posting an article about an acknowledged mystic who saw a close relationship between Slav nationalism and religion, but to me Alphons Mucha is very much like the Irish patriots who identified Catholicism with Irish nationalism, not because they believed in Papal authority and the divine right of priests to meddle in national affairs but because Catholicism was a part of the identity of the Celtic Irish. So, Mucha saw the struggle for Slav self-determination as closely tied to the struggles against Catholicism, Eastern Orthodox Christianity and later Germanic Protestantism.

Like Irish History, Slav history too can be seen as an illustration of how religion poisons everything, as the Czech people seem to have realised, since they are now second only to France in the proportion of the population who openly self-identify as Atheists.

So, it's interesting to read the following article by Will Visconti, a member of the teaching staff in the Department of Art History, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia, introducing an exhibition of Alphons Macha's work in the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. I've reproduced it here under a Creative Commons license as a sort of sequel to my earlier article om Mucha's Slav Epic. The article is reformatted for stylistic consistency:

Sunday, 16 June 2024

Creationism in Crisis - How Homo Sapiens Helped Bonelli's Eagle Extend Its Range - 40,000 Years Before Creation Week


Bonelli's Eagle, Aquila fasciata
F. David Carmona
Early "Homo sapiens" facilitated the establishment of the Bonelli's eagle in the Mediterranean 50,000 years ago - Canal UGR

Not only is there no sign at all that the conversion of leading biologists to creationism's childish fairy tale in place of the scientific Theory of Evolution, that creationist cult leaders have been assuring their dupes is imminent - and has been for the last 50 years or so - it's as though they've never even heard of it. They still keep finding evidence of events that happened ten of thousand, even tens of millions of years before the Universe existed, according to the ludicrous creation myths they are supposedly about to adopt. And those events are frequently evidence of evolution or recent human history.

Imagine a serious, grown-up scientist who has been through university, with so much contrary information at his or her fingertips believing that account of magic creation 10,000 years ago written by ignorant Bronze Age pastoralists yet belonging to the creation cult requires fools to believe such an absurdity.

About 9 months ago while on holidat near Bezier, France, we were driving to Carcassonnes when, about a mile apart, we saw two majestic eagles that neither of us recognised. I now know they were Bonelli's eagles, and I probably have the activities of early Homo sapiens about 40,000 years ago to thank for them being there.

A study led by scientists from the University of Granada (UGR), Spain, shows how the activities of early Homo sapiens in the Iberian Peninsula, 40,000 years before creationists think their god created a universe consisting of a small, flat planet with a dome over it in the Middle East, may well have facilitated the expansion of the range of Bonelli's Eagle, Aquila fasciata, north of the Mediterranean Basin.

Saturday, 15 June 2024

Creationism in Crisis - How The Human Heart Evolved As Humans Adapted To An Active Life-Style



Study on architecture of heart offers new understanding of human evolution - Swansea University

According to research by an international team from Swansea University, Swansea, Glamorgan, Wales and the University of British Columbia, Okanagan, Canada, there is evidence that the human heart has evolved to facilitate the more active life-style of humans compared to their closest relatives, as they diversified.

Humans typically have a much more active life-style with a higher resting metabolic rate compared to chimpanzees. We also have larger brains. As hunter-gatherers, we typically walked and ran far more often and for much longer than do the other apes and we needed to lose the excess body heat this activity generated, so we needed a more hemodynamic heart able to meet those needs, which meant adaptations to changes in the twisting of the left ventricle (LV) - the chamber which pumps oxygenated blood around the body - during systole, and this meant a change in the degree of trabeculation inside the LV.

In the context of heart ventricles, what are trabeculae and what is their function? Trabeculae (also known as trabeculae carneae) are irregular ridges of muscle found on the inner walls of the ventricles of the heart. They play several important roles in the function of the heart:
  1. Structural Support: Trabeculae carneae help reinforce the ventricular walls. Their irregular structure provides additional strength and prevents the walls from sticking together during contraction, thereby maintaining the heart's shape and integrity.
  2. Facilitation of Blood Flow: The trabeculae carneae create a more turbulent flow of blood within the ventricles, which can help with the efficient mixing of blood and ensure a more thorough contraction and expulsion of blood from the ventricles during systole.
  3. Conduction System: Some trabeculae carneae are involved in the conduction system of the heart. For example, the moderator band (a type of trabecula) in the right ventricle contains part of the right bundle branch of the bundle of His. This helps coordinate the contraction of the right ventricle by ensuring that the electrical impulses are transmitted efficiently.
  4. Reduction of Blood Stagnation: By creating a complex surface within the ventricles, trabeculae carneae reduce the likelihood of blood stagnation, which can prevent clot formation and improve overall blood flow dynamics.

In summary, trabeculae carneae serve to strengthen the ventricular walls, enhance blood flow, support the heart's electrical conduction system, and reduce the risk of blood clots by preventing blood from pooling in the ventricles.

What is meant by 'ventricular twist'?

'Ventricular twist' refers to the complex motion of the heart's ventricles during the cardiac cycle, particularly during the contraction (systole) and relaxation (diastole) phases. This twisting motion is also known as 'ventricular torsion' or 'ventricular rotation.' Here’s a more detailed explanation:

Mechanics of Ventricular Twist
  1. Twisting Motion During Systole: During systole, the ventricles contract to pump blood out of the heart. The base (the top part of the ventricles, near the atria) of the heart rotates in a counterclockwise direction (when viewed from the apex), while the apex (the bottom tip of the heart) rotates in a clockwise direction. This results in a wringing motion, similar to wringing out a wet towel.
  2. Untwisting Motion During Diastole: During diastole, the ventricles relax and fill with blood. The previously twisted ventricles now untwist, helping to create a suction effect that aids in the efficient filling of the ventricles with blood.

Significance of Ventricular Twist
  1. Efficient Blood Ejection: The twisting motion enhances the efficiency of the heart’s pumping action. By adding a rotational component to the contraction, the heart can expel blood more forcefully and completely.
  2. Diastolic Suction: The untwisting or recoil of the ventricles during diastole contributes to the rapid filling phase. This elastic recoil generates a negative pressure that helps draw blood into the ventricles more efficiently.
  3. Mechanical Synchrony: The coordinated twisting and untwisting ensure that the contraction and relaxation phases are well-synchronized, promoting optimal cardiac function and maintaining a steady and efficient blood flow throughout the body.
  4. Clinical Relevance: Abnormalities in ventricular twist mechanics can be indicative of various cardiac pathologies, such as heart failure, myocardial infarction, or cardiomyopathies. Therefore, measuring and analyzing ventricular twist can provide valuable diagnostic and prognostic information.

Measurement of Ventricular Twist
Ventricular twist can be assessed using advanced imaging techniques such as speckle-tracking echocardiography (STE) or cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). These techniques allow for detailed visualization and quantification of the rotational mechanics of the heart.

In summary, ventricular twist is a crucial aspect of the heart’s mechanics, contributing to the efficient ejection and filling of blood in the ventricles. It is essential for maintaining optimal cardiac function and can be an important parameter in the assessment of heart health.
The team has shown there is a negative correlation between the degree of trabeculation and LV systolic twist. The inner wall of the LV of a healthy human heart is comparatively smooth. Their results are published in the journal Communications Biology and explained in a Swansea University News release:
An international research team from Swansea University and UBC Okanagan (UBCO) has uncovered a new insight into human evolution by comparing humans’ hearts with those of other great apes.

Despite humans and non-human great apes having a common ancestor, the former has evolved larger brains and the ability to walk or run upright on two feet to travel long distances, likely to hunt.

Now, through a new comparative study of the form and function of the heart, published in Communications Biology, researchers believe they have discovered another piece of the evolutionary puzzle.

The team compared the human heart with those of our closest evolutionary relatives, including chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas, and bonobos cared for at wildlife sanctuaries in Africa and zoos throughout Europe.

During these great apes' routine veterinary procedures, the team used echocardiography—a cardiac ultrasound—to produce images of the left ventricle, the chamber of the heart that pumps blood around the body. Within the non-human great ape's left ventricle, bundles of muscle extend into the chamber, called trabeculations.

The left ventricle of a healthy human is relatively smooth, with predominantly compact muscle compared to the more trabeculated, mesh-like network in the non-human great apes. The difference is most pronounced at the apex, the bottom of the heart, where we found approximately four times the trabeculation in non-human great apes compared to humans.

Bryony Curry, first author
Centre for Heart, Lung and Vascular Health
School of Health and Exercise Sciences
University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC, Canada.


The team also measured the heart's movement and velocities using speckle-tracking echocardiography, an imaging technique that traces the pattern of the cardiac muscle as it contracts and relaxes.

We found that the degree of trabeculation in the heart was related to the amount of deformation, rotation and twist. In other words, in humans, who have the least trabeculation, we observed comparatively greater cardiac function. This finding supports our hypothesis that the human heart may have evolved away from the structure of other non-human great apes to meet the higher demands of humans’ unique ecological niche.

Bryony Curry.


A human’s larger brain and greater physical activity compared to other great apes can also be linked to higher metabolic demand, which requires a heart that can pump a greater volume of blood to the body.

Similarly, Higher blood flow contributes to humans’ ability to cool down, as blood vessels close to the skin dilate—observed as flushing of the skin—and lose heat to the air.

In evolutionary terms, our findings may suggest selective pressure was placed on the human heart to adapt to meet the demands of walking upright and managing thermal stress.

What remains unclear is how the more trabeculated hearts of non-human great apes may be adaptive to their own ecological niches. Perhaps it’s a remaining structure of the ancestral heart, though, in nature, form most often serves a function.

Dr Aimee Drane, co-corresponding author
International Primate Heart Project
Cardiff Metropolitan University, Cardiff, UK
And Faculty of Medicine
Health and Life Sciences
Swansea University, Swansea, UK


The research team is grateful to the staff and volunteers who care for the animals in the study, including the teams at Tchimpounga Wildlife Sanctuary (Congo), Chimfunshi Wildlife Sanctuary (Zambia), Tacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary (Sierra Leone), Nyaru Menteng Orangutan Rescue and Rehabilitation Center (Borneo), the Zoological Society of London (UK), Paignton Zoo (UK), Bristol Zoo Gardens (UK), Burgers’ Zoo (Netherlands) and Wilhelma Zoo (Germany).
Abstract
Although the gross morphology of the heart is conserved across mammals, subtle interspecific variations exist in the cardiac phenotype, which may reflect evolutionary divergence among closely-related species. Here, we compare the left ventricle (LV) across all extant members of the Hominidae taxon, using 2D echocardiography, to gain insight into the evolution of the human heart. We present compelling evidence that the human LV has diverged away from a more trabeculated phenotype present in all other great apes, towards a ventricular wall with proportionally greater compact myocardium, which was corroborated by post-mortem chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) hearts. Speckle-tracking echocardiographic analyses identified a negative curvilinear relationship between the degree of trabeculation and LV systolic twist, revealing lower rotational mechanics in the trabeculated non-human great ape LV. This divergent evolution of the human heart may have facilitated the augmentation of cardiac output to support the metabolic and thermoregulatory demands of the human ecological niche.

Introduction
Mammals are a remarkably diverse class of vertebrates, capable of inhabiting every major biome on the planet. This diversity is associated with a vast range of environmental stressors and interspecific differences in posture and locomotion, creating very different hemodynamic challenges. Despite this remarkable diversity, the gross structure of the mammalian heart is highly conserved across species; retaining four chambers and a complete interatrial and interventricular septum1.

Although the gross structure of the mammalian heart is conserved, interspecific features exist. For example, heart shape varies considerably across species, from broad and flat in whales to long and narrow in terrestrial ungulates2. Variation in the cardiac phenotype is also present among closely-related mammals2, indicative of evolutionary divergence. While comprehensive data examining cardiac structure and function across the entire Hominidae taxon do not exist, preliminary work suggests that the left ventricle (LV) of adult male chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) may be morphologically distinct from that of humans3. Prominent myocardial trabeculations, characterized by protrusions of the endocardium into the LV cavity with intertrabecular recesses, were previously observed in adult male chimpanzees3. This trabeculated phenotype differs from the relatively smoother ventricular wall typically observed in healthy humans4, suggesting that there may have been species-specific selective pressures on the heart during the evolution of Hominidae3.

Cardiac morphology and function are closely linked5; therefore, the discrete structural attributes of the chimpanzee and human LV likely coincide with differences in systolic and diastolic ventricular function. Such interspecific cardiac phenotypes may be the result of selection for the hemodynamic demands associated with each species’ ecological niche (i.e., the habitat and the role a species plays within an ecosystem). Indeed, previous data has shown that resting metabolic rate6, physical activity and daily locomotion7 are far greater in humans in comparison with other great apes, and so it is not surprising that cardiac output is also comparatively higher in humans3. The larger cardiac output in humans is likely supported by comparatively greater LV systolic and diastolic function (e.g., myocardial rotation and deformation), including LV twist3. LV twist, which is dependent upon the helical angulation of the aggregated cardiomyocytes8,9,10, is characterized by counter-directional rotation of the LV base and apex during systole. Together with the velocity of LV untwisting during diastole, LV twist helps facilitate efficient filling and ejection of the ventricle, especially during periods of heightened metabolic and thermoregulatory demand11,12.

The functional advantages associated with a LV capable of greater twist and untwisting velocity, combined with the preliminary data in adult male chimpanzees3, prompt the hypothesis that the human heart has diverged from a trabeculated ancestral phenotype to support the specific metabolic and thermoregulatory demands of the human niche. To test this hypothesis, we compared LV structure across all extant great apes using 2D echocardiography and further explored trabeculation in a subset of post-mortem chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) hearts. We then compared LV rotation and deformation between human and non-human great apes to explore whether the trabeculated phenotype is associated with differences in LV systolic and diastolic functional mechanics. Our findings point to evolutionary divergence of the human LV away from the phenotype of all other non-human great apes, which may have had important implications for cardiac function in early humans.

Discussion (part of)

[…]

Collectively, the findings of this study support evolutionary divergence of the human LV away from a trabeculated ancestral phenotype, towards a ventricular wall with a proportionately greater compact myocardium. We propose that this adaptive evolution occurred to support the requirements of the human ecological niche, including an augmented cardiac output to facilitate sustained bipedal physical activity, a larger brain, and the associated metabolic and thermoregulatory demands.
Fig. 1: Comparison of left ventricular trabeculation in great apes.
The bullseye plots represent the trabecular:compact (T:C) ratio for each segment of the left ventricle. The outer layer of the bullseye plots represents the basal segments, the middle and innermost layers represent the midpapillary and apical segments of the left ventricle, respectively. Red segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of >2; orange segments correspond to an average T:C ratio >1.5–2; yellow segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of >1–1.5; green segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of >0.5–1; blue segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of <0.05. Echocardiographic images of the parasternal short-axis at the apex are shown at end-diastole. *No data were available for the basal or midpapillary segments in the orangutans due to artifact from laryngeal air sacs. †These T:C ratios compare favorably with other reports in healthy human cohorts, ranging from 0.2 to 0.965,66. ‡Anatomical labels have been provided in accordance with the conventional guidelines for cardiac chamber quantification by the American Society of Echocardiography and European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging52. However, we note that this clinical convention does not align with the recognized anatomical approach and may result in confusion across disciplines—see ref. 67 for further clarification.

Fig. 2: Graphical representation of the trabecular:compact (T:C) ratio for each segment of the left ventricle in chimpanzees.
The outer layer of the bullseye plots represents the basal segments, the middle and innermost layers represent the midpapillary and apical segments of the left ventricle, respectively. Red segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of >2; orange segments correspond to an average T:C ratio >1.5–2; yellow segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of >1–1.5; green segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of >0.5–1; blue segments correspond to an average T:C ratio of <0.05. Infant age class includes individuals of ≤4 years of age, juveniles between 5–7 years of age, sub-adults between 8-11 years of age and adults ≥12 years of age.

Fig. 3: Comparison of left ventricular morphology and mechanical indices of ventricular function between chimpanzees and humans.
Shortening along the long axis of the left ventricle (i.e., longitudinal strain) and deformation at the apex (i.e., apical circumferential and apical radial strain) were averaged across a mixed-sex, adult cohort of chimpanzees (n = 136) and represented in maroon. Blue reflects the deformation patterns of a mixed-sex, adult human cohort (n = 34). Dashed line represents aortic valve closure. Gray shading to the left of dashed line represents systole and white represents diastole.

Fig. 4: Relationship between markers of left ventricular (LV) function and apical trabeculation in the extant Hominidae taxon.
a Peak LV systolic apical rotation, shown in red, in a mixed-sex, adult cohort of humans (male n = 18, female n = 16), chimpanzees (male n = 59, female n = 51), bonobos (male n = 2, female n = 4), gorillas (male n = 4, female n = 6) and orangutans (male n = 10, female n = 6). b Peak LV systolic twist, shown in green, and (c) peak diastolic untwisting velocity, shown in blue, in a cohort of humans (male n = 18, female n = 16), chimpanzees (male n = 47, female n = 43), bonobos (male n = 1, female n = 3) and gorillas (male n = 4, female n = 5). Analyses of LV twist and untwisting velocity were not possible in all individuals, nor any of the orangutans due to artifacts from laryngeal air sacs, hence the reduced sample size. The exponential plateau curve is shown, with the 95% confidence bands represented by the dotted line. The mean and standard error are shown in black for each species.


Curry, B.A., Drane, A.L., Atencia, R. et al.
Left ventricular trabeculation in Hominidae: divergence of the human cardiac phenotype. Commun Biol 7, 682 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06280-9

Copyright: © 2024 The authors.
Published by Springer Nature Ltd. Open access.
Reprinted under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0)
No crumbs of comfort there for creationists as the authors attribute everything to evolution by natural selection as humans diverged from the other great apes, nor is there any hint of a doubt that such an evolutionary divergence occurred.

The interesting thing from a biologists point of view is how the changes to the human heart reflect changes in our life-style as we adopted an upright gait and a hunter-gatherer life-style, necessitating running and walking long distances with additional demands on our heart to cope with the additional oxygen required and to dissipate the excess heat these activities generated, in addition to the increased demands our large brains were already imposing on our circulatory and thermoregulatory systems.

More work is now needed to understand whether the retention of this degree of trabeculation in the other apes has a benefit or whether it has simply been retained from a common ancestor. If the former, what evolutionary trade-off has there been for humans in losing these benefits?

Creationism in Crisis - A New Genus of Fish - From 18 Million Years Before 'Creation Week'


†Simpsonigobius nerimanae gen. et sp. nov. A, holotype, BSPG 1980X1030a; B, paratype, BSPG 1980X1013(2); C, paratype, BSPG 1980X1019a; D, paratype, BSPG 1980X992a. All scale bars = 2 mm.

Paleontology: new fossil fish genus discovered - LMU Munich

Today's casual refutation of creationism come in the form of an open access paper in the Journal of Systematic Palaeontology in which a team of researchers from the master program ‘Geobiology and Paleobiology’ led by Bettina Reichenbacher, professor at the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, München, Germany.

In it, the team of three explain how they have identified a new genus of the Gobi family of fishes and so provided critical insight into the evolution of this group of fish.

The fossil of the Simpsonigobius genus was found in 18-million-year-old rocks in Turkey. The significance of their discovery is explained in a Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) press release:

Religion Provides Excuses for People Who Need Excuses - Human Sacrifice At Chichén Itzá


El Castillo, also known as the Temple of Kukulcan, is among the largest structures at Chichén Itzá and its architecture reflects its far-flung political connections.

© Johannes Krause
Ancient Maya genomes reveal ritual sacrifice at Chichén Itzá | Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

When priests succeed in sowing superstition and fear into the minds of their victims, and fool them into believe they know the mind of their god and what he requires them to do, there is probably no depth of depravity they can't descend to, with the excuse of religion to fall back on, especially when it's backed up by threats of eternal pain and suffering in some assumed life after death, for non-compliance.

For example, Christians have been persuaded that their god needed a blood sacrifice so it could forgive them for something of which it had arbitrarily declared them to be guilty, and that there was a sense in which impregnating a young woman without her consent, then having her baby killed to satiate its lust for blood, was something to be admired.

Now detach those acts from religion and the belief that a god had sanctioned them and imagine them, being the subject of a court case in which the defendant explained that he had to rape the girl so she could have his baby, so he could then kill her child, because he was angry about something that someone once did hundreds of years ago, and would otherwise make people suffer in unimaginably horrible ways.

Which jury would declare him to be not guilty of any crime and free to go, assuming he was considered fit to plead? After appropriate psychiatric assessment, he would most likely be found to be a dangerous psychopath with a narcissistic personality disorder, who should probably be kept under lock and key for the sake of society.

And yet Christians sing songs in this monster's praise and tell their children to look to it for moral guidance, and pass on to their children the superstition and fear that caused them to lose their moral judgement, believing this to be the right and proper way to bring up children!

Something has caused them to lose moral judgement because priests say a god did it, so they can distance themselves from the brutality.

It's hardly surprising then that there has been so much death, destruction and human misery caused by religions, or rather caused by people who had been told a god wanted them to go out and cause it.

And it's hardly surprising that an international team of researchers from institutions including the Max Planck Institutes for Evolutionary Anthropology (Leipzig) and Geoanthropology (Jena), the National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH, Mexico City), the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH-Yucatan, Mérida), and Harvard University (Cambridge) have found evidence of regular barbaric ritual child sacrifice, carried out by the Mayan's at Chichén Itzá.

And in another discovery, the same team provide evidence, if any were needed, of how a population's genome can be changed by intense selection pressure such as an epidemic, resulting in the evolution of the population in response to this environmental change, in a classic example of Darwinian evolution by natural selection.

In this case, an outbreak of Salmonella enterica in 1545 (the cocoliztli pandemic) has resulted in an increased frequency of HLA-DR4 alleles which provide greater resistance to Salmonella enterica infection. Clearly, those better able to resist the infection left more descendants than those who succumbed to it.

An account of their findings is given in an open access paper in Nature and in a Max Planck Institute News release:

Friday, 14 June 2024

Malevolent Designer News - How a Special Gene Helps Cancer Spread Throughout The Body


Mass General Cancer Center Researchers Identify Gene That Helps Cancer Cells Spread Throughout the Body

According to creationists, genes don't evolve but are intelligently designed, so presumably their intelligent designer should be given the credit for designing a gene which has been shown to help cancer cells disseminate and set up colonies of secondaries throughout the body. The gene, Gstt1, is responsible for 90% of cancer-related deaths.

Gstt1 has a key role in eliminating toxins from the body so blocking it as a prophylactic treatment to prevent cancer metastases may not be a straightforward option.

The gene's role in helping cancer to metastasize was discovered by a team of investigators from the Massachusetts General Cancer Center, Boston, USA, who have just published their findings in the journal Nature Cell Biology and explained it in a press release from Massachusetts General Hospital:

Thursday, 13 June 2024

Creationism in Crisis - A 'Missing' Fossil From 550 Million Years Ago - And Another Gap Is Filled


Virginia Tech geobiologist Shuhai Xiao with a 550 million-year-old sea sponge fossil, filling in a gap in the evolutionary family tree of one of the earliest animals.
Photo by Spencer Coppage for Virginia Tech.
Virginia Tech researcher's team discovers 'missing' sea sponges | Virginia Tech News | Virginia Tech

That mountain of evidence against creationism just grows and grows!

Today, we have evidence of multicellular life in the form of an early sponge from about 550 million years before creationism's 'Creation Week' when they believe everything was magicked into existence in 6 days from nothing by some magic words spoken by a magic man made of nothing.

And it gets even worse.

Creationists also like to pretend the so-called 'Cambrian Explosion' when a lot of different multicellular body plans appear in the geological record, was an actual explosive creation as a single event, so the organisms in the Cambrian biota had no ancestors. It wasn't, of course; it lasted some 6-10 million years during which there are recognizable phases with characteristic organisms in each phase showing clear evolutionary progress - and it was preceded by the Ediacaran biota when some of the earliest multicellular organisms are found in the geological column.

Creationism in Crisis - History Of The Human Malaria Parasite in 4,500 Years


Plasmodium vivax

Photo Credit: CDC/ Steven Glenn, Laboratory & Consultation Division
via Wikipedia (Public domain)
Ancient Genomes reveal origin and spread of malaria | Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Sometimes, I can almost feel sorry for creationists, if only most of them weren't such arrogant, obnoxious liars, more interested in winning more simpletons for their cult than in truth.

It must be difficult when none of the available real-world evidence can be shoehorned successfully into the absurd mythology they want to teach to school children at tax-payers' expense as a prelude to establishing a self-appointing theocracy unaccountable to no-one but themselves.

I have written many of articles in this blog, and will no doubt write a great many more, detailing events in the history of the universe and of life on Earth in the long period of time before creationist superstition says the Universe was created in 6 days of a mythical 'Creation Week'.

I also write regular articles showing how, if life is intelligently designed, the only conclusion must be that the designer is an incompetent idiot and a sadistic, pestilential malevolence with so many parasites seemingly designed to cause suffering in the world. Creationists have been taught to blame the latter, indeed all the nasty stuff in the Universe, on 'The Fall' and 'sin', and have even been given some scientifically nonsensical but sciencey-sounding parrot squawks, 'Genetic entropy' and 'devolution' to throw in at the appropriate time.

The problem there, apart from giving away the fact that creationism is a religious cult, not a science, is the fact that if that had even a slight degree of merit, parasitism should have begun at this mythical 'Fall'.

Admittedly, the Bible is vague about the timing but the clear impression of the Adam & Eve legend it that it happen within weeks, or months, maybe a year or so after 'Creation Week', and before they had any children to inherit it, but certainly not 4,500 years later, unless Adam & Eve were ancient beyond belief when they decided to 'sin'.

And yet, here we have clear scientific evidence that two of the nasty little family of parasites of the Plasmodium genus that cause so much human death and suffering in the form of malaria, weren't around until about 5,500 years ago - some 4,500 years after the alleged 'Fall'.

And creationists shouldn't forget how their guru, Michael J Behe, denied them the opportunity to blame 'Sin' and his other scientifically nonsensical 'explanations', by using what he falsely claimed could not have evolved, being 'irreducibly complex' - anti-malarial drug resistance in P. falciparum - as evidence that their god created it.

Wednesday, 12 June 2024

Covidiot News - Feeling Rough After A Covid Booster Not A Reason To Refuse One


Feeling Rough After Your COVID Shot? Congrats, It’s Working! | UC San Francisco

Despite a continuing high death toll from COVID-19 - 23,000 so far this year in the USA - only 25% of Americans had the booster last Autumn. This year, so far in the UK under 60% of 75+ age group invited have taken up the offer of a booster.

One of the reasons often cited is that the boosters make you feel rough for a day or two with flu-like symptoms of headache, aches and pains and general malaise, although, speaking from personal experience, I have never had anything like that, and I have had every booster offered. The worst I've had has been a slightly sore arm for a day or two with a little stiffness which is only there when I think about it. However, even the reported adverse reactions pass within a day or two. Now a new study has shown that this is a good sign because it shows the vaccine is working well to produce a high yield of antibodies.

The study, led by UC San Francisco, has found that the symptoms indicate a robust immune response that is likely to lessen the chances of infection. The findings, explained in a UC San Franciso press release, are published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

Creationism in Crisis - Elephants Know One Another by Name - Just Like Humans


Elephants have names for each other like people do, new study shows - Warner College of Natural Resources

It's an article of faith in creationist cults that humans are a special creation, materially different to other animals and the evidence for this is that we have unique characteristics, ignoring for the moment that every species has unique characteristics, which is what makes them distinct species. And the list of 'uniquely human' characteristics which by creationist circular logic is 'evidence' of human uniqueness, includes language, culture, intelligence, the ability to make and use tools, a sense of self-identity, compassion, empathy, and love and affection.

The problem is, the items on this list keep on being found to not be unique to humans after all, but to be characteristic of lots of other species.

Tuesday, 11 June 2024

Malevolent Designer - How A Dangerous Pathogen Is Designed to Infect Our Lungs


The pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa breaching through the respiratory epithelia of a human lung microtissue model, captured via Scanning Electron Microscopy.

Image: Benoit Laventie, Biozentrum, University of Basel.
Lung organoids unveil secret: How pathogens infect human lung tissue | University of Basel

A team at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel have shown how a dangerous pathogen gains access to tissues in the lungs, the better to infect them.

To an intelligent [sic] design creationist, there can only be one explanation for this - intelligent design.

To quickly dispense with the traditional excuse offered for this evidence of malevolence, if you subscribe to the intelligent design nonsense - to blame 'Sin' which was caused by 'The Fall', oblivious of the fact that this exposes the intelligent design argument as fundamentalist religion in disguise. Even given a spurious gloss of sciencey-sounding gibberish by Michael J Behe, with his 'genetic entropy' and 'scientifically nonsensical 'devolution' from some assumed created perfection, makes no sense and fails abysmally to rescue creationism from its obvious religious fundamentalism.

No mutation which conveys an advantage, and so progresses to fixation in the species gene pool, can possibly be regarded as 'devolutionary' or less perfect than what went before it, and of course, postulating some assumed initial created perfection simply underlines the religious fundamentalist and the intellectual contortions needed to try to shoehorn the facts into the superstition inherent in the notion.

So, we are left with malevolent intent as the only conclusion, if we subscribe to the intelligent design notion.

Bible Blunder - Or How We Know The Bible Was Written By Ignorant People


The JADES Deep Field uses observations taken by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) as part of the JADES (JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey) program. A team of astronomers studying JADES data identified about 80 objects (circled in green) that changed in brightness over time. Most of these objects, known as transients, are the result of exploding stars or supernovae. Prior to this survey, only a handful of supernovae had been found above a redshift of 2, which corresponds to when the universe was only 3.3 billion years old — just 25% of its current age. The JADES sample contains many supernovae that exploded even further in the past, when the universe was less than 2 billion years old. It includes the farthest one ever spectroscopically confirmed, at a redshift of 3.6. Its progenitor star exploded when the universe was only 1.8 billion years old.

NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, JADES Collaboration.
NASA’s Webb Opens New Window on Supernova Science - NASA Science

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) continues to allow scientists to witness events almost at the beginning of time - at least when the Universe was just 1.8 billion years old. This comes in the form of supernovae or exploding stars, the light from which has just reached the JWST's detectors, having taken some 12 billion years to get there.

How long does it take light to travel 2 meters? To determine how long it takes light to travel 2 meters, you can use the speed of light in a vacuum, which is approximately \( 299,792,458 \) meters per second. The formula to calculate the time it takes for light to travel a certain distance is: \[ \text{Time} = \frac{\text{Distance}}{\text{Speed}} \] Plugging in the values: \[ \text{Time} = \frac{2 \, \text{meters}}{299,792,458 \, \text{meters/second}} \] Let's calculate this: \[ \text{Time} \approx 6.67 \times 10^{-9} \, \text{seconds} \] So, it takes approximately 6.67 nanoseconds for light to travel 2 meters.
I have previously explained how witnessing an event, the information about which has taken billions of years to arrive is no less witnessing that event than witnessing an event in the same room, information about which took a few nanoseconds to reach us.

And what the cosmologists have seen is far more supernovae than was previously thought.

The recent press release from NASA explains how these events were seen:
‘A Supernova Discovery Machine’

To make these discoveries, the team analyzed imaging data obtained as part of the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) program. Webb is ideal for finding extremely distant supernovae because their light is stretched into longer wavelengths — a phenomenon known as cosmological redshift.

Prior to Webb’s launch, only a handful of supernovae had been found above a redshift of 2, which corresponds to when the universe was only 3.3 billion years old — just 25% of its current age. The JADES sample contains many supernovae that exploded even further in the past, when the universe was less than 2 billion years old.

Previously, researchers used NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope to view supernovae from when the universe was in the "young adult" stage. With JADES, scientists are seeing supernovae when the universe was in its “teens” or “pre-teens.” In the future, they hope to look back to the “toddler” or “infant” phase of the universe.

To discover the supernovae, the team compared multiple images taken up to one year apart and looked for sources that disappeared or appeared in those images. These objects that vary in observed brightness over time are called transients, and supernovae are a type of transient. In all, the JADES Transient Survey Sample team uncovered about 80 supernovae in a patch of sky only about the thickness of a grain of rice held at arm’s length. [my highlight]

Monday, 10 June 2024

Creationism in Crisis - How Hominoid Apes Co-Existed in Germany 12 million Years Before 'Creation Week'.


Second great ape species discovered at Hammerschmiede fossil site | University of Tübingen
Teeth of Buronius manfredschmidi found in the Hammerschmiede.
Upper row: second upper molar. Bottom row: second lower premolar (from different angles). Scale bar corresponds to 10 mm.
Scientists have discovered the 11.6-million-year-old fossilised remains of a second hominoid ape in Germany, showing that at least two species of archaic ape were contemporaneous in the same habitat in Miocene Europe.

To give you some idea of how much history of Earth and life on it happened before creationists think it existed, spread your arms wide and imagine time, from the moment Earth formed in the accretion disk around the young sun at the tip of the middle finger of your left hand to the tip of the middle finger of your right hand. On that analogy, the whole of recorded human history would be wiped away with a single stroke of a nail-file on the nail of your right-hand middle finger!

In that tiny fraction of time, everyone you ever knew, everyone you ever heard of, indeed every person that has ever existed during the past 3-4,000 years lived their lives.

According to creationists, taking a book written in the fearful infancy of our species by ignorant people who knew only the few square miles they lived their entire lives in, as accurate history and real science, that tiny fragment of time is just under half of all that has ever existed. So, it is hardly surprising then that almost all of history and almost all of the evolution of life on Earth, happened in the time before creationists think there was a universe for it to happen in.

Creationism in Crisis - Parasitic Nematodes From Tens of Millions of Years Before 'Creation Week' and the Legendary 'Fall'!


False scorpion embedded in Baltic amber

Photo by George Poinar Jr.
Tiny roundworms carve out unique parasitic niche inside pseudoscorpion’s protective covering | Oregon State University

In their eagerness for simplistic answers and in line with their belief in never questioning those who supply them, creationists have swallowed the nonsense that somehow the notion of 'Sin' and 'The Fall', made to sound nice and sciencey with Michael J Behe's scientifically nonsensical notions of 'devolution' from an assumed initial perfection and 'genetic entropy', can explain parasites.

Parasites are, of course, entirely inconsistent with the notion of creation by an omnibenevolent, intelligent designer who wishes only to reduce the suffering in the world.

The problem for them is that they've also swallowed the nonsensical idea that is on a par with flatearthism - that Earth is only a few thousand years old and was created in 6 days in 'Creation Week' (although the exact dating and duration of that 'event' is as elastic as need be to explain the contradictory evidence).

But what then of the evidence that parasites existed way before this legendary 'Creation Week' and much earlier than the equally legendary 'Fall'?

In fact, as major environmental drivers of evolution, parasites are probably almost as old as the first cells and certainly, if we class predators as parasites on their prey, almost certainly account for the biodiversity seen in the Cambrian biota as predator and prey were the results of arms races.

And now, a scientist at Oregan State University, George Poinar Jr, has found that a group of arthropods known as false scorpions, were subjected to parasitism by a nematode worm. The victims and parasites were trapped in Baltic amber about 30 million years ago (The actual age is difficult to establish exactly for various reasons - see the panel on the right, but none of the geochronology techniques come anywhere near to 10,000 years.).

Sunday, 9 June 2024

Unintelligent Design - A Tiny Fern With A Record-Breaking Genome


Record breaker: This tiny fern has the largest genome of any organism on Earth | Kew

Creationists know little of genetics or biology in general, so they are easy prey for frauds who lead their cult and take their money while fooling them into believing their ignorance makes them more expert than the experts and fully qualified to tell millions of working biomedical scientists that they've got it all wrong.

And one of the ideas they've been fooled with is the evolution is a process of increasing complexity and increasing genetic information. This is useful to the frauds who then sell them the idiotic notion that new genetic information can't arise because the Second Law of Thermodynamics [sic] makes it impossible. They also present complexity as evidence of intelligent design, which is also nonsensical, of course, because good intelligent, design is minimally complex.

So, many creationists believe the humans are the most complex organisms because they are the pinnacle of evolution, which is a again nonsensical because there is no such pinnacle; all species are equally well-adapted to their given environment and have been evolving, aimlessly, for the same period of time.

So, the logic of their misconception should be the assumption that humans should have at least one of the largest and most complex genomes of all living organisms or at least that genome size should equate to complexity and complexity to the ranking position in some sort of living hierarchy.

It might come as a shock then to discover that not only do humans have a fairly average size genome, far smaller than some 'primitive' salamanders, for instance, and certainly much small than some plants (e.g., the Norwegian spruce of Christmas tree). But the record genome size goes to a humble miniature fern from the French overseas territor of New Caledonia, Tmesipteris oblanceolata, with a genome size of 148.89 Gbp, or a little over 50 times the size of a human genome!

Creationism in Crisis - How The Nile Was Changing Its Course - During Creationism's Legendary Global Flood


Crucial shift in River Nile’s evolution during ancient Egypt discovered | University of Southampton

The beautiful and timeless river Nile at Luxor, cradle of civilisation, where we spend a wonderful ten days some years ago having completed a river cruise from Luxor to Aswan and been driven back to our hotel in Luxor in a high-speed convoy with military escorts - for me, the high-point of the holiday; for my partner, not so much, especially when our driver insisted on stopping in the middle of nowhere to relieve himself behind a rock, leaving us alone in the car with our guardian soldier escort fingering his sub machine gun nervously.

But the lovely old River Nile has not always flowed in its present bed. From before, during and after creationism's legendary global flood through which Egyptian society appears to have come without harm and without leaving a single record, not even a hint of sediment in the Nile floodplain, the Nile has changed its course multiple times, according to recent research by an international team of archaeologists, which included researchers from Southampton University, England.

Saturday, 8 June 2024

Creationism in Crisis - Darwinian Evolution in Giraffes Confirmed


Female Giraffe, Giraffa camelopardalis, browsing

Food, not sex, drove the evolution of giraffes’ long neck, new study finds | Penn State University

In a nice illustration of how science works, there had been conflicting explanations for how the Giraffe evolved its long neck, but before creationists get over-excited neither of them were alternatives to evolution; the debate was about the precise drivers of evolution. That the giraffe's neck evolved from a shorter neck of a common ancestor with the related okapi was never in dispute.

One school of thought was the standard Darwinian view that it was the result of an arms race between giraffes and their preferred food plants; the other was slightly more complex, involving female sex selection and the way male giraffes use their necks against rival males with longer neck being a distinct advantage and the winner winning the favours of the females. Since the length of the neck is not strictly sex-linked, meaning it is mostly coded for by genes located on autosomes, rather than on the Y sex chromosome, both males and females benefit from this sex-selection, or so the second school of thought ran.

Now, a team of scientists led by Penn State biologists believe they have resolved this dispute buy, in the time-honoured scientific way, by examining the evidence and letting it speak for itself. What they found was that females actually have proportionately longer necks than males, so sex selection is unlikely to be the driver. However, what they observed was that females are better able to reach leaves in the crowns of trees and so get the more nutritious food, with obvious benefits for their offspring

The team have published their work, another incidental refutation of creationism that comes from revealing scientific facts, open access, in the journal Mammalian Biology. It is also explained in a Penn State University News release:

Liar! - UK General Election - How Sunak Lied To Us


How Sunak came up with disputed Labour tax figures – and what’s wrong with them

When Rishi Sunak lied for his party he showed us two things:
  • He knows the Tory Party depends on fools who'll believe falsehoods.
  • He is in politics, not for the he can do for us with power but for what power can do for him.
Qualities of the spiv and conman, which, of course, endeared him to the Tory MPs, who chose him when Liz Truss crashed and burned both the economy and her career.

The lie of course, repeated by Penny Mordaunt last night, even though it had been refuted by the very Treasury civil servant they were pretending had calculated the figure, was that Labour's plans will cost the average household £2,000. (Note: not £2,000 a year, as was implied, but £2,000 over 4 years!).

But, as, Treasury permanent secretary James Bowler, revealed, the figure was based on costings supplied not by the Labour Party, or independent experts, but on notional figures dreamed up by Tory Party paid advisors who started with the £2,000 and calculated backwards, so the Treasury civil service came up with the required figure. He had warned that ministers should not present the figure as provided by the Treasury based on their estimated costings.

How Sunak's Tories tried this blatant lie as the opening salvo in his forlorn reelection campaign, is explained by Steve Schifferes, Honorary Research Fellow, City Political Economy Research Centre, City, University of London in an article in The Conversation. His article is reprinted here under a Creative Commons license, reformatted for stylistic consistency:

Creationism in Crisis - How Marine Worms Caused a Burst in Biodiversity - 480 Million Years Before 'Creation Week'


The Ordovician Biota
Johns Hopkins scientists pinpoint an unlikely hero in evolution: Worms | Hub

Creationists often try to misrepresent the so-called 'Cambrian Explosion' - the relatively rapid radiation of different taxa over a period of some 6 million years when the first hard body parts evolved and by the end of which all the progenitors of the main modern taxa had appeared - as a sudden event, happening almost overnight, where major taxons suddenly appeared without ancestors, as some sort of evidence of intelligent design.

This is nonsense of course, as the 'explosion' took some 6-10 million years and was preceded by the Ediacaran biota, but what they don't seem to realise is that this period was followed fairly soon after by another period of rapid evolution and increased biodiversity in the 'Ordovician Explosion' or the 'Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event' (GOBE) when the same basic forces that produced the Cambrian explosion continued for another 25 million years.

Thursday, 6 June 2024

Creationism in Crisis - A Giant Pterosaur From Oxfordshire - About 155 Million Years Before 'Creation Week'


Gigantic Jurassic pterosaur fossil unearthed in Oxfordshire | University of Portsmouth
Part of a left wing first phalanx. The fossil was broken into three pieces but is still well-preserved
During the immense passage of time before 'Creation Week' as creationists call the legendary creation of a small universe consisting of a small flat planet with a dome over it in the Middle East, giant pterosaurs were in the sky over what is now the Vale of the White Horse in Oxfordshire.

The body of one of these monsters ended up buried in Kimmeridge Clay before that too became buried beneath alluvial gravel deposits forming in the proto-Thames valley around my adopted hometown of Abingdon.

Part of the fossilised skeleton, in the form of a partial left wing first phalanx (finger), was recovered in 2022 when a pit was being dug in the clay to form a sump and bank enclosure to replace the removed gravel in an open-cast gravel pit a few miles south of Abingdon. This has now been identified as an adult ctenochasmatoid - a group of pterosaurs known for their long, slender wings, long jaws and fine bristle-like teeth - by experts from Portsmouth and Leicester Universities.

How it came to be recovered and its significance, is the subject of a brief news release from the University of Portsmouth:

Creationism in Crisis - How Humans May Have Caused the Extinction of Woolly Rhinos - 20,000 Years Before 'Creation Week'


Pleistocene landscape in northern Spain with woolly mammoths (Mammuthus primigenius), equids, a woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis), and European cave lions (Panthera leo spelaea) with a reindeer carcass.
Image credit: Mauricio Antón.
Human activity contributed to woolly rhinoceros’ extinction | Newsroom | University of Adelaide

I spend a couple of days away from science papers writing about my other major interests, history and art, instead and what do I find? Scientists have only gone and produced six more papers which casually refute the childish superstition of creationism, so I will now need to spend a few days catching up.

The first of them deals with the findings that humans might well have been the cause of the extinction of the woolly rhinoceros, Coelodonta antiquitatis, in Eurasia, by causing their population to fragment and then collapse altogether over a period starting about 30,000 years ago and ending about 14,000 years ago . This was between 20,000 and 4,000 years before creationists think Earth was magicked up out of nothing by some magic words, spoken in a language that no-one else spoke, by a magic man who had magically self-assembled out of nothing, according to a design it had made before it existed.

Wednesday, 5 June 2024

Lessons From Czechia - Alphons Mucha's "Slav Epic" - How Religion Poisoned Everything


Mucha's poster advertising the first exhibition of the "Slav Epic"

"The Slav Epic"
History of the Celebration in Pictures
Alphons Mucha
Exhibited from June 1 to September 30, 1930
in the large hall of the exhibition palace
In Brno
under the protection of
Brno City Council
Open daily from 8-18.hrs.
We've just got back from Czechia where we spend 8 days visiting our son and his Czech wife.

We first went to Prague in December 2011 where, in addition to the breath-taking beauty of Old Town Square, dressed up for Christmas, the most abiding memory was the memorial to the two young Czechs, Jan Palach and Jan Zajíc, who killed themselves by self-immolation in Wenceslaus Square in January and February 1969, respectively, in protest against the Soviet-led occupation of then Czechoslovakia in Spring 1968. Soviet-led Russian, East German, Polish and Rumanian forces had occupied the country to depose Alexander Dubček's regime, which had attempted to introduce liberalization and reformed communism more in line with western Social Democracy.

This time, apart from the stunning growth in prosperity that manifests itself in new roads, traffic, good eateries and supermarkets with full shelves and a wide range of choice, mostly since Czechia joined the EU, the most memorable event was a visit to a Museum in the Moravský Krumlov castle near Brno which is the temporary home of a series of immense paintings by the Czech artist, Alphons Mucha, perhaps more famous in the West for his commercial art nouveau designs for chocolate boxes, biscuit tins and soap packages that charcterised the 1920's and 30's.

In Czechia he is better known for his series depicting the 'Slav Epic', or the history of the Slavs, from their legendary origins in the wetlands between the Baltic and the Black Sea to their settled homeland in Eastern Europe.

The story is one of an oppressed people, set about by enemies, forever yearning to be free to live their lives in peace, according to their own customs, culture and tradition, free from interference by more powerful and expansionist neighbours. In the 1920, when Mucha was finalizing his epic, Russia had not emerged as the threat it would later become and was considered part of the Slav family of nations together with Poland and the Southern or 'Jugo' Slavs of the Balkans who had emerged from the ruins of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the end of World War I.

And underlying this backdrop of interference and meddling, was religion, Catholic, Protestant and Eastern Orthodox, each using their religion as an excuse to wage war and impose foreign rule on the Slavs. Consequently, Czechia is now one of the most Atheist country in Europe, with 37% of the population, second only to France with 40%, openly declaring their Atheism.

This description of Mucha's Slave Epic follows the sequence in which they are displayed in Moravský Krumlov castle, which is neither chronological in the events they depict nor in the order in which Mucha painted them, so bear with me if I flit back and forth from age to age throughout the Middle Ages and the 18th, 19th and early 20th century:

The first of Mucha's Slav Epic:
The Slavs in their Original Homeland - Alphons Mucha (1912)
There is no general consensus of where the Slavic peoples originated apart from some vague reference to between the Baltic and the Black Sea. Tradition has it that the Slavs, an Indo-European people, speaking an Indo-European language, emerged somewhere in Eastern Europe during the 'migration period' between 5th to the 10th century CE, traditionally in Polesia. During this period, The Huns, a Turkic people from Central Asia had moved westward in one of the periodic explosions of Central Asian nomads into Eastern Europe. This precipitated a movement of Germanic peoples, known in German history as the Volkswanderung, when various Germanic tribes such as the Goths, the Vandals and the Franks undertook huge migrations into Western Europe and North Africa (Vandals), into the Balkans, Italy and Spain (Goths) and France (Franks) where they destroyed and replaced the remnants of the Roman Empire.

The picture shows a Slav settlement being destroyed by fire by nomadic slave raiders who sold their captives in the slave market in the city of Kherson on the northern shores of the Black Sea. The giant figure is an old Slavic priest or zhrets, who begs the gods for help. He is propped up by a young man in red (symbolizing war) and a girls dressed in white (symbolizing peace). The painting symbolises the birth of a people born in fear, oppression and destruction, with nomadic Turkic raiders from the East and South and the Germanic Goths from the West. Their only hope is for peace in which to realize their potential, but they are going to need to fight for it.
The "Magic of the Word" triptych
1. Jan Milíč of Kroměříž (1916)
2. Master Jan Hus Preaching at the Bethlehem Chapel (1916)
3. The Meeting at Křížky (1916)
This illustrates a period in Slav national development when, in a period of rising discontent with the corruption and debauchery of the Catholic clergy, they were becoming increasingly disillusioned with the Catholic Church, in a way that presaged the Protestant Reformation some years later.

The left-hand panel depicts the preaching of Jan Milíč, the son of a master weaver from Kroměříž who had risen to the post of notary to King Charles IV of Prague and then to the post of vice-chancellor and canon of St Vitus Church. He fell under the influence of the German preacher, Konrad Waldhausen whom Charles IV had invited to Prague to preach against the 'sinful and immodest ways' of the local citizenry. Milíč also became interested in the teachings of Francis of Assisi and resigned to live a life of poverty and preaching against pride, adultery and greed.

His most notable success was in his conversion of many of Prague's prostitutes. Having begged Charles IV to donate land in Prague Old Town, he built a chapel and a the 'New Jerusalem' monastic shelter for the women. The first picture depicts the construction of New Jerusalem while the women look on and listen to Milíč preaching. The woman with the face covering is meant to symbolize repentance, rectification and doing good deeds.

The central panel of the triptych depicts the last sermon of Master Jan Hus in Bethlehem Chapel in 1412. At the time, Hus was rector of Charles University in Prague. The chapel was the only place in Prague where sermons were preached in Czech at a time when the Catholic Church was determined to protect its monopoly on interpretation of the Bible by forbidding it to be translated into local languages to make it accessible to any literate person, not just priests trained in Latin. Masses were only permitted in Latin.

Hus had been strongly influenced by the teachings of John Wycliffe, Master of Baliol College, Oxford, sometimes called "The Morning Star of the Protestant Reformation" - a title often applied to Jan Hus - who had produced the first English translation of the Latin Vulgate Bible and had argued against the Catholic Triune god and preached against Catholic corruption including the sale of indulgences. His followers were the Lollards, a prescribed heretical sect and Wycliffe was excommunicated although he escaped execution, the usual punishment for heretics.

Jan Hus's followers, the Hussites, eventually became a major Christian sect in Bohemia - the part of Czechia that includes Prague, the forerunner of the Protestant Reformation.

The panel depicts several Prague notables, and people involved in funding and building the chapel. On the left of the picture, near the chapel wall and next to the veiled figure in white, there is Jan Žižka of Trocnov, a courtier of King Wenceslaus IV and Queen Sophia's doorman. In front of him, dressed in black, is the tradesman Kříž who donated part of the land for the chapel and next to him, dressed in red, is Hanuš of Műlheim who obtained the building permit for the chapel and provided funds to build it.

Under the canopy on the right is Queen Sophia, wife of Wenceslaus IV, whose confessor was Jan Hus. Her lady in waiting is modelled on Mucha's wife, Maria Née Chytílová. The hooded figure lurking behind the font is a spy employed by Catholic priests concerned that Hus was preaching against the church's iniquities and the sale of indulgencies.

In 1412, an interdict was declared over Prague, banning all church rites until Hus left the city.

When the painting was completed in 1916, a private house stood on the site of the Jerusalem Chapel which was not rebuilt until 1954 to a design by the architect, Jaroslav Fragner. The chapel interior in the painting does not correspond with the modern chapel.

The right-hand panel depicts the beginnings of the Hussite rebellion. To begin with, the movement had been peaceful and non-violent, seeking to establish the Kingdom of God on Earth, with rallies on hilltops at Hradiště (later Tábor), at Beránek near Vožice and at Oreb near Třebechovice, however it quickly became radicalized by a radical sect from Tábor. On September 17, 1419, a proclamation was read by Václav Korda, a priest from Pilsen, to a rally on Bzí Hill, addressed to all Czechs, telling them "Brethren! Know that the vineyard has blossomed, but the goats want to eat it all up, so don't walk holding a stick but a weapon!". It was a call to arms to defend the Hussite.

The scene depicted is the meeting of the armed group in response to this proclamation that took place on September 30, 1419 on a hill called Na Křížkách. This hill is still called U Křížků, located some 20 Km south of Prague.

The painting is full of symbolism: the dry tree with the white banner signified was and death; the green pine and red banner represent life. The dark sky pierced by lightening signifies the changes that have recently occurred - the Death of Wenceslaus IV, the first defenestration in Prague and Jan Žižka forming the first military division of Hussites. The picture as a whole is a call to arms and a challenge to fight for the truth for which Master Jan Hus had laid down his life.

As usual, a theological difference was shaping up to end in a bloodbath with 'truth' going to the side which did the most killing.

The Celebration of Svantovit on Rügen (1912)
This next painting deals with events preceding the Hussite rebellion, in the pre-Christian era when the Slavs had become too populous for their homelands and so set out to find a new homeland, during the period known as the Migration Period. As early as the 7th Century CE, some tribes settled on the Baltic coast, assimilating with the local Celtic and Germanic people.

Near the Odra estuary to the Baltic Sea is an island called Rügen, the home of the Rani tribe, on which there was a temple to the god Svantovit in the city of Arkona. The painting shows the autumn festival to celebrate Svantovit in which the priests thank the god for the harvest and prophesy the future. In that respect, Arkona was to the Slavs what Delphi was to the Greeks.

In 1168, Christian Denmark launched a crusade against the Baltic Slavs, led by Valdemar of Denmark. They captured the city of Arkona, destroyed the temple and burned down the statue of Svantovit. The top part of the painting symbolises this destruction of the Slavic religion with the Germanic war god, Wödan on the left looking on surrounded by sacred wolves. The figure on the sacred white horse represents the last Slavic warrior as Svantovit takes his sword from his hands. People in chains represent the conquest of the Baltic Slavs by Germanic people.

At the bottom to the left is a bard, as a reminder that all we know of the Baltic Slavs is from oral traditions in myths and legends. In the center is a woman in white with a grey area above her, symbolizing the poor prospects for the Rani tribe while to the right a boy tries forlornly to carve a replacement for the statue of Svantovit.
This painting then records the destruction of an important Slavic religious tradition by crusading Germanic Christians.

The next painting celebrates a high point in Slavic cultural development with Tsar Simeon of Bulgaria (Car Simeon Bulharsky) taking control of a large part of the Balkans in dispute with the Byzantine Empire (the descendant of the Eastern Roman Empire) which had adopted Eastern Orthodox Christianity.
Car Simeon Bulharsky (1923)
The reign of Tsar Simeon at the turn of the 9th and 10th centuries marks the high-point of Bulgarian power and glory. After fighting with his neighbours, Simeon gained control of most of the Balkans and came close to taking Byzantium and so the crown of the Byzantine Empire.

Simeon's reign also marks the birth of Slavic literature.

When Bishop Methodius died in Great Moravia in 885 CE, it sparked a dispute between supporters of Latin and Slavic liturgies. Although Methodius had promoted Gorazd as his successor, Rome imposed Bishop Wiching of Nitra to administer the Moravian Church and banned the use of the Slavic language in worship. Slavic priests were expelled from Great Moravia and most went to Greater Bulgaria, including Clement of Ohrid who became the first Slavic Bulgarian bishop (depicted top left). In the upper right corner is Naun of Angelarij who simplified the Galgolitic Alphabet to Cyrillic - the predecessor of the modern Cyrillic Alphabet.

The painting shows Simeon on a throne in a palace in the capital city of Velká Pereslav, supervising the works of scribes who write down the elders' memories to preserve them for posterity. The available literature is translated here, and monks transcribe a reproduce works of literature. The whole painting illustrates Byzantine richness and opulence.

The next painting is a stark depiction of the aftermath of the battle of Grunwald in which the Slavs were triumphant over the Teutonic Knights, a Catholic order of shock troops charged with spreading the authority of Rome by force of arms. Painted in 1924, it is Alphons Mucha's call for peaceful coexistence of nations.
After the Battle of Grunwald (1924)
In the 12th century, the Teutonic Knights, an expansionist crusading order, settled in the then Slavic territory of Prussia and quickly got into territorial dispute with its neighbours. In 1409, war broke out between the Teutonic Order and Lithuania in which Poland became involved on the side of Lithuania, supported by a mercenary corps from Bohemia and Moravia led by Jan Sokol from Lamberk. The corps also probably included Jan Žižka from Trocnov.

The painting depicts the scene the morning after the bloody battle in which the Teutonic Order was defeated. King Władysław II Jagiełło covered his face in pain at the unnecessary deaths and the immense sacrifice of his warriors. Under the hill is the body of the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights, Ulrich von Jurgingen with a cross on his chest. In the background the Orthodox Patriarch blesses the fallen, especially the Smolens who were in the front row in the battle.

The numerous white cloaks with black crosses symbolize the broken power of the Teutonic Order and how Poland and Lithuania had defended their freedom.

In the next painting Alphons Mucha celebrates the 9th century introduction of the Slavonic liturgy at Great Moravia as a symbol of Great Moravia's independence from Bavaria.
The Introduction of the Slavonic Liturgy at Great Moravia (1912)
The Great Moravian Empire had successfully faced the onslaught of the Germanic Franks, but the local church was subordinate to the Bavarian bishops. Moravia's ruler, Prince Ratislav realised that he needed to assert the independence of the Moravian Church to strengthen to nation's position as a united entity, so, in 860-861 CE he asked Pope Nicholas I for help. However, this was refused so Ratislav turned to the Byzantine Emperor Michael III with a request to send teachers to Moravia who would be capable of spreading the faith in a Slavic language.

Amongst the teachers sent by Michael III were Constantine (who later took the name Cyril) and his brother Methodius from Thessaloniki (Salonica). They compiled a new script, Glagolitic (the predecessor of Cyrillic), and used it to translate the Gospels. Although they face stiff opposition from the Latin priests, they eventually prevailed and Old Slavonic became an equal ecclesiastical language in Great Moravia. The Pope eventually appoints Methodius as Archbishop, giving him authority over Bishop Witching of Nitra.

The painting is set in the Great Moravian capital, Velehrad. It depicts Price Svatopluk sitting on a high stool with bishops and nobles before him. The deacon is reading a letter from the Pope appointing the new Archbishop Methodius. A Frankish knight watches him humbly. The Rotunda in the background represent the Church of St George in Thessaloniki with Methodius at the head of a procession of his disciples.

The group at the top of the painting represents the violent spread of Christianity by the Franks. At bottom left, Cyril, in a cowl, protects the Moravians from heaven. At top right, Mucha uses four figures to symbolize the liturgical connection of Great Moravia to Kievan Rus with St. Olga and her husband Igor, to Great Bulgaria with St. Boris and his wife.

The two figures in the middle, sitting on a sword shaped like a ship, are the sons of St. Vladimir of Kyiv, Gleb and Boris, patrons of sailors and protectors of merchants. This is Mucha's metaphorical depiction of Christianity as a port to which all Slavic nations gradually arrive. The prominent young man with a circle and clenched fist in the foreground represents strength and cohesion.

While the northern Slavs of the Baltic and south into Bohemia and Moravia (Modern Czechia) were consolidating their position and unifying around a Slavonic liturgy and asserting their independence from the Latin liturgy and the Germanic tribes to the West, the southern Slavs of the Balkans, especially Serbia, were struggling to become unified. They lived in valleys separated by high mountains and were dominated by the Byzantine Empire until the 12th century when Stefan Nemanja succeeded in unifying most of the tribes in the Drina basin and Montenegro. In the 14th century, Stefan IV Dušan incorporated more of Serbia, southern Macedonia, Albania, Thessaly and the Belgrade area into an empire that stretched from the Danube to the Gulf of Corinth. In 1349 he issued a Code, creating a feudal society giving rights and power to feudal lords over the peasants. In 1346 he had been crowned Tsar of Serbs and Romans (The (Greek) Byzantines always called themselves Romans) in Skopje, making him, de facto, Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, a high-point in Slavic political power.

In the same ceremony, his son, Stephen V. Uroš, was crowned king of all Serbian and costal territories.

The next painting depicts the moments immediately after the coronation in Skopje.
The Coronation of Stefan Uroš Dušan
At the head of the procession, the nobles carry the tsar's helmet, shield and sword, symbols of his military power, and the chancellor carries the state seal, the symbol of his political powers. The tsar dressing in lavish robes carried a scepter, also a sign of his powers.

His son, Steven V. Uroš follows in his footsteps while girls with branches sprinkle flowers in the path. The Sebian patriarch (Senior Eastern Orthodox Archbishop or Pope) follows behind.

The girl with a long braid and floral crown in the foreground, is typical of Mucha's elaborate Art Nouveau style.

In the 13th century, under Wenceslaus I's son Ottokar II of the Přemyslid dynasty, Czechia became a major power on the European stage. The town of Kutná Hora provided an abundance of silver resulting in unprecedented prosperity. Due to his wealth and generosity, Ottokar was known as the 'Golden King' and Czechia expanded its empire in Austria to include Styria, Egerland, Carinthia and more.

The next painting depicts the marriage of Ottokar's niece, Kuningunde of Brandenburg to the second-born son of his long-time rival, the Hungarian Béla IV, also called Béla, as part of the political machinations that took place following Ottakar's defeat of Béla IV in battle and his annexation of Bratislava.
King Ottokar II of Bohemia. (1924)
Ottokar II had a major long-time rival in Béla IV of the Hungarian Árpád dynasty, culminating in the Battle of Kressenbrunn. Ottokar's 'iron cavalry' which earned him his alternative nickname, the 'Iron King', prevailed and Béla's forces fled the battlefield in chaos. Taking Bratislava forced Béla to negotiate a peace agreement.

To consolidate this resulting peace, Ottokar divorced his wife, Margaret of Bebenburg and married Béla IV's granddaughter, Kunigunda. He also arranged the marriage of his niece, Kunigunde of Brandenburg to Béla IV's second-born son, Béla. The latter wedding took place on October 25, 1264, on Žitný ostrov, an island in the Danube in what is now Slovakia.

The painting shows influential European rulers of the time in a tented city specially built for the wedding. Ottokar is shown warmly welcoming his recent rivals. The guest list includes King Daniel of Galicia and the Serbian King Stefan Uroš I with both his sons Dragutin and Milutin, the Duke of Croatia, Bosnia Transylvania and Bulgaria, princes, counts and knights from Germany, Poland, Eastern Europe and the Balkans.

Ottokar had a serious claim to the throne of Holy Roman Emperor. However, the electors, overwhelmingly German, chose the inconsequential Prince Rudolf I of Germany from the house of Hapsburg.

In 1273 the peace gained through political marriages broke down and the Hungarians invaded Moravia. In 1276 the Holy Roman Empire attacked and Ottakar was forced to cede numerous territories to Rudolf I. Finally, Ottokar had to face civil war when the Czech nobles rebelled, eventually being killed in battle at the Battle of Marchfield on August 26, 1278.

The Unity of the Brethren was a religious denomination, originating in the later 15th century in response to corruption in the Roman and Ultraquist churches. The Ultraquist Church was the largest sect of the Hussites after they split into factions. They preached that the Eucharist should consist of both bread and wine and be administered to the laity (one of the Four Articles of Prague of the original Hussites). At the time, the Roman Catholic Church insisted that only priests could receive communion wine. Of the Hussite factions, the Ultraquists, also known in Czechia as the Calixtines were closets to Rome and eventually allied themselves to Rome in suppressing the more radical Hussites, the Taborites and Orphans at the Battle of Lipany in 1434.

The Brethren were influenced by Humanism and consequently moderated their former strict approach to education, producing some of the best schools in Czech lands.

The next painting depicts one of the most famous Brethren schools in Mucha's hometown of Ivančice: the aristocratic Law School. He shows the town as it was in the 16th century, with city walls and a church tower. Karel the Elder of Žerontín, then lord of Rosice and Náměššť nad Oslavou supported the institution. A number of distinguished people taught there, including Jan Blahoslav from Přerov, known for his translation of the New Testament from Greek into Czech. This translation was considered a gem of Czech literature and the Brethren set up a printing press at their church in Ivančice to print copies of it. The press was eventually transferred to a Romanesque fortress near Kralice. Because of that relocation, Karel the Elder's translation became known as the Kralice Bible

The following painting shows the classes being taught at the Brethren school in nature. The location of this school is today known as "Va Sboru", "At the Brethren’s place".
The Brethren School at Ivančice (1914)
The location of this school is today known as "Va Sboru", "At the Brethren’s place".

The lessons are interrupted by a visit from Karel the Elder of Žerontín who is shown sitting on the right, under the shelter, looking at copies of the Bible. His second wife is nearby. Her face shows that she was ill and had suffered illness all her life. There is a printing press on the right edge of the painting. A young man, with the face of Alphons Mucha reads from the Bible to a blind man. The fruitful prosperity that followed the hot summer of the Hussite wars is symbolized by a sunny autumn scene and abundant harvest. The swifts circling the church tower symbolize that the Unity Brethren will soon need to leave on long journeys. After the Battle of White Mountain (1620) many left to seek refuge abroad. The Battle of White Mountain was an early battle in the 30-years war from which the Czech people were to suffer horribly as the Catholic Church tried to suppress the Protestant Reformation. The battle ended the Bohemian Revolt and gave the Germanic Hapsburgs a supremacy that was to last for 300 years, until the end of World War I and the dismantling of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

In the next painting, Mucha comes forward to the 19th century and events in Russia.

Russia had fallen behind both politically and economically, only catching up with developments in the West in the 19th century. Defeat in the Crimean War (1853-1856) and several peasant uprisings, under the influence of the political developments in France where the monarchy had been overthrown and a nation built ostensibly on the principles of Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité (freedom, equality and brotherhood) forced the Russian government to implement changes. The Emancipation reform laid the foundation for industrial development with freedom for the working class who were now free to leave the countryside where they have been tied by feudal laws, to move into the industrial cities.

On February 16, 1861, Tsar Nicholas II issued a proclamation abolishing serfdom, so freeing 47 million serfs from the Mediaeval feudalism that tied them to the land of their feudal overlords.

This event is depicted in Mucha's painting set in Red Square, Moscow in front of St Basi's Cathedral.
The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia (1914)
The Kremin towers loom in the background. To the right of the temple, built in the 16th century by the first Russian Tsar Ivan the Terrible, is a round tribune from which the Tsar's order abolishing slavery was announced on March 5, 1861. The village and Townspeople remain in the square to deal with their new freedom in their own way. Some are clearly rejoicing while others are unsure what to expect.

Above the towers of the Church of Vasily the Blessed, the first rays of the sun symbolize the dawn of freedom, gradually penetrating the fog. Mucha painted this after a trip to Russia in 1913. He originally intended to paint it as a glorious event but changed it when he realised the oppression of ordinary Russian people and their actual standard of living. This was just 4 years before the October Revolution that overthrew the monarchy and replaced it with Soviet Communism.

We're back now to the 15th century, to another significant figure in the cultural development of the Slavic people, Petr Chelčický, the influential religious thinker and pacifist from the village of Chelčice near Vodňany. He knew the leaders of the Hussites personally, including Jan Huss.

His religious beliefs included the complete equality of all Christians which led him to conclude that, to be rewarded in the afterlife, people living in secular coexistence should endure evil without resistance. This set him apart from the other Hussites who taught that they had to be prepared to defend truth and religion with force of arms if necessary.

The next painting depicts an event in the autumn of 1420.
Petr Chelčický at Vodňany (1918)
In autumn, 1420, the victorious Hussite army had marched back from Prague to southern Bohemia when a powerful local feudal lord Oldřích of Rosenberg, an implacable enemy of the Hussites since his defeat at Tàbor sacked the town of Vodňany with a band of mercenaries. He murdered and banished supporters of the reform movement, demolished the city walls and installed a new, anti-Hussite town council. The Hussite army set out from their camp near Písek and stormed Vodňany to retake it from the invaders.
The painting shows smoke rising from the plundered and burning city in the background. The inhabitants flee to the pond near the Chelčice village and lay their dead and wounded on its shore. Their faces reflect hopelessness, fear and anxiety: on the left is a crying little girl who was able to save only the dishes in the basket and a caged bird. Next to her, a young women mourns the death of her loved ones. The event evoked an overwhelming desire for revenge, but Petr Chelčický intervenes to proclaim his faith in the power of love, tolerance and forgiveness. Holding the man’s raised fists, he tells him "No, you must not repay evil with evil because then it multiplies, and it does not end. Let evil perish!

In 1457, following Chelčický's teaching, Jan Řehoř founded the Unity of Brethren in Kunvald.

In 1566 Ottoman Turks invaded Hungary with a large army and in August that year they laid siege to the town of Szigetvár which was defended by troops of the Croatian Royal Army under the command of the Ban of Croatia, Mikuláš Ŝubić Zrinski, a descendant of the old noble house of Ŝubić Bribirski. He had risen to fame by defending his homeland against the Ottomans and in 1863 he was appointed commander of the royal army at Szigetvár.

Though vastly outnumbered the defenders fought fiercely for every part of the city, palace and old fortress. Ultimately, Zrinski and his garrison were defeated, but their courage and the enormous casualties they inflicted on the Ottomans postponed the Ottoman campaign in the west for several years.

The painting depicts the last moments of the siege when the Turks had already taken the city.
The Defence of Szigetvár by Nikola Zrinski (1914)
The painting shows the palace and old fortress engulfed in flames. Zrinski delivers a fiery speech as he prepares what remains of the garrison for a last charge. Exhausted fighters lay aside their heavy gear, so it doesn't slow them down.

The righthand side of the paintings shows a gunpowder magazine that the defenders don't want to fall into enemy hands. The commander of local women lights a torch which she will throw into the magazine, destroying it and her women with it. Other women follow her onto the scaffolding because they prefer death to captivity and slavery.

The black column dividing the images symbolises the explosion of the fortress and the nobility of the terrible sacrifice: the lives lost defending freedom.

During the Hussite era one battle stands out for the bravery with which a Hussites army, led by Jan Žižka of Trocnov, withstood an attack by the mercenary army of the Holy Roman Emperor, Sigismund.

Sigismund was the younger brother of King Wenceslaus IV, and after Wenceslaus’s death, Sigismund laid claim to the Czech throne and laid siege to Prague. Jan Žižka set out from Tábor to try to raise the siege. As an experience military leader, he realised the strategic importance of Vítkov Hill, so he fortified the road that led from the only access to Prague not occupied by Sigismund's forces, the Poříčská gate, under Vítkov Hill to Tábor, by building two log cabins surrounded by a small moat and a wall. He defended this position personally with 26 men, two women and a girl.

Sigismund's armies launched an attack on Prague on Sunday, July 14, 1420, with the cavalry from Meissen storming Vítkov Hill. They managed to reach the log cabins where they met heroic resistance from the defenders. The uneven battle raged for some time until the situation became desperate until the people of Prague used the Poříčská gate to attack the cavalry from the rear. In the ensuing panic and confusion, many of the enemy perished as they tried to flee down the steep slope.

This painting depicts the scene after Žižka and his fighters descend victoriously from Vítkov Hill.
After the Battle of Vítkov Hill (1920)
The priest from Tábor stands at the field altar holding the host; other priests lie on the ground in deep humility. A man sitting on a wicker basket is accompanying the prayer by playing a field organ. On the left of the road a young warrior bandages his wounds, and a woman is breast-feeding her baby - symbolizing a new generation. Poříčská gate and the city walls can be seen on the left in the background, brightly lit by sunlight. Vítkov Hill looms on the right and Žižka, in a red cloak, stands deep in thought and thanks God for his victory. In front of him are captured weapons and equipment.

A notable figure in Slav cultural history is the teacher and philosopher, Jan Amos Comenius (Jan Amos Komenský), known as the 'Father of Education'. His parents were members of the Unity Brethren, a pacifist Hussite faction. The Komenský family took its name from the village of Komňa near Uherský Brod, where Jan's father, Martin, worked as a miller for his brother. Jan's birthplace is uncertain, probably either Uherský Brod or Nivnice, but around the time of Jan's birth, his family moved to Uherský Brod where they belonged to the wealthy burger class and became important members of the Unity Brethren who helped Jan attend their school in Přerov. He graduated from colleges in Herborn and Heidelberg. During his studies he began writing 'Treasures of the Czech Language' and prepared Theatrum Universitatum Rerum (The Treasures of the World), an encyclopedia for young people.

After completing his became a priest and teacher studies he returned to the Přerov school and later became rector of the Brethren school in Fulnek. After the Battle of White Hill in 1620, which resulted in victory for the Germanic Hapsburgs and the suppression of the Slavs which was to last until the end of World Ward I in the form of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, executions of Hussites took place in Old Town Square and a warrant was issued for Jan Komenský's arrest.

Heeding the warnings of Karel the Elder of Žerontín he went into hiding at Šternberk on the Žerontín estate, but then had to flee from Moravia to Bradýs nad Orlicí.

Following the issue of the Renewed Provincial (Land) Ordinance which effectively abolished Czech independence from the Hapsburgs and made Catholicism the only legal religion, Jan Komenský went into permanent exile, first to Leszno in Poland, then to England, France, Sweden and Hungary and finally back to Leszno. The Peace of Westphalia, the treaty that ended the 30-years war, gave the Hapsburgs dominion over Czech lands and meant permanent exile for Komenský. While in Leszno he wrote a major work, 'The Last Will and Testament of the Dying Mother: The Unity of Brethren, in which he called on Czechs not to lose hope for their eventual independence, but in 1655 he declared his support for Protestant Swedish troops who had invaded Poland, for which his house was burned by Polish Catholic partisans, destroying his manuscripts including a 'Pansophia' (encyclopedia) on which he had been working and his 'Treasures of the Czech language, and he went into exile in Holand where he remained until his death in 1670.

The painting by Mucha shows him at the end of his life looking across the sea, yearning for his homeland.
Jan Amos Komenský (1918)
The painting shows Jan Komenský strapped to a chair on the seashore where he often went to reminisce about his Czech homeland. His friend's gesture and the grief of his wife and others signify that this is his last days before his death on November 15, 1670. He is buried in Naarden which can be seen silhouetted in the distance.

We go back now to the 15th Century to another significant figure in Czech history - George (Jiří) of Poděbrady "King of Both People" (1458-1471). This painting illustrates an event in his life.

Zdeněk Kostka of Postupice and Prokop Rabštejn, allies of King Jiří, delivered a message to Pope Pius II in Rome, requesting that he confirm the 'Basel Compact' (an agreement that regulated the relations between the Hussites and the Catholic Church). But Pius III did not take kindly to it. Instead, he sent a delegation to Prague demanding that King George, his family and the whole nation renounce the Hussites and confirming that he would not recognise the Basel Compact.

The painting shows King Georg's reaction to the Pope's demands.
The Hussite King Jiří of Poděbrady and Kunstat (1923)
King Jiří received the Pope's delegation in the King's Court in Prague's Old Town during the Diet (Parliament). His reaction to the Pope's demands is furious as he rises from his chair, knocking it over in the process and exclaiming, "I do not recognise the Pope as judge over my conscience, my family, or my nation!". The papal envoys are forced to stand as they were not offered seats, to mirror the fact that Jiří's delegates were made to stand before Pius II in Rome.

Several historical figures are represented in the painting. The five-petalled rose at the back marks the lord of Rosenburg, a member of the royal council and ruler of southern Bohemia. Sitting opposite is Archbishop Jan Rokycana, with a cross on a purple robe. In the right corner is the most famous court jester in Czech history, Brother Paleček, in a fool's cap, a wise and educated man who renounced all privileges to advise the king. To his left a boy closes a book inscribed 'Roma' to symbolize the end of negotiations between King Jiří and the Pope.

At the end of this audience, the king dismissed the papal envoys. The next day he arrested and imprisoned the permanent representative of the Czech kingdom to Rome, Fatinus de Valle, who had returned to Prague with the Pope's envoys for betraying and misrepresenting the interests of the Czech kingdom. The Pope retaliated by anathematizing King Jiří (i.e., excluding him from thew society of the faithful because of heresy) and refused to recognise him as King of Bohemia.

Jiří remained on the Bohemian throne for a further 10 years until his death in 1471, aged 51.

Forward now to the 19th century to an event that marks the bid for independence from the Hapsburgs that the Czech's lost in the Peace of Westphalia that ended the bloody 30-Years War between Catholics and Protestants in Central Europe.

After a period of recatholicization, centralization and Germanization which reached a peak in the 18th century under Maia Theresa and Joseph II of Austro-Hungary, with an attempt to suppress even the Czech language, nevertheless a Czech national revival flourished. The people of Prague fought hard to restore their cultural and national identity and, at the end of the 19th century, a progressive youth group, the Omladina, had formed. The movement was accused of high treason and, in an attempt to suppress it in 1894, 76 people were prosecuted and 68 of them were sentenced to a total of 96 years in prison. Among them were future representatives of political and cultural life such as Alois Raší, Karel Stanislave Sokol, Stanislav Kostka Neumann and others.
The Oath of Omladina Under the Slavic Linden Tree (1926)
In this highly symbolic painting Mucha sets the scene in and beneath the sacred linden tree, based on a real tree in Žamberk region. Mother Slavia is seated in the fork of its branches with young people kneeling before her swearing allegiance to the nation and mutual cohesion. To the left in the background stands an old man with a huge grey moustache, a figure from the history of Serbia, as a reminder that a similar also existed there. A Sokol member takes the oath on the right. The Sokol movement (Czech: [ˈsokol], falcon) is an all-age gymnastics organization first founded in Prague in the Czech lands of Austria-Hungary in 1862 by Miroslav Tyrš and Jindřich Fügner. It was based upon the principle of "a strong mind in a sound body". Sokol, through lectures, discussions, and group outings, provided what Tyrš viewed as physical, moral, and intellectual training for the nation. This training extended to men of all ages and classes, and eventually to women. It quickly became associated with Slav cultural identity.

Some of the faces are deliberately left blank as Mucha did not want to portray the politicians of the day. This period was when criticism of Much's work was at its height, and this may have discouraged him from completing this work.

The girl playing the harp in the lower part of the scene is modelled after Mucha's daughter Jaroslava; the boy on the right on his son, Jiří. On the right an old man sings about the famous deed of his ancestors and on the far right, painted before it gained its notoriety as the symbol of fascism, is a swastika - a symbol of the sun in motion worshipped by ancient Slavs and other pagan nations.

The next painting in the series is of the interior of a temple on Mount Athos, in Greece. Although not strictly Slavic, Mount Athos has huge spiritual significance to Orthodox Christians, the predominant religion of some Slavic people, particularly Russians and some Balkan peoples.

Mount Athos is the easternmost of three peninsulas projecting into the Aegean from Khalkidhiki. The whole peninsula belongs to the Orthodox monastic state and comprises some 20 monasteries with about 2,000 monks. Its significance derives from it being the centre of Orthodox Christianity during the Turkish Moslem occupation of Greece and the southern Balkans.

According to legend the Virgin Mary found refuge there and Athos is traditionally her last resting place. In 1045, the Byzantine Emperor Constantine IX decreed that no female may set foot on the entire peninsula, not even female animals, except cats.

The painting represents the interior of one of the Athos Temples, the apis with the mosaic of the Virgin Mary.
Mount Athos (1926)
On the far right, rays of sunlight enter the temple, illuminated by numerous candles. Priests stand before the iconostasis and let pilgrims kiss the holy relics. Cherubs hovering in the bright light carry models of four other Orthodox monasteries: Serbian Hilander, Russian St. Panteleimon, and Bulgarian monasteries Zograf and Vatopedia. Behind the cherubim, we see portraits of the four heads of these monasteries. In the foreground is a young man supporting a blind old man - The model for the young man was Mucha himself.

The final painting in the series, and the summary of the entire Slav Epic, is the Apotheosis of the Slav History.
Apotheosis of the Slav History (1926)
Four colour section the scene. At the bottom right the colour is blue, symbolizing antiquity and the Slavs in their homeland when they worshipped pagan gods. The old pagan priest, Zhrets, presents a burnt offering to the gods.

In the upper third, the colour is red, commemorating the famous moments in Czech history - the most important Czech rulers - Přemsyl Ottokar II, Charles IV and the last Czech king, Jiří of Poděbrady - and the reformation ideas of Jan Hus and the Hussite movement.

Under the red is a black rection symbolizing lost battles and the period of oppression of the Slavs: raids by Franks, Avars and Turks and 300 years of suppression of the Czech language after the Battle of White Mountain.

But the largest area of the canvas is painted yellow - the colour of joy and freedom. The First World War ended in 1918, and the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires were dismantled so many Slavic nations achieved freedom. At the bottom left, people welcome legionnaires returning home and women in national costumes knit garlands and prepare flags for the celebration of independence. On the right, an old man gives thanks that he has lived long enough to experience freedom. The flags of the victorious powers flutter in the background. On the left are representatives of the Slav nations.

The figure of a young Slavic man dominates the upper part of the painting. His arms are spread wide to show he is finally free. He holds a wreath of victory and unity with ribbons of a Czechoslovakia tricolour tied to them. The image ends with a rainbow, symbolizing the most important idea of the entire Slavic Epic cycle~: peace between nations.

Of course, these paintings were completed in the years immediately following WWI and before WWII and its aftermath when the Slavic nations were again subject to foreign domination. It was to be a further 70 years or so before the Slavs finally became free and freely joined with other European nations in the European Union. As a result of the cultural history of Czechia, and its sorry experience of the blood-soaked struggles between competing religious ideologies and of religion providing the excuse for repression and denial of freedom of conscience, Czechia is now second only to France in Europe, in the proportion of its citizens who openly reject religion altogether.
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