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🚃 Why do Brits say “transport” and Americans “transportation”?
🚊 What’s the difference between a train and a locomotive?
🚙 How do you actually pronounce Hyundai?
These questions answered – and many more – in this transport[ation] special of Words Unravelled.
Meet the extraordinary women who shaped Brazilian history from the 16th to the 20th century. This video introduces Catarina Paraguaçu, a visionary Tupinambá Indian from the early colonial period, and Dandara dos Palmares, an Afro-Brazilian warrior who fought bravely against slavery. We also highlight Maria Quitéria, known as Brazil’s Joan of Arc from the 19th century, who broke gender barriers in the fight for independence. Experience the creative spirit of Chiquinha Gonzaga, a composer who defied societal expectations and influenced Brazil’s music scene, blending classical with popular rhythms. Finally, we celebrate Tarsila do Amaral, a pivotal figure in Brazilian Modernist art, along with fellow artists Oswald de Andrade and Anita Malfatti. Join us to honor these inspiring women whose lives and legacies continue to resonate across centuries and beyond.
Chapters:
00:00 – Intro
01:48 – Catarina Paraguaçu
05:27 – Dandara dos Palmares
07:58 – Maria Quitéria
11:04 – Chiquinha Gonzaga
14:06 – Tarsila do Amaral
16:29 – Final Thoughts
Further Reading:
Janaína Amado, ‘O Caramuru, e a Fundação Mítica do Brasil’, Actas dos IV Cursos Internacionais de Ikrão de Cascais – Mito e Símbolo na História de Portugal e do Brasil (1998), pp. 175-209.
Aracy Amaral, Tarsila: Sua Obra e Seu Tempo (2010).
Isabelle Anchieta, Revolucionárias: Joana d’Arc e Maria Quitéria (2024).
Jarid Arraes, As lendas de Dandara (2016).
_________, Heroínas negras em 15 cordéis (2017).
Angela Braga, Tarsila do Amaral (1998).
Leonardo Chalub, Dandara e a Falange Feminina de Palmares, (2021).
Chiara Ciodarot, Tempos de liberdade (2022).
Edinha Diniz, Chiquinha Gonzaga: Uma história de vida (2009).
Carlos Dourado, Maria Quitéria: A primeira militar brasileira, uma guerreira também pela independência do Brasil (2023).
Santa Rita Durão, Caramuru: Poema Épico (1781).
Tasso Franco, Catarina Paraguacu: A Mae do Brasil (2001).
Nádia Battella Gotlib, Tarsila do Amaral: A Modernista (2018).
Dalva Lazaroni, Chiquinha Gonzaga: Sofri e Chorei, Tive Muito Amor (1999).
Adriano Petrosa (ed.), Tarsila Popular (2019). (English version: Tarsila do Amaral: Cannibalizing Modernism, 2019).
Sebastião da Rocha Pitta, História da América Portugueza (1880).
Shuma Schumaher (ed.), Dicionário Mulheres do Brasil de 1500 até a atualidade (2000).
Rosa Symanski, Maria Quitéria: A soldada que conquistou o Império (2021).
Discover the remarkable stories of influential women who have shaped Brazilian history. This video highlights their significant roles throughout Brazil’s past, emphasizing their contributions to the country’s cultural and social development. Each of these women offers a unique story of courage and influence that has helped define the nation.
Learn about the contributions of key historical figures, including Afro-Brazilian leaders and pioneering artists, who broke barriers and set new precedents in Brazilian society. This presentation details the lives of these trailblazing women from different eras, all of whom played critical roles in building and shaping modern Brazil.
Our video is perfect for those interested in the history of women, Brazilian culture, and historical achievements. By focusing on figures like Maria Quitéria, Chiquinha Gonzaga, and Tarsila do Amaral, we bring their stories to the forefront, celebrating their enduring impact on both Brazil and the global stage.
This content is ideal for educators, students, and anyone with a keen interest in history. It sheds light on the vital contributions of Brazilian women, aiming to educate and inspire today’s audiences about the diverse and impactful history of Brazil, highlighting the powerful roles women have played throughout.
f you want to dive deeper into all things Frisian or even learn Frisian, check out the Frisian with Hilbert channel: / @frisianwithhilbert
Imagine you have a sibling who moves out from your parents’ house and has this amazing life abroad – meets foreigners, explores new lands, becomes a global trendsetter while you are stuck with your relatives who also took all the room for themselves. Now imagine that the successful sibling is the English language. Today we are going to talk about that other language that remained with the relatives – the Frisian language (actually it’s languageS – there is more than one Frisian language). Frisian didn’t become global like English, but it is a proud little language that survived through the turmoils that were hitting mainland Europe over and over. Join me for this story of battling with the sea, migrations, trade, and… tea?
Join me, Dr Julia Martins, as I explore the fascinating world of Renaissance bathing and medicine. From ancient Egypt to 16th-century Italy, discover how therapeutic waters shaped medical practice and social life throughout history.
In this video, I examine historical therapeutic bathing with a focus on Renaissance hydrotherapy. Learn about the strange “bath that makes women pregnant” mentioned by Leonardo Fioravanti in 1561 and the curious proverb that advised men to “send their lady to the baths and not go along.” I uncover what these mysterious references actually meant!
I look at how bathing fit into Renaissance medicine, when doctors were caught between respecting ancient authorities like Galen while facing new evidence from popular healing springs. Watch as I examine the clash between traditional humoral theory and the radical chemical approaches of Paracelsus, who prescribed extreme treatments like 12-hour baths!
This video also covers the social aspects of Renaissance spa culture, where medical treatments overlapped with leisure, socialising, and potentially romantic encounters. From nobility hosting balls to commoners making pilgrimages to healing waters, these baths served multiple purposes in society.
Learn about bizarre treatments, like sulphurous waters that smelled of rotten eggs, patients being lowered down cliffs in baskets to reach thermal pools, and healing springs supposedly discovered by a sick cow! I trace how these practices evolved into modern hydrotherapy and physiotherapy.
Whether you’re interested in medical history, Renaissance culture, ancient healing methods, or the origins of modern spa treatments, this video connects the dots between water and wellness across the centuries. Find out why humans have consistently turned to water for health and pleasure throughout history.
Chapters:
00:00 – Intro
02:07 – A Quick Dip Into Bathing History
03:26 – Renaissance Splashes
05:31 – Diving Into Bathing and Medicine
08:23 – Paracelsus Makes Waves
11:18 – Renaissance Bathing Culture
14:59 – From Renaissance Ripples to Modern Waves
16:19 – The Eternal Appeal of Water
References:
Andrea Bacci, De Thermis (Venice, 1571).
William Dieffenbach, Hydrotherapy: a Brief Summary of the Practical Value of Water In Disease, for Students And Practicians of Medicine (1909).
William Eamon, ‘Alchemy in Popular Culture: Leonardo Fioravanti and the Search for the Philosopher’s Stone’, Early Science and Medicine, 5 (2000), pp. 196–213.
———, Science and the Secrets of Nature: Books of Secrets in Medieval and Early Modern Culture (1994).
———, The Professor of Secrets: Mystery, Medicine, and Alchemy in Renaissance Italy (2010).
Gabriele Falloppio, De medicatis aquis (Venice, 1564).
Leonardo Fioravanti, Capricci medicinali (1561).
John Floyer, Psykhroloysia, or the History of Cold Bathing… (1732).
Tomaso Giunta (ed.), De balneis omnia quae extant… (Venice, 1553).
Ute Lotz-Heumann, Ute, “Spas from the 16th to the 19th century”, European History Online (2012)
Genevieve Miller, “‘Airs, Waters, and Places’ in History”, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 17(1) (1962, pp. 129–40.
Michel de Montaigne, Journal de Voyage en Italie (Rome, 1581).
Bruce T. Moran, Paracelsus: An Alchemical Life (2019).
Richard Palmer, “In this our lightye and learned tyme”: Italian Baths in the Era of the Renaissance“, Medical History Supplement No.10 (1990), pp. 14–22.
Frank Van Tubergen and Sjef van der Linden, “A brief history of spa therapy”, in Annals of Rheumatic Diseases 61.3 (2002): 273–275
Theophrastus von Hohenheim (Paracelsus), Von dem Bad Pfeffers (1535).
________, Book of Minerals (1530s).
(On Paracelsus, make sure to check out The Zurich Paracelsus Project).
Royal College of Physicians of Edingburgh Blog, “Bathing by Prescription: A Brief History of Treatment by Water”.