Why is there a Germany? Part of the answer goes back to a battle fought in A

游客2024-11-21  0

问题     Why is there a Germany? Part of the answer goes back to a battle fought in A.D. 9 in the treacherous marshes and dense thickets of Teutoburg Forest, near modern Osnabrueck. As described by the Roman historian Tacitus, three Roman legions led by Quinctilius Varus had crossed the Rhine from Gaul, intent on incorporating the vast area known as Germania into the empire. They were ambushed and annihilated by German tribes under the command of a warrior named Arminius. It was one of the worst military disasters the Romans ever suffered. Some years ago, archaeologists discovered the site of the battle: the debris field was a mile wide and 15 miles long. Caesar Augustus, it is said, roamed the hallways of his palace, crying, " Quinctilius Varus, give me back my legions!" Henceforth, the Romans pretty much wrote off the area east of the Rhine and north of the Alps. The line of demarcation survives to this day as a cultural divide — beer versus wine, butter versus oil, Germanic versus Romance.
    So the victory of Arminius established certain facts on the ground. In his fascinating study, Christopher B. Krebs draws attention to another part of the explanation for Germany’s existence — the role played by Tacitus himself, through the influence of a small volume called "Germania." Think of it as an ancient exercise in social anthropology. The Romans had been bedeviled for years by the motley tribes they lumped together as Germans. Tacitus set out to describe them.
    In his telling, the Germans possessed "fierce blue eyes, tawny hair, huge bodies." They prized freedom, scorned luxury and esteemed military courage above all else. They were a people of sturdy values for whom "good laws" were no substitute for "good habits." In the land of the Germans, Tacitus writes, " nobody laughs off vice: and to corrupt and to be corrupted is not called ’ modern times.’ " Pointedly, he observed that the Germans were "not tainted by intermarriage with any other nations" but rather existed "as a distinct unadulterated people that resembles only itself."
    Fast forward 14 centuries. Central Europe is a mosaic of fractious principalities, united by Christianity and a Germanic language, but little else. The literate elites, looking abroad to the advanced kingdoms of England and France, have begun to wonder: who are we? They know that a book called "Germania" once existed, but the text itself has been lost since antiquity. Suddenly, in the mid-15th century, book collectors pick up vague rumors: a copy may have surfaced in a distant monastery. And yes, it’s true!
    Krebs, a classicist who teaches at Harvard, lays out the recovery of "Germania," in 1455, like a detective story. But that is just the beginning. Tacitus’s book was exactly what nationalists had been waiting for. It tells a story of origins. It describes a proud, brave and virtuous people. In truth, its portrait was complex. The Germans were not one nation —Tacitus lists 50 tribes. They manifested plenty of appalling qualities. And Tacitus, who probably never set foot in Germany, clearly had an agenda: to provoke his own soft and decadent society. All this proved easy enough to ignore. "Germania" was received as the "golden booklet." It was published and republished. An adviser to Frederick the Great, citing Tacitus, called the German people " still the same aboriginal and indigenous nation which has preserved its independence, its name and its language from its origin to this day."
    In hindsight, it’s clear where this is heading. Phrases from Tacitus like "not tainted" and "unadulterated" are picked up by 19th-century German theorists of race and superiority. The most popular German textbook of the time would refer to " the unmixed German blood which flows in our veins." In a newly unified Germany, "Germania" was high on every reading list. Clubs sprang up to celebrate peasant virtues, physical prowess and Aryan superiority. The Nazis would leverage all this for their own purposes. In 1924, the young Heinrich Himmler read "Germania" while on a train trip. In his diary he evoked "the glorious image of the loftiness, purity and nobleness of our ancestors." He vowed, "Thus shall we be again," adding the ominous note, " or at least some among us." The Nazi Party convention held in Nuremberg in 1936 featured a "Germanic Room" with Tacitean quotations. In 1943, Himmler sent troops to a palazzo in Italy where he believed the oldest manuscript of "Germania" was preserved. They didn’t find it. The manuscript made its way to Germany eventually — in 2009, for an exhibition marking the 2,000th anniversary of Arminius’ victory.
    Krebs’s quick march through a wealth of material hits a few boggy academic patches but becomes increasingly sure-footed. He has a light touch and a dry sense of humor. And despite the title of his book, he does not hold "Germania" responsible for acts committed in its name. "Tacitus did not write a most dangerous book," he concludes. "His readers made it so." [br] The sentence "Thus shall we be again, ... or at least some among us." in the sixth paragraph suggests that______.

选项 A、the Nazi Party was to provoke the German people to wage a war with Tacitean quotations
B、Heinrich Himmler was to be one of the "some among us"
C、Germany was to be glorious and lofty again
D、the revival of the Germans was overdue

答案 A

解析 推断题。此句为德国纳粹党秘密警察头子Heinrich Himmler在日记中所述,从原文“adding the ominous note”可以推断这是战争前的不良征兆,意即纳粹党将别有用心地利用“Germania”中的言语夸大德意志民族的优越性,继而挑动德国人卷入一场世界级战争,A为最合适答案。B的概括仅仅局限于Heinrich Himmler本人,过于片面。C和D都不符合原意。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3855303.html
最新回复(0)