| Christian
culture sites:
The
Agrarian Society!!. "... landed property, humane economy, and independent
community," says their masthead. Hear, hear.
The
Southern Traditionalist. The conservative tradition of the South,
which was classical in orientation, is the emphasis here.
A Distributivism
Page. Distributism (or distributivism) was the English precursor
to modern agrarianism and considered itself a "third way" between commercial
capitalism and socialism.
An explanation
of distributism. Another excellent description of Distributism,
an economic and social theory which holds that property should be widely
held by common people, neither concentrated in the hands of a few private
citizens nor held by the government.
Medieval
links:
Medieval and Renaissance Culture:
Mega-Links Page.
Peoples
of the Dark Ages. Don't be thrown by the title; the author doesn't
take the simplistic view that the so-called "Dark Ages" were really dark.
Good overview of the early Middle Ages.
Medieval
Latin. Probably the best link site for Medieval Latin.
Medieval
History - Home Page. Links to maps, timelines, biographical
information, videos, etc. on medieval history. |
G.
K. Chesterton
G.
K. Chesterton. A good short biographical introduction to one
of the great Christian thinkers of the 20th century.
The
Chesterton Review. An excellent publication that also covers
writers such as C.S. Lewis and Christopher Dawson.
G.K.
Chesterton Institute. A good biographical introduction to Chesterton
as well as information on distributism, of which Chesterton is the best
known proponent.
American
Chesterton Society. Essays, quotations and publications about
Chesterton.
G.K.
Chesterton Mega-Links Page. Excellent general links page.
C.
S. Lewis
C.S.
Lewis Mega-Links Page. Excellent general links page for C.S.
Lewis.
John
Henry Newman
John
Henry Newman: Mega-Links Page. Excellent general links page
for John Henry Newman, whose book The Idea of a University is a
classic on Christian education.
Christopher
Dawson
Christopher
Dawson. Another good, short introduction
to the thought of Christopher Dawson from the Acton Institute for the
Study of Religion and Liberty. |