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  1. #211
    i/e regjistruar Maska e Alti Elezi
    Anėtarėsuar
    04-04-2010
    Postime
    794
    Citim Postuar mė parė nga FIERI1 Lexo Postimin
    Behet fjale per banken "KRAJBANKA" e Latvia, Baltic shtet e ish BS ne kufi me Rusine. Depozitoret nga paniku kane formuar radhe te gjata dhe ne banka te tjera, momentalisht gjendja eshte me e qete eshte nenkontroll, por mosbesimi dhe pasiguria po triumfon dhe ekziston me ndjenja te larta, nese do artikullin e plote mund te kerkosh ne google me fjalet - long lines form at krajbanka - por puna eshte se po forcohet nje ndjenje pasigurie, kurse per situaten ne lidhje me bankat Greke mund ta gjesh artikullin e fundit te gazetastart.com me titullin "GREKET PO BOSHATISIN LLOGARITE BANKARE"
    Sa mire ca fati.
    Mbase marrin leket,por po blen nje buke per 10.000 usd ca do te bejne me ato copa letrash....do u dalin???

  2. #212
    i/e regjistruar Maska e D&G Feminine
    Anėtarėsuar
    08-08-2003
    Postime
    2,659
    Botticelli and his bankers

    Gold, God and forgiveness

    Two exhibitions of 15th-century painting highlight what drove the Renaissance

    Dec 17th 2011 | FLORENCE | from the print edition





    ..






    DO BANKERS inevitably go to hell? What many people today merely hope will come to pass was for Christians in the early 1400s a matter of faith. After all, the Bible, like the Koran, was explicit in its condemnation of lending money at interest, the basis of most banking operations. So in many parts of Christendom moneylending was left to Jews. In several northern cities of medieval Italy, however, ingenious Christians started to find ways round the banking ban. Their contrivances, though legal, were not popular with the church, which held that usurers, by charging for the duration of a loan, were not trading in goods but in time, and this was God’s.

    The prospect of an eternity of hellfire was particularly acute in Florence, since it was here that the foundations of modern banking were being laid. As it happened, Florence was also witnessing the first stirrings of an extraordinary flowering of the arts. Before long guilt-ridden bankers were commissioning great works of religious art in the hope that they might after death escape the damnation that the scriptures foretold. In this way were the birth of the international financial industry and that of the Renaissance intimately connected.








    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------



    The connection might perhaps be reduced to a single word, whether patronage, or atonement, or Medici. A longer, and far more pleasurable, elaboration can be found in text, pictures and objects at the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, where an exhibition devoted to “Money and Beauty” continues into 2012. Subtitled “Bankers, Botticelli and the Bonfire of the Vanities”, it explores the motives of Florence’s bankers in their artistic commissions; the reactions of churchmen to rich Florentines’ displays of luxury and wealth; and the effects of both penitential patronage and ecclesiastical reproach on the works of art that, throughout the 1400s, or Quattrocento, tumbled forth from Florence like coins from a slot machine.

    In the background of the exhibition are the Medici, the wool-traders turned bankers who held sway over the Florentine republic in its golden age under Lorenzo the Magnificent, and who produced popes and queens and Tuscan grand dukes until the last of the dynasty died in 1737. Their grip was interrupted by the invasion of Charles VIII of France in 1494, which brought in its wake the brief rule of Girolamo Savonarola, the austere Dominican friar from Ferrara who berated the Florentines for their luxuries, gambling, carnivals, and particularly their wanton paintings, which made “the Virgin Mary look like a harlot”. He called for children to spy upon their parents, prostitutes to be chastised, sodomites burned alive and irreligious frivolities prohibited. Hence the great Bonfires of the Vanities in the Piazza della Signoria in 1497 and 1498, when countless works of art, as well as cards, books and dresses, went up in flames.

    Sandro Botticelli, a central figure, was not one of the artists who flung their paintings onto the fires, but he nevertheless fell under Savonarola’s spell, as his later works clearly show. Gone, in these, were the sensuous depictions of idealised beauty seen in his early paintings, such as the “Birth of Venus”. Now Botticelli’s figures were more likely to bear agonised expressions of intense piety, as in “Madonna and Child with the Young St John”.

    In between came works like “The Calumny” (pictured above). This shows Midas on his throne, receiving the counsels of Ignorance and Suspicion, with a hooded Envy clasping the hand of Calumny, who in turn, with Deception and Fraud attending, is dragging the unidentified victim by the hair, while Penitence turns hopefully towards stark-naked Truth. Though not overtly religious, the sentiment is morally correct and therefore Savonarola-suitable, as is the turbulent mood, so far removed from the sumptuous lyricism of Botticelli’s earlier, mythological works. When those were made, as the chronicler Giorgio Vasari noted over half a century later, he worked happily for many Florentine families painting “very nude women”.

    “Money and Beauty” was proposed in 2006, just after the birth of the foundation that runs the Palazzo Strozzi, a 15th-century building in the middle of Florence built by mercantile rivals of the Medici. Five years of incubation, however, have only improved the show’s timeliness, allowing reflections not just on the role of bankers in general but even on some familiar banking terms whose origins are Tuscan. The most notable may be “risk”, which derives from Tuscan rischio, the amount considered necessary to cover costs when lending money, ie, a euphemism for interest. Another is “florin”. First coined in Florence, florins circulated widely in Europe for centuries—in Britain until 1971—and may yet perhaps make a post-euro return.

    It is not just its timing, though, that makes this show so successful. Its themes, and the abundance of artefacts and paintings on which the curators could draw, allow every point to be illustrated with a wonderful work of art: a panel commissioned by the mint; an altar painting showing Filippo Strozzi, who paid for it, almost as prominently as the entire Holy Family; keys, locks, letters of exchange; an account book pointing to the perils of sovereign default (three banks had gone bust when Edward III of England reneged on large loans); a codex containing the sumptuary laws that forbade flashy clothes and ostentatious funerals. (Even Fra Angelico—see next story—so pious he could not paint a crucifix without tears running down his cheeks, chose to depict the Virgin’s obsequies in the manner of an unashamedly opulent 15th-century Florentine funeral.)

    The images are merciless. Miserly bishops are shown being whipped with their own moneybags; St Anthony causes a usurer’s heart to be found in a strongbox; a moneylender meets the figure of Death. Balancing these are numberless images of devotional scenes, the Nativity, the Madonna and other religious figures. And also shown are the events with which Lorenzo’s magnificent era ended: Charles VIII’s entry into Florence, Savonarola preaching against luxuries in a city that derived so much wealth from making them, and the fundamentalist friar’s own execution in the very square in which the Bonfires of the Vanities had been held. This is the visual telling of a tale of beauty and bloodshed, lucre and licentiousness, morality, hypocrisy and propitiation.

    The telling is not all the work of the Quattrocento. The exhibits benefit enormously from the commentaries of two curators, Ludovica Sebregondi, a specialist in the religious art of the Renaissance, and Tim Parks, a British novelist and author of “Medici Money” (2005). While one puts the exhibits in their art-historical context, the other explains the social and wider significance. With different styles, and sometimes conflicting views, they add considerably to the pleasure of the show.

    And should today’s bankers take heed? Though usury has long since lost its power to inspire any penitential effort among Christians, modern moneylenders are accused of other sins: Pope Benedict calls for “moral renewal” in Italy and the Church of England agonises about the godlessness of the City of London. Yet most bankers seem to dread damnation in the hereafter as little as censure in the here and now. Too bad. Without the fear of God, they are unlikely to pay for a new Renaissance.

    “Money and Beauty: Bankers, Botticelli and the Bonfire of the Vanities” is at the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi (http://www.palazzostrozzi.org) in Florence until January 22nd

  3. #213
    Natyre e turbulluar... Maska e Robbery
    Anėtarėsuar
    03-11-2007
    Vendndodhja
    Firenze
    Postime
    1,449
    MA perkthe i ēik po deshe se nuk e njoh anglishten...
    https://www.behance.net/robberysk1100

  4. #214
    i/e regjistruar Maska e landi45
    Anėtarėsuar
    10-04-2008
    Postime
    1,711
    per bankat kam nje mendim si ti grabis nuk e di

  5. #215
    i/e regjistruar Maska e D&G Feminine
    Anėtarėsuar
    08-08-2003
    Postime
    2,659
    Citim Postuar mė parė nga Robery Lexo Postimin
    MA perkthe i ēik po deshe se nuk e njoh anglishten...
    Shko e shif ekspoziten ne Palazzo Strozzi se eshte deri ne fund te janarit. Shif fjaline e fundit

  6. #216
    Rob~i~Allahut . Maska e Al-Mustafa
    Anėtarėsuar
    26-11-2011
    Postime
    88
    We selam alejkum vellezer e motra muslimane .

    Sot per sot bankat ne shqiperi jan shum pak te sigurta . Ne mund te marrim kredi ose mund te depozitojme para vetem ne nje banke qe ka kapital te mire , dmth qe edhe po ti kape kriza ajo mund tia dale dhe nuk falimenton . Prandaj them qe bankat ne shqiperi nuk vlejn kshu qe me mire ruajini leket ke shpia se nuk jemi me ne vitet 1990-2000 Allahu ua shperbleft per leximin .
    Rob~i~Allahut !

  7. #217
    Natyre e turbulluar... Maska e Robbery
    Anėtarėsuar
    03-11-2007
    Vendndodhja
    Firenze
    Postime
    1,449
    Citim Postuar mė parė nga D&G Feminine Lexo Postimin
    Shko e shif ekspoziten ne Palazzo Strozzi se eshte deri ne fund te janarit. Shif fjaline e fundit

    Po perkthe shkrimin edhe per ata qe s'dine..po thoja...
    https://www.behance.net/robberysk1100

  8. #218
    i/e regjistruar
    Anėtarėsuar
    14-12-2011
    Postime
    9
    sikurse bankat te jepnin kredi pa fajde do ishte shume mire
    por ne te vertet perqindja e tyre eshte mjaft e lart gje qe slejohet as nga ZOTI por dhe nuk ndihmon njeri pervec se e genjen
    Ndryshuar pėr herė tė fundit nga elio33 : 27-12-2011 mė 08:57 Arsyeja: ishte teper e shkurter

  9. #219
    i/e regjistruar
    Anėtarėsuar
    14-12-2011
    Postime
    9
    o landi po gjete nanji menyre na i thuaj

  10. #220
    i/e regjistruar
    Anėtarėsuar
    14-12-2011
    Postime
    9
    o landi po gjete nanji menyre na i thuaj

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