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Friedrich Heer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (200 words) |
 | Friedrich Heer (1916 - 1983) was a historian born in Vienna. |
 | Friedrich Heer was arrested for the first time on 11 March 1938 by the Austrian Nazis. |
 | From 1946 to 1961 Friedrich Heer was the editor of the weekly magazine Die Furche [The Furrow] and in 1961 he was appointed chief literacy to the Vienna Burgtheater. |
| The Holy Roman Empire (1555 words) |
 | Heer's work is like a good film adaptation of a complicated adventure romance: it is filled with lyrical language and splendid images (wonderful graphics in this book, by the way), but it is really an illustration of the story rather than a retelling of it. |
 | Heer does not cease to remind us that the symbols and the functions of the emperors go back 5,000 years, to the first city-states with their eagle emblems and god-kings. |
 | Heer points out that the largely successful campaign by the popes of the 12th and 13th centuries to desacralize the empire was the basis of every other claim of right that would ever be made against the state. |