Symphony No. 6 (Schubert) Sinfonía nº 6 en Do Mayor D589 de Franz Schubert, Orquesta Sinfónica de RTVE, Carlos Kalmar, director, Teatro Monumental de Madrid The Symphony No. 6 in C major, D. 589, is a symphony by Franz Schubert composed between October 1817 and February 1818. Its first public performance was in Vienna in 1828. It is nicknamed the "Little C major" to distinguish it from his later Ninth Symphony, also in C major, which is known as "the Great." There are four movements: Adagio, 3/4 - Allegro, 2/2 Andante, 2/4 in F major Scherzo: Presto; Trio: Piu lento (Trio in E major), 3/4 Allegro moderato, 2/4 La Sexta Sinfonía en Do mayor D. 589 de Franz Schubert fue escrita entre octubre de 1817 (fecha que figura a la cabeza del manuscrito) y febrero de 1818. Es conocida como la pequeña do mayor, para diferenciarla de la Gran Sinfonía en do mayor (D. 944) del mismo compositor. Esta sinfonía es una de las menos conocidas y menos reproducidas de Schubert. Su escritura se vio muy …更に表示
Pope explains his visit to the mosque was not to pretend Catholicism and Islam are the same but simply to promote the rejection of religious violence in Algeria.
thefallenpoe.t The curse of awareness. Narrated by TheFallenPoet. He who sees too much ends up not fitting in anywhere. That’s the weight of awareness. Once you begin looking beneath the surface, the world stops feeling simple. You start noticing the games people play, the performances, the hidden motives behind friendly faces. You realize how much of life runs on unspoken rules and quiet pretending. And once you see it, you can’t unsee it. When you try to explain it, people say you’re overthinking, being dramatic, reading too deeply. So you grow quieter. You observe more. You belong less. Not because you think you’re better, but because you can no longer move through things blindly. Awareness can isolate you, but it also returns you to yourself. You may lose the crowd, but you gain clarity. And clarity, though lonely, is honest. instagram.com/reel/DUM7TeGDtKP/
Tue Apr 14, 2026 - 12:07 pm EDTWed Apr 15, 2026 - 11:56 am EDT VATICAN CITY (LifeSiteNews) — In what is the first official Vatican acknowledgment of an active investigation into the legitimacy of Pope Benedict XVI’s 2013 resignation, the Office of the Promoter of Justice of the Vatican City State has formally confirmed that it is actively carrying out an investigation into a petition to the court alleging the nullity of the resignation. The Office is the body responsible for conducting criminal investigations for the Tribunal of the Vatican City State (commonly referred to by journalist Andrea Cionci as the “Vatican Criminal Court”). Cionci is a veteran Roman journalist with 20 years’ experience at Italy’s major daily newspapers and the author of the bestselling book The Ratzinger Code (25,000 copies sold and translated into five languages). He has conducted one of the most detailed examinations of Benedict XVI’s renunciation since 2020. LifeSiteNews has received and independently …
ESCLUSIVA: La Corte vaticana conferma l'indagine in corso sulla validità delle dimissioni di Papa Benedetto XVI È la prima volta che la Corte penale vaticana mette per iscritto che le accuse, risalenti a diversi anni fa, hanno dato il via a un'indagine attiva sulla validità delle dimissioni di Benedetto XVI.
Vatican.va that contains an archive of speeches of recent popes, altered the prayer delivered by Pope John Paul II in March 2000 in Wadi al-Kharrar, Jordan, in all languages. John Paul II concluded the prayer with the following words: "May Saint John the Baptist protect Islam." Unsurprisingly, this caused a huge scandal at the time. Archive.org has saved screenshots of the relevant files in different languages up to 10 February 2026. The new, fabricated version on Vatican.va, which John Paul II never uttered, reads: "May Saint John the Baptist protect this land." #newsHgeytapbbx
Cardinal Frank Leo, Archbishop of Toronto, will preside over the beatification of the Georgia Martyrs on October 31 in Savannah, Georgia. The Georgia Martyrs refer to a group of five Franciscan friars who were killed in 1597 while serving as missionaries in what is now the coastal region of Georgia, United States Info: Archdiocese of Toronto