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Facts about OU students

Check the latest statistics on OU students.

If the answer is '4 out of 10' what is the question?

How many students take out a student loan?

What is the average age of an OU student?

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Check the latest statistics on OU students. If the answer is '4 out of 10' what is the question? How many students take out a student loan? What is the average age of an OU student? Click the image below to go to OU on Pinterest.com. Source: flickr.com via The Open on Pinterest 0

Maintaining social order with gruesome images of Hell

Hell is a subject that has long fascinated artists and writers. It inspired Dante's Inferno, a literary journey through Hell which has fired the imagination of generations from the 14th century down to contemporary thriller writer Dan Brown.
 
Now research on the Mediterranean island of Crete is throwing new light on how Hell was imagined in the past and how it was used to maintain social order, and to prevent crime and antisocial behaviour.

The research carried out at the Open University and in Germany has established that infernal images played both a religious and a social role.

Graphic visions of hellish torture gave a clear warning to villagers across Crete not to sin or break the law.
 
Hell frescoes popular
Crete was under Venetian domination between 1211 and 1669. Over 800 decorated churches date from this period and display remarkable wall frescoes.
 
Around 100 of these churches, dated predominantly to the 14th and 15th centuries, include Hell and its sinful inhabitants among their iconographic programmes – making Hell a very popular Cretan subject.
 
Most of the frescoes have never been properly analysed or even recorded until now.
 
In 2010 The Leverhulme Trust awarded £176,600 for an International Networks project to Dr Angeliki Lymberopoulou of The Open University, and Professor Dr Vasiliki Tsamakda of the University of Mainz, to photograph, catalogue, examine and publish all the Cretan Hell frescoes for first time.
 
The depiction of Hell and the punishments inflicted on the sinners, often grotesque and disturbing, reveal the priorities of Cretan society and reflect the island’s evolving multicultural identity.
 
Religion was a major cause of friction between the island's native Greek Orthodox population and the Roman Catholic Venetian colonists.
 
The Cretan frescoes are Byzantine in character but they also demonstrate influences from the western Catholic tradition – influences that seeped through owing to the cross-cultural interaction between the two sets of inhabitants.

From the early 14th century Dante’s Divine Comedy was one of the most popular literary works of the pre-print era, and its first part, Hell (Inferno), was often read out publicly in Italian cities.
 
“We do not know how well Dante was known on Crete, or even if he was known at all," says Angeliki Lymberopoulou.
 
“But the images from Venetian Crete, like Dante, demonstrate a common concern about the afterlife, and also act as a reminder what happens to bad people – helping to ensure behaviour within the limits of the law, of social parameters and of religion.
“Both take pretty much the same line on what happens to sinners – the punishment in the afterlife fits the crime.


’The images (…) act as a reminder what happens to bad people – helping to ensure behaviour within the limits of the law, of social parameters and of religion’


“Interestingly, in the Cretan frescoes it is those who have committed sins in their profession – such the dishonest miller or tailor – who are punished the most.
 

“The gossip, the fornicator, the moral sinners generally, while they receive their due in the afterlife, are nevertheless shown having less pain inflicted, which sends a very clear social message.”
 
Cultural harmony
During its Venetian domination Crete became a unique melting pot of cultures, she says.
 
“Venetian Crete is probably one of the best examples of a society where we can see people trying to rise about political and religious differences, find common ground and live peacefully together.
 
"Effectively, whatever differences they had in this life, when it comes to the afterlife, the frescoes show the good people go to paradise and the bad people go to hell, and there is no other way.”
 
The Leverhulme Trust funded research project Damned in Hell in the Frescoes of Venetian-Dominated Crete (13th-17th centuries) runs until end September 2013.
 
An associated series of conferences brings together experts to discuss different aspects of Hell. The final conference in the series, The Road to Hell: Sins and their after-life Punishments in the Mediterranean, takes places in Mainz, Germany on 4 and 5 October 2013. The team members of this project will present their preliminary research results during this conference. Find out more here.
 
Angeliki Lymberopoulou is a specialist in Byzantine art. She chairs AA315 Renaissance Art Reconsidered.
 
 
Find out more
•    Ten things about hell
 

Posted on 3 July 2013.

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Hell is a subject that has long fascinated artists and writers. It inspired Dante's Inferno, a literary journey through Hell which has fired the imagination of generations from the 14th century down to contemporary thriller writer Dan Brown.   Now research on the Mediterranean island of Crete is throwing new light on how Hell was imagined in the past and how it was used to maintain ...

National Diversity Awards 2013 – who will you nominate?

The OU is one of the founding sponsors of a movement that is creating and celebrating a new generation of positive role models for the UK.

The National Diversity Awards was launched in 2012 by the Diversity Group, and recognises the achievements of individuals, charities and community organisations who are tackling some of the most challenging issues and inequalities in our society.

The importance of a role model can never be under-estimated.

Role models inspire us, help us to focus, to pursue our goals, and to achieve our potential.

That’s why the OU sponsored the Positive Role Model Award category in 2012, and again in 2013, and recently made a commitment to support the awards for at least a further three years.

Tony O’Shea-Poon, Head of Equality, Diversity and Information Rights said: “Too often it’s the big companies with big funds that are put forward for diversity awards.

“The National Diversity Awards are refreshingly different. It’s not the big companies who are in the limelight - it’s the turn of individuals and grass-roots organisations to come out of the shadows, and take the credit they deserve for tackling big issues, often with very little resource. It’s humbling to be associated with so many inspirational people”.

Do you know someone that demonstrates passion, enthusiasm and determination, and is an inspiration to you and others?

A role model can be a family member, friend, coach, mentor, teacher or tutor, community leader, colleague or a neighbour.

If so, you can ensure they are recognised for their contribution through the National Diversity Awards, by following the link to nominate them.

Nominations for the awards are open until Friday 19 July 2013 and the nomination form is very short, taking just a minute or two to complete.

The 2013 Awards take place on 20 September at the Queen’s Hotel, Leeds, and promises to be a prestigious and glamorous celebration.

This year, the OU will present the Positive Role Model Award for Race, Religion and Faith, and we’ll be tweeting updates from the event.

Links:

Nominate an individual or community organisation for an award
Visit the National Diversity Awards on Facebook
Follow the National Diversity Awards on Twitter
 

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The OU is one of the founding sponsors of a movement that is creating and celebrating a new generation of positive role models for the UK. The National Diversity Awards was launched in 2012 by the Diversity Group, and recognises the achievements of individuals, charities and community organisations who are tackling some of the most challenging issues and inequalities in our ...