Within the vast repertoire that made medieval storytelling a brilliant marketing project lasting centuries and, curiously, still offering fierce resilience against modern narratives, the inclusion of themes that persist today among its legendary myths stands out.
Among these, two completely opposite themes stand out for their enduring nature and because they are possibly deeply rooted in the depths of the Collective Unconscious—with apologies to Dr. Jung—yet they bear witness to an unparalleled dualistic model: love and war. Generally depicted by medieval stonemasons in sculptures that, in a way, like painting, became the forerunners of modern storytelling, it could be said that there was no church, hermitage, cathedral, or monastery that did not include them in its message.
The clashes between knights, which continued not only on battlefields but also in the form of aristocratic duels that so inspired literary styles like Romanticism, contrast with the specter of love derived from the world of music, a world closely linked to the great master of seduction: Eros.
Eros and Thanatos, or death, as its counterpart, continue to exert a powerful fascination in a world that already dreams of great space voyages, immersed in the astonishing capabilities of Artificial Intelligence, where, as on ancient pilgrimage routes, travelers and pilgrims find themselves in the same circumstances, but with different backdrops.
Therefore, one of the greatest attractions of any worthwhile journey is the opportunity to study and appreciate this cultural legacy, which, often neglected and misappropriated for foreign interests, still offers, in the most overlooked corners of countless paths, a place not only for contemplation but also for learning, allowing us to truly see who we are, where we come from, and how little we have learned.
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