In the current study we report a total of 99 specimens of terrestrial snails from which the species Zebrina detrita dominated with 76 specimens. All other species were represented by 4-8 specimens each. As a whole the xerophilic species were most abundant - 84 specimens (Z. detrita and Helix figulina). The rest of the specimens were representatives of mesophilic species. The registered freshwater mussels were from the genera Unio and Anodonta, and the marine ones were Ostrea edulis, Mytilus galloprovincialis, and Lima hians.
Artykuł koncentruje się na rozwoju sarmatyzmu na ziemiach słowackich w okresie pomiędzy XVI a XIX wiekiem. W tym samym czasie ruch sarmacki rozwijał się w Polsce i na ziemiach słowackich, które znalazły sie w granicach cesarstwa Habsburgów. Sarmatyzm był związany ze szczególnym zainteresowaniem starożytnością w epoce baroku, z narodzinami slawizmu i panslawizmu, a także z początkami ruchu odrodzenia narodowego. Ponadto był używany jako historyczny argument na udowodnienie chwalebnej przeszłości Słowian, w szczególności Słowaków, przez obie grupy inteligencji okresu baroku na ziemiach słowackich: protestantów i katolików.
The three main philosophical and theological objections, as they were posed in Letter 105, were traditionally considered as an evidence of Synesius' affiliations to pagan Neoplatonism as well as an act of non-acceptance of the main doctrines of Christianity. With his first objection, Synesius entered into the dispute concerning the origin and the fate of souls in their descent from and ascent to God. The Neoplatonic philosophers have always defended such a thesis energetically, rejecting the Christian notion of a single and unique act of God's Will. It is impossible, however, to summarize the main aspects of religious, philosophical and cultural symbiosis without the poetic inheritance of Synesius. Synesius received a rich education at the school of Hypatia in Alexandria, which included the then fashionable Neoplatonism. Keywords: Alexandria; Christianity; cultural symbiosis; Hypatia; Neoplatonism; pagan; Synesius