Changes

1 byte added ,  22:21, 12 December 2020
m
Text replacement - "http://nordan.daynal.org" to "https://nordan.daynal.org"
Line 11: Line 11:     
National flags, national anthems, and other [[symbols]] of national [[identity]] are often considered [[sacred]], as if they were [[religious]] rather than [[political]] [[symbols]]. Deep [[emotions]] are aroused. Gellner and Breuilly, in ''Nations and Nationalism'', [[contrast]] nationalism and patriotism. "If the nobler [[word]] 'patriotism' then replaced 'civic/Western nationalism', nationalism as a [[phenomenon]] had ceased to exist."
 
National flags, national anthems, and other [[symbols]] of national [[identity]] are often considered [[sacred]], as if they were [[religious]] rather than [[political]] [[symbols]]. Deep [[emotions]] are aroused. Gellner and Breuilly, in ''Nations and Nationalism'', [[contrast]] nationalism and patriotism. "If the nobler [[word]] 'patriotism' then replaced 'civic/Western nationalism', nationalism as a [[phenomenon]] had ceased to exist."
<center>For lessons on the [[topic]] of '''''Nationalism''''', follow [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Nationalism '''''this link'''''].</center>
+
<center>For lessons on the [[topic]] of '''''Nationalism''''', follow [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Nationalism '''''this link'''''].</center>
 
Before the [[development]] of nationalism, people were generally [[loyal]] to a city or to a particular [[leader]] rather than to their nation. Encyclopedia Britannica identifies the movement's [[genesis]] with the late-18th century [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Revolution American Revolution] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Revolution French Revolution]; other historians point specifically to the ultra-nationalist party in France during the French Revolution.
 
Before the [[development]] of nationalism, people were generally [[loyal]] to a city or to a particular [[leader]] rather than to their nation. Encyclopedia Britannica identifies the movement's [[genesis]] with the late-18th century [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Revolution American Revolution] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Revolution French Revolution]; other historians point specifically to the ultra-nationalist party in France during the French Revolution.