18 resultados para Vautrin, Hubert, 1742-1822.
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Esta dissertação analisa e compara os periódicos com uma componente de divulgação científica, editados por refugiados políticos em Londres e Paris, sendo o núcleo investigado composto por quatro títulos: o Correio Braziliense (1808-1822) e O Investigador Portuguez em Inglaterra (1811-1819), publicados em Londres, O Observador Lusitano em Pariz (1815) e os Annaes das Sciencias, das Artes, e das Letras (1818-1822), ambos com origem na capital francesa. Este estudo comporta uma discussão sobre questões historiográficas levantadas pelo estudo de periódicos de divulgação científica, nomeadamente num país com as particularidades de Portugal, a caracterização do período histórico em que decorreu a vida destas publicações, um panorama breve do estado das diversas ciências no plano internacional que nelas encontraram eco, seguidos da análise propriamente dita do núcleo de periódicos seleccionados. No âmbito desta última, deu-se particular destaque aos editores e ao seu percurso, ao lugar das ciências entre as matérias apresentadas por cada periódico, e aos temas e personalidades focadas. Foram identificadas as principais fontes citadas e analisou-se a participação dos leitores em cada periódico. Ressaltam como traços fundamentais destes periódicos o esforço desenvolvido pelos seus editores no sentido de sensibilizarem os governantes para a importância de alterarem práticas tradicionais e estruturas ultrapassadas, abrindo o país à informação proveniente do exterior e, em particular, ao desenvolvimento científico e económico.
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Revista do IHA, N.3 (2007), pp. 7-18
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A verificação da segurança aos sismos de estruturas portuárias assume grande relevância no contexto nacional pela conjugação de dois factores: a perigosidade sísmica moderada da faixa costeira e a importância sócio-económica que este tipo de infraestruturas representa para o País. Nesta tese realiza-se uma breve apresentação das várias soluções estruturais correntes em obras portuárias, particularizando-se o comportamento sísmico observado de estruturas de gravidade com infraestrutura em caixotão, para sismos ocorridos nas últimas duas décadas. A apresentação da Metodologia por Avaliação de Desempenho aplicada às estruturas portuárias de gravidade, como forma de verificar a segurança aos sismos, pretende concretizar a aplicação do método no controlo dos danos para a uma determinada acção sísmica e, consequentemente, da minimização dos custos associados à reparação e à inoperacionalidade do porto.
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Este guião de apoio à formação tem como objectivo apoiar docentes em (1) aprender boas práticas no design de páginas web, (2) conhecer aspectos de versatilidade do moodle e (3) configurar o bloco "course menu".
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Apresenta-se uma breve pesquisa sobre a origem e introdução na nomenclatura geológica portuguesa dos termos “Carbonífero” e “Carbónico”, para designar o respectivo Sistema/Período geológico. Conclui-se que o termo “Carbónico” terá possivelmente tido origem na designação em língua francesa “Système Carbonique”, resultante de proposta de Eugene Renevier (em 1874) para a criação de um super-sistema que englobasse o Devónico, o Carbonífero e o Pérmico. Foi Wenscelau de Lima que introduziu os termos “Carbonique” e “Carbónico” (em 1888) na literatura geológica publicada em Portugal. Anteriormente, outros geólogos portugueses já tinham utilizado correctamente as designações “Carboniferous” e Carbonífero. Sendo “Carboniferous” (Phillips & Conybeare, 1822) o termo original proposto para designar formalmente a unidade estratigráfica e adoptado pelo código estratigráfico internacional, o aportuguesamento natural será “Carbonífero”, tal como escreveram Pereira da Costa (1860-61), Bernardino Gomes (1865), Carlos Ribeiro e Nery Delgado (1867, 1876). Além disso, a designação “Carbónico” revela-se desajustada face às recomendações do código estratigráfico internacional.
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The Upper Cenomanian and Lower Turonian ammonite assemblages from the onshore sectors of the West Portuguese Margin are reviewed after new studies on the type section of Figueira da Foz, and correlative sections of Baixo Mondego. The faunal succession shows a strong contribution of vascoceratids and other ammonites with North African and Tethyan affinities. Euomphaloceras septemseriatum (Cragin, 1893), Kamerunoceras douvillei (Pervinquere, 1907), Fagesia catinus (Mantell, 1822), Neoptychites cephalotus (Courtiller, 1860), and Thomasites rollandi (Thomas & Peron, 1889) are for the first time mentioned to Portugal. The Upper Cenomanian is recognised after a set of 3 assemblage zones: Neolobites vibrayeanus z., Euomphaloceras septemseriatum z ., and Pseudaspidoceras pseudonodosoides z. The carbonate succession shows an important unconformity across the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary, associated to subaerial exposure, and to the development of a palaeokarst over Upper Cenomanian units. The first Lower Turonian carbonates are yielded a single but diverse ammonite assemblage of middle Lower Turonian age (Thomasites rollandi z.). This biozone was previously recognised in Central Tunisia by G. Chancellor et al. (1994).
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FEBS journal, Volume 278, Issue 14, pages 2511-2524, July 2011
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Tese apresentada para cumprimento dos requisitos necessários à obtenção do grau de Doutor em Filosofia
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Portugal was one of the first and most enduring European colonial powers of modern times: 1415 and 1975 mark the beginning and the end of a long empire cycle that left impressive imprints in many places. Since it started, the overseas expansion and the exploration of the colonial resources were closely articulated with state-building and the preservation of national independence. A forerunner at the Great Age of Discoveries, but a latecomer in the era of industrialization, in the 19th and early-20th centuries Portugal was a peripheral country, and the economic gap with the rich and industrialized core of Europe was wide. During this period, however, the country faced the critical challenge of ruling vast and geographically scattered overseas territories, and of preserving them from the greed of strong imperialist powers. This article starts by outlining the major developments in the Portuguese colonial policy over a century, since the 1820s until 1926. The independence of Brazil (1822) was a crucial turning point, which brought about a shift towards Africa. The First Republic (1910-1926), pervaded by a nationalist ideology, gave a new impetus to the efforts towards a more effective colonisation. Symptomatically, a Ministry of Colonies was then established for the first time. Second, it describes and analyses the transformation of the central office for colonial affairs – from a small ministerial department to an autonomous ministry -, stressing the increasing bureaucratic specialisation, the growth of the apparatus and its staff, and the introduction of new criteria for the selection and promotion of permanent officials (namely a higher profile given to careers in local colonial administration). Finally, it presents a collective biography of both the politicians (Cabinet ministers) and the administrators (directors-general) who ran the Colonial Office for a large period of the Constitutional Monarchy (from 1851 to 1910) and during the First Republic, thus enabling to assess the impact of regime change on elite circulation and career patterns.
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Contém notícias: MACIEL, Manuel Justino, Xº Colóquio Internacional da Associação Internacional para o Estudo do Mosaico Antigo, p.159; SILVA, José Custódio Vieira da, VIº Encontro Internacional de Estudos Medievais, pp.159-160; MOREIRA, Rafael, Filipe Terzi em Miramar, p.160-162; SILVA, Raquel Henriques da, Comemorações do centenário da morte de Rafael Bordalo Pinheiro, p.162-164; SILVA, Raquel Henriques da, Duzentos e cinquenta anos depois do Terramoto, p.164
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A tipologia do teatro nasceu na Grécia e foi apropriada por Roma, com alterações significativas que constituem instrumento importante da investigação em História da Arte. Assim acontece com o teatro romano de Lisboa que, foi construído “ao modo grego”. Parece evidente que o Teatro foi adaptado para “espectáculos aquáticos”, embora o aprofundamento da reflexão exija a continuação de trabalhos arqueológicos, sob a Rua de São Mamede ao Caldas.
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Revista do IHA, N.4 (2007), pp.329-332
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Revista do IHA, N.5 (2008), pp.66-75
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AraL from Bacillus subtilis is a member of the ubiquitous haloalkanoate dehalogenase, HAD, superfamily. The araL gene has been cloned, over-expressed in Escherichia coli and its product purified to homogeneity. The enzyme displays phosphatase activity, which is optimal at neutral pH (7.0) and 65 °C. Substrate screening and kinetic analysis showed AraL to have low specificity and catalytic activity towards several sugar phosphates, which are metabolic intermediates of the glycolytic and pentose phosphate pathways. Based on substrate specificity and gene context within the arabinose metabolic operon, a putative physiological role of AraL in detoxification of accidental accumulation of phosphorylated metabolites has been proposed. The ability of AraL to catabolise several related secondary metabolites requires regulation at the genetic level. Here, by site- directed mutagenesis, we show that AraL production is regulated by a structure in the translation initiation region of the mRNA, which most probably blocks access to the ribosome-binding site, preventing protein synthesis. Members of HAD subfamily IIA and IIB are characterised by a broad-range and overlapping specificity that anticipated the need for regulation at the genetic level. In this study we provide evidence for the existence of a genetic regulatory mechanism controlling AraL production.
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The term res publica (literally “thing of the people”) was coined by the Romans to translate the Greek word politeia, which, as we know, referred to a political community organised in accordance with certain principles, amongst which the notion of the “good life” (as against exclusively private interests) was paramount. This ideal also came to be known as political virtue. To achieve it, it was necessary to combine the best of each “constitutional” type and avoid their worst aspects (tyranny, oligarchy and ochlocracy). Hence, the term acquired from the Greeks a sense of being a “mixed” and “balanced” system. Anyone that was entitled to citizenship could participate in the governance of the “public thing”. This implied the institutionalization of open debate and confrontation between interested parties as a way of achieving the consensus necessary to ensure that man the political animal, who fought with words and reason, prevailed over his “natural” counterpart. These premises lie at the heart of the project which is now being presented under the title of Res Publica: Citizenship and Political Representation in Portugal, 1820-1926. The fact that it is integrated into the centenary commemorations of the establishment of the Republic in Portugal is significant, as it was the idea of revolution – with its promise of rupture and change – that inspired it. However, it has also sought to explore events that could be considered the precursor of democratization in the history of Portugal, namely the vintista, setembrista and patuleia revolutions. It is true that the republican regime was opposed to the monarchic. However, although the thesis that monarchy would inevitably lead to tyranny had held sway for centuries, it had also been long believed that the monarchic system could be as “politically virtuous” as a republic (in the strict sense of the word) provided that power was not concentrated in the hands of a single individual. Moreover, various historical experiments had shown that republics could also degenerate into Caesarism and different kinds of despotism. Thus, when absolutism began to be overturned in continental Europe in the name of the natural rights of man and the new social pact theories, initiating the difficult process of (written) constitutionalization, the monarchic principle began to be qualified as a “monarchy hedged by republican institutions”, a situation in which not even the king was exempt from isonomy. This context justifies the time frame chosen here, as it captures the various changes and continuities that run through it. Having rejected the imperative mandate and the reinstatement of the model of corporative representation (which did not mean that, in new contexts, this might not be revived, or that the second chamber established by the Constitutional Charter of 1826 might not be given another lease of life), a new power base was convened: national sovereignty, a precept that would be shared by the monarchic constitutions of 1822 and 1838, and by the republican one of 1911. This followed the French example (manifested in the monarchic constitution of 1791 and in the Spanish constitution of 1812), as not even republicans entertained a tradition of republicanism based upon popular sovereignty. This enables us to better understand the rejection of direct democracy and universal suffrage, and also the long incapacitation (concerning voting and standing for office) of the vast body of “passive” citizens, justified by “enlightened”, property- and gender-based criteria. Although the republicans had promised in the propaganda phase to alter this situation, they ultimately failed to do so. Indeed, throughout the whole period under analysis, the realisation of the potential of national sovereignty was mediated above all by the individual citizen through his choice of representatives. However, this representation was indirect and took place at national level, in the hope that action would be motivated not by particular local interests but by the common good, as dictated by reason. This was considered the only way for the law to be virtuous, a requirement that was also manifested in the separation and balance of powers. As sovereignty was postulated as single and indivisible, so would be the nation that gave it soul and the State that embodied it. Although these characteristics were common to foreign paradigms of reference, in Portugal, the constitutionalization process also sought to nationalise the idea of Empire. Indeed, this had been the overriding purpose of the 1822 Constitution, and it persisted, even after the loss of Brazil, until decolonization. Then, the dream of a single nation stretching from the Minho to Timor finally came to an end.