5 resultados para Coins, Venetian.
em CentAUR: Central Archive University of Reading - UK
Resumo:
This article contains an exhaustive research done on archives sources regarding the Venetian suor Arcangela Tarabotti's family. The eldest of seven girls, she was compelled to enter the cloister in 1620. Despite she includes only two letters agmong the 256 she managed to publish in her collection, her siblings had destinies that stayed intertwined with her own. In particular, because her family had, most probably a past as a Jewish new converted family, something that explains some unusual patterns within the Tarabotti family itself.
Resumo:
Theophilus (Gottlieb) Siegfried Bayer (1694-1738) is usually credited as the first person in modern times to address the history of the Greeks in Bactria in a serious way. Bayer’s Historia Regni Graecorum Bactriani, brings together numismatic and historical research. He describes two Graeco-Bactrian coins which he was able to examine first hand, and collects and comments upon the Classical historical sources on the Greek kingdoms of Bactria and India. It was published in St. Petersburg in 1738, where Bayer, a German, held an academic position. In this short article, I am interested in two questions surrounding the Historia Regni Graecorum Bactriani. First (and relatively briefly), how Bayer conducted his research without first hand access to source material and without himself travelling in Bactria – or indeed further east than St. Petersburg. Secondly, the way in which Bayer’s scholarship was received by some of his contemporaries and by later writers, outside the field of Bactrian studies.
Resumo:
The "inside story" on convent life by a political, protofeminist Venetian nun, Arcangela Tarabotti (1604-1652), which had never been published before, but circulated broadly, together with a lengthy essay by Francesca Medioli on unwilling nuns, Venice during the XVIIth century, alphabetisation, reading for women, textual strategies.