979 resultados para Rome (Italy). S. Maria Rotonda.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Papers of the school were ordinarily published in the American Journal of Archaeology, 2d. ser.; supplementary volumes wre authorized when material for publication either exceeded the space available in the journal, or when it was of such a nature as to make a different mode of publication advisable. (cf. v. 1, Prefatory note) The present volumes form the only collection of papers issued separately by the school in Rome. (Lists of the papers published in other journals, 1898-1907, may be found in the Supplementary papers, v. 1-2, Prefatory note) From 1909-12, the reports, etc., of the school were published in the Bulletin of the Archaeological Institute of America. On January 1, 1913, the American School of Classical Studies in Rome became a part of the American Academy in Rome.
Resumo:
Cf. Gumuchian 4499.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Bound in full leather, stamped in blind, marbled endpapers, 2 binder's leaves at front and back. The binding appears to be modern and the work of an amateur, signed "DK" at foot of spine.
Resumo:
Tr. of Recuerdos de Italia.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
The aim of this study is to examine the relationship of the Roman villa to its environment. The villa was an important feature of the countryside intended both for agricultural production and for leisure. Manuals of Roman agriculture give instructions on how to select a location for an estate. The ideal location was a moderate slope facing east or south in a healthy area and good neighborhood, near good water resources and fertile soils. A road or a navigable river or the sea was needed for transportation of produce. A market for selling the produce, a town or a village, should have been nearby. The research area is the surroundings of the city of Rome, a key area for the development of the villa. The materials used consist of archaeological settlement sites, literary and epigraphical evidence as well as environmental data. The sites include all settlement sites from the 7th century BC to 5th century AD to examine changes in the tradition of site selection. Geographical Information Systems were used to analyze the data. Six aspects of location were examined: geology, soils, water resources, terrain, visibility/viewability and relationship to roads and habitation centers. Geology was important for finding building materials and the large villas from the 2nd century BC onwards are close to sources of building stones. Fertile soils were sought even in the period of the densest settlement. The area is rich in water, both rainfall and groundwater, and finding a water supply was fairly easy. A certain kind of terrain was sought over very long periods: a small spur or ridge shoulder facing preferably south with an open area in front of the site. The most popular villa resorts are located on the slopes visible from almost the entire Roman region. A visible villa served the social and political aspirations of the owner, whereas being in the villa created a sense of privacy. The area has a very dense road network ensuring good connectivity from almost anywhere in the region. The best visibility/viewability, dense settlement and most burials by roads coincide, creating a good neighborhood. The locations featuring the most qualities cover nearly a quarter of the area and more than half of the settlement sites are located in them. The ideal location was based on centuries of practical experience and rationalized by the literary tradition.
Resumo:
A long-standing economic tradition maintains that labour supply reacts to market tightness; its sensitivity to job quality has received less attention. If firms hire workers with both temporary and open-ended contracts, does participation increase when more permanent jobs are available? We investigate this relationship within a policy evaluation framework; in particular, we examine how labour supply reacted in Italy to a recent subsidy in favour of open-ended contracts. This subsidy increased labour force participation by 1.4% in 2001 and 2.1% in 2002. This increase was concentrated on males aged 35-54, with a low or at most a secondary schooling level.
Resumo:
Milton’s Elegiarum Liber, the first half of his Poemata published in Poems of Mr John Milton Both English and Latin (1645), concludes with a series of eight Latin epigrams: five bitterly anti-Catholic pieces on the failed Gunpowder Plot of 1605, followed by three encomiastic poems hymning the praises of an Italian soprano, Leonora Baroni, singing in Catholic Rome. The disparity in terms of subject matter and tone is self-evident yet surprising in an epigrammatic series that runs sequentially. Whereas the gunpowder epigrams denigrate Rome, the Leonora epigrams present the city as a cultured hub of inclusivity, the welcome host of a Neapolitan soprano. In providing the setting for a human song that both enthrals its audience and attests to the presence of a divine power, Rome now epitomizes something other than brute idolatry, clerical habit or doctrine. And for the poet this facilitates an interrogation of theological (especially Catholic) doctrines. Coelum non animum muto, dum trans mare curro wrote the homeward-bound Milton in the autograph book of Camillo Cardoini at Geneva on 10 June 1639. But that this was an animus that could indeed acclimatize to religious and cultural difference is suggested by the Latin poems which Milton “patch [ed] up” in the course of his Italian journey. Central to that acclimatisation, as this chapter argues, is Milton’s quasi-Catholic self-fashioning. Thus Mansus offers a poetic autobiography of sorts, a self-inscribed vita coloured by intertextually kaleidoscopic links with two Catholic poets of Renaissance Italy and their patron; Ad Leonoram 1 both invokes and interrogates Catholic doctrine before a Catholic audience only to view the whole through the lens of a neo-Platonic hermeticism that may refreshingly transcend religious difference. Finally, Epitaphium Damonis, composed upon Milton’s return home, seems to highlight the potential interconnectedness of Protestant England and Catholic Italy, through the Anglo-Italian identity of its deceased subject, and through a pseudo-monasticism suggested by the poem’s possible engagement with the hagiography of a Catholic Saint. Perhaps continental travel and the physical encounter with the symbols, personages and institutions of the other have engendered in the Milton of the Italian journey a tolerance or, more accurately, the manipulation of a seeming tolerance to serve poetic and cultural ends.
First reviewer:
Haan: a fine piece by the senior neo-Latinist in Milton studies.
Second reviewer:
Chapter 7 is ... a high-spot of the collection. Its argument that in his Latin poetry Milton’s is a ‘quasi-Catholic self-fashioning’ stressing ‘the potential interconnectedness of Protestant England and Catholic Italy is striking and is advanced with learning, clarity and insight. Its sensitive exploration of the paradox of Milton’s coupling of humanistically complimentary and tolerant address to Roman Catholic friends with fiercely Protestant partisanship demonstrates that there is much greater complexity to his poetic persona than the self-construction and self-presentation of the later works would suggest. The essay is always adroit and sure-footed, often critically acute and illuminating (as, for example, in its discussion of the adjective and adverb mollis and molliter in Mansus, or in the identification in n. 99 of hitherto unnoticed Virgilian echoes). It has the added merits of being very well written, precise and apt in its citation of evidence, and absolutely central to the concerns of the volume.
Resumo:
Tese de Doutoramento, Ecologia, Especialidade de Ecofisiologia, Faculdade de Ciências do Mar e do Ambiente, Universidade do Algarve, 2007
Resumo:
Contient : IRoman des Sept sages ; « Ci commance li livres des VII sages de Rome... Il ot jadis I emperere à Rome, qui ot non Diocliciens ; il ot eu famme... » ; «... aprés l'ampereour fu son fill ampereres tant coume il vesqui. Explicit. Explicit » ; IIMarqués de Rome ; « Ci commance li romanz de Marqués, le filz Chaton. Jadis out I empereeur à Rome, qui avoit non Diocliciens ; li empereres fu mult vieuz hom... » ; « ... et vesquirent ainsint en samble toutes leurs vies. Ici faut li rommanz de Marqués et des VII sages de Rome » ; IIIMiracles de Notre-Dame, en vers, par GAUTIER DE COINCY, incomplets du début. Exemplaire non cité dans l'édition de l'abbé Poquet ; Fragments du Prologue ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, publiés par l'abbé Poquet, 1857, vers 25-30, 62-69, 99-106, 138-142 ; Suite du Prologue, à partir du vers 143 ; Fin du Prologue : « ... La langue GAUTIER DE CHOISI (sic), Qui por s'amor commance einsi » ; Miracle de Théophile : « Por ceus esbatre et deporter... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, col. 50 ; « Un biau miracle vos récite... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, col. 423 ; « Tenez silence, bones genz... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, col. 355 ; « Un biau miracle vos weil dire... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, col. 291 ; « [M]es livres me dit et revelle... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge., col. 475 ; « Ci aprés vell metre en brief... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, col. 501 ; « Queque talant avez d'oïr... » ; Les Miracles de la sainte Vierge, col. 511 ; « De l'abesse qui fu enceinte, que Nostre Dame délivra de son enfant en dormant. Une abesse fu jadis, Qui la dame de Paradis... » ; Ulrich, dans Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie, t. VI (1882), p. 334 ; « Un miracle truis d'un provoire... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 323 ; « Un moine fu d'une abahie... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 327 ; « Por plusors cuers plus enflammer... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 341 ; « Un arcevesque ot à Touleste... », texte très abrégé ; édit. Poquet, col. 77 ; « Tuit li miracle Nostre Dame... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 429 ; « Entendez tuit, et cler et lai... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 517 ; « Tant convolante me semont... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 303 ; « Pour ce qu'oiseuse est mort à l'ame... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 523 ; « [C]i fu un clers, un damoisiaux... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 363 ; « Entendez tuit, faites silence... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 443 ; « Des V siaumes de Maria. Un brief miracle vos veil dire, Conter vos veil d'un simple moinne... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 359 ; « Si com mes [livres] me tesmoigne... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 455 ; « A ceus qui aiment doucement... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 493 ; « A la loange de la Virge... » ; texte abrégé, comprenant seulement les 114 premiers vers ; édit. Poquet, col. 481 ; « Queque d'oïr estes en grant... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 505 ; « A Chartres fu ce truis uns clers... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 297 ; « Bien est que nos le bien dions... » ; édit. Poquet, col. 347 ; « Cele en cui prist humanité... », texte incomplet ; édit. Poquet, col. 461 ; « De la nonnein que li chevalliers espoussa. A la gloire la glorieuse, Une merveille merveilleuse... » ; Ulrich, dans Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie, t. VI (1882), p. 339 ; « ... Et serront tant com Dieux dura, Beneoiz soit qui l'endurra. Amen. Amen. Explicit les miracles de Nostre Dame sainte Marie, la douce dame et la beningne » ; IVLa Conception de Notre-Dame, par WACE ; « Ci commance la vie Nostre Damne. El non Dieu, qui nous doint sa grace, Oiiez que nos dit mestre GASCE... » — Le texte est incomplet des 18 derniers vers, et s'arrête (fol. 200 v°, col. 2) à ces mots : « ... Si Jonas en la mer sauva, Les IIII enfanz el feu garda, Bien pout donques [resusciter...] » ; cf La vie de la vierge Marie, de maître Wace, p. p. V. Luzarche, Tours, 1859, p. 90
Resumo:
Traditionally Italian universities have trained researchers and professionals in conservation: archaeologists, art historians and architects. It is only with the reform of the universities, from 1999, that the teaching of museology and museography have also been expanded.Italian museums are for the most part public museums, depending on local bodies or the national ministry; they lack autonomy and do not possess specific professional figures. The task of conservation has predominated over the other roles of museums, but with the reform of the conservation law in 2004 the definition of „museum‟ has been introduced in Italy as well, and regulations regarding the development of heritage have been issued; in addition the Regions have also taken on a more active role for museums belonging to local bodies and for the development of their territory.Museum professions are not officially recognised, but the museum community, through the various associations and ICOM Italia, has put together a document to act as a general reference, the National Charter of Museum Professions, which has been followed by the Manual of Museum Professions in Europe. Now there is a need to plan the content and outlines ofvocational training courses for museum professionals, together withthe universities, the regions and the museums themselves, alongwith the associations and ICOM – ICTOP, utilising the mostinnovative Master‟s courses which offer an interdisciplinaryapproach, a methodology which combines theory and practice, andan element of hands-on experimentation in museums, or withmuseums.