996 resultados para Art, ritual, Malta, Temple, figurine, Neolithic
Resumo:
Se presenta experiencia educativa que propone el desarrollo del proyecto educativo de centro para dar respuesta a las necesidades reales del contexto. Se realiza en el IES El Temple en La Malah??, Granada. Los objetivos son: analizar y revisar la legislaci??n y biograf??a m??s significativa y relevante, para la elaboraci??n de nuestro proyecto de centro; realizar el an??lisis del contexto de nuestra realidad educativa; establecer nuestras finalidades educativas; elaborar nuestro proyecto curricular de centro.
Resumo:
Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
Resumo:
Resumen tomado de la publicaci??n
Resumo:
Historia de la formaci??n del museo de artes decorativas, Temple Newsam House, con an??lisis de la arquitectura del edificio, repaso de sus antiguos due??os, y el proceso de conformaci??n y exposici??n actual de la colecci??n de muebles, pinturas y objetos de arte, entre los que destacan las cer??micas y porcelanas chinas, procedentes en su mayor??a de donaciones.
Resumo:
Resumen basado en el de la publicaci??n
Resumo:
This thesis presents population dynamics models that can be applied to predict the rate of spread of the Neolithic transition (change from hunter-gathering to farming economics) across the European continent, which took place about 9000 to 5000 years ago. The first models in this thesis provide predictions at a continental scale. We develop population dynamics models with explicit kernels and apply realistic data. We also derive a new time-delayed reaction-diffusion equation which yields speeds about a 10% slower than previous models. We also deal with a regional variability: the slowdown of the Neolithic front when reaching the North of Europe. We develop simple reaction-diffusion models that can predict the measured speeds in terms of the non-homogeneous distribution of pre-Neolithic (Mesolithic) population in Europe, which were present in higher densities at the North of the continent. Such models can explain the observed speeds.
Resumo:
The paper conceptualises and explores the links between cities, commerce, urbanism and cultural planning by drawing on Temple Bar in Dublin as an example of how, by linking these concepts to practice in real concrete situations urban life or urban culture can be created and/or revitalised. Temple Bar is Dublin's emerging cultural quarter, an experiment in urban revitalisation which is deliberately focused on culture and urbanism as ways of rediscovering the good city. It has attracted considerable interest from across Europe, and has secured EC funding to kick-start the process of renewal. The author was appointed by the Irish Government to prepare the area management and development strategy for Temple Bar in 1990. Wary of the dangers of property led regeneration, of the destructive impacts of sudden or cataclysmic change, the agencies in Temple Bar have deliberately adopted a strategic management approach to the area. This is referred to as 'urban stewardship', a process of looking after and respecting a place, and helping it to help itself. The paper explores whether there is a 'culture of cities' and whether it is possible to recreate an urban culture. Following Raymond Williams, an anthropological definition of culture is employed, "... a particular way of life, which expresses certain meaning and values not only in art and learning but also in institutional and ordinary behaviour". Rather than being simply an add-on to the serious concerns of economic development and the built environment, culture has both helped shape, and continues to develop in, the streets, spaces and buildings of the city.