991 resultados para Christ Church Priory (Canterbury, England)
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Appendixes: A. Abridged genealogy, or pedigree of the ancient noble family of Peyton: p. [311]-336; Isleham Hall, the priory and church, co. Cambridge, England: p. 337-354.--B. Memoranda of the Preston family, by O. Brown: p. [355]-374.--C. Abridged pedigree of the Lewis family: p. 375-379.--D. Extract from the Washington pedigree ... by John Washington: p. [380]-383.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes bibliographical footnotes.
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Includes index.
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La función dramática de los conceptos mentales y geográficos ‚cercanía‘ y ‚distancia‘ se pone a prueba de forma exitosa en el término ‚Heimat‘. Se analizan Odysseus. Verbrecher de Christoph Ransmayr y Odisej de Goran Stefanovskis. Se ve que un retorno puede ser decepcionante porque la idea mental de ‚Heimat‘ no coincide con la geográfica. El repatriado permanece en esta distancia mental, lo cual daña a su entorno y la formación de su identidad. El concepto alemán de ‚Heimat‘, tal y como lo explica Peter Blickle, se puede aplicar a ambos textos. En el texto de Ransmayr se puede observar, no obstante, que crea su posición y crítica a raíz de este concepto, mientras que la comparación con el texto de Stefanovski solo muestra semejanzas, pero ninguna congruencia con el concepto cultural de ‚Heimat‘.
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http://www.archive.org/details/southsouthcentra00daviiala/
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http://www.archive.org/details/kabirandthekabir020544mbp
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Swiss National Science Foundation; Austrian Federal Ministry of Science and Research; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 314); Christ Church, Oxford; Oxford University Computing Laboratory
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A fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) scheme is envisioned as a key cryptographic tool in building a secure and reliable cloud computing environment, as it allows arbitrary evaluation of a ciphertext without revealing the plaintext. However, existing FHE implementations remain impractical due to very high time and resource costs. To the authors’ knowledge, this paper presents the first hardware implementation of a full encryption primitive for FHE over the integers using FPGA technology. A large-integer multiplier architecture utilising Integer-FFT multiplication is proposed, and a large-integer Barrett modular reduction module is designed incorporating the proposed multiplier. The encryption primitive used in the integer-based FHE scheme is designed employing the proposed multiplier and modular reduction modules. The designs are verified using the Xilinx Virtex-7 FPGA platform. Experimental results show that a speed improvement factor of up to 44 is achievable for the hardware implementation of the FHE encryption scheme when compared to its corresponding software implementation. Moreover, performance analysis shows further speed improvements of the integer-based FHE encryption primitives may still be possible, for example through further optimisations or by targeting an ASIC platform.
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In the year 1702 two books were published, in Oxford and Paris, that can now be seen as defining the presses that produced them. In Paris, the Imprimerie Royale issued the Médailles sur les principaux évènements du règne de Louis le Grand, a large folio of text and plates intended to glorify the regime of Louis XIV. In Oxford, the first, large format volume of Clarendon’s The history of the rebellion appeared; painstakingly edited at Christ Church, it brought prestige and profit to the University. Both were considerable statements of publishing intent in graphic form: both were sumptuous, and both used types and decorations reserved to their respective presses. But the French book points the way to future developments in typography, particularly in the design of type, while the Oxford book is a summation of the past, and its types and page design would be abandoned by the Oxford press in little more than thirty years. Tracing the printed pages of Oxford books from the late sixteenth to the mid-eighteenth century shows changes that parallel wider developments in English and European typography, but from a distinctly Oxford perspective.
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The sternal end of the clavicle has been illustrated to be useful in aging young adults, however, no studies have investigated what age-related changes occur to the sternal end post epiphyseal fusion. In this study, three morphological features (i.e., surface topography, porosity, and osteophyte formation) were examined and scored using 564 clavicles of individuals of European ancestry (n = 318 males; n = 246 females), with known ages of 40+ years, from four documented skeletal collections: Hamann-Todd, Pretoria, St. Bride's, and Coimbra. An ordinal scoring method was developed for each of the three traits. Surface topography showed the strongest correlation with age, and composite scores (formed by summing the three separate trait scores) indicated progressive degeneration of the surface with increasing chronological age. Linear regression analyses were performed on the trait scores to produce pooled-sample age estimation equations. Blind tests of the composite score method and regression formulae on 56 individuals, aged 40+ years, from Christ Church Spitalfields, suggest accuracies of 96.4% for both methods. These preliminary results display the first evidence of the utility of the sternal end of the clavicle in aging older adult individuals. However, in the current format, these criteria should only be applied to individuals already identified as over 40 years in order to refine the age ranges used for advanced age. These findings do suggest the sternal end of the clavicle has potential to aid age estimates beyond the traditional "mature adult" age category (i.e., 46+ years), and provides several suggestions for future research.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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