988 resultados para Martin, Sarah Elizabeth, 1830-1896.
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La station valaisanne de Crans-Montana est richement représentée par la photographie, la peinture, les affiches et l'architecture. Cette thèse de doctorat s'emploie à réunir un large corpus de photographies et de représentations : peintures, affiches, cartes postales et reproductions de bâtiments emblématiques (voir le corpus illustré et documentaire annexé). Les questions liées à l'identité du territoire et son image sont les fils conducteurs de ce travail qui a débuté en 2008. Un premier ensemble visuel a été réuni par le Dr Théodore Stephani (1868-1951), un acteur fondamental pour l'histoire de la naissance de la station. Médecin, mais également photographe, il réalise une collection de plus de 1300 clichés, réunie en six albums, sur une période de trente-sept ans (1899-1936). Les photographies du médecin, originaire de Genève, fondateur de ce lieu désormais touristique sont le point de départ de cette recherche et son fil rouge. Celle-ci tentera d'articuler des représentations sur l'évolution du paysage et l'urbanisation de la station autour d'acteurs illustres, tels que les peintres Ferdinand Hodler (1853-1918) et Albert Muret (1874-1955), l'écrivain Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz (1878-1947) et les nombreux hôteliers ou médecins qui ont marqué l'histoire de la naissance du Haut-Plateau. Les représentations débutent en 1896 car c'est à ce moment-là que le Dr Stephani s'établit à Montana. Les architectes les plus connus de la première période sont François-Casimir Besson (1869-1944), Markus Burgener (1878-1953), suivi de la deuxième génération autour de Jean-Marie Ellenberger (1913-1988), André Perraudin (1915-2014) et André Gaillard (1921-2010). Parallèlement ou avant eux, les peintres déjà cités, Ferdinand Hodler et Albert Muret, - suivis de René Auberjonois (1872-1957), Henri-Edouard Bercher (1877-1970), Charles-Clos Olsommer (1883-1966), Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980), Albert Chavaz (1907¬1990), Paul Monnier (1907-1982) et Hans Emi (1909-2015) - qui appartiennent tous à l'histoire culturelle de la région. Quant aux écrivains qui ont résidé dans la région, nous citons Elizabeth von Arnim (1866-1941), sa cousine Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923) alors que l'oeuvre de Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz est largement développée par une interprétation de son oeuvre Le Règne de l'esprit malin (1917) et un clin d'oeil pour Igor Stravinsky (1882¬1971). Nous présenterons aussi les films de trois cinéastes qui se sont inspirés des oeuvres écrites par Ramuz lors de son passage à Lens, à savoir Dimitri Kirsanoff (1899-1957), Claude Goretta (1929) et Francis Reusser (1942). Le concept du « village » est abordé depuis l'exposition nationale suisse (1896) jusqu'au projet des investisseurs russes, à Aminona. Ce « village » est le deuxième mégaprojet de Suisse, après celui d'Andermatt. Si le projet se réalise, l'image de la station s'en trouvera profondément transformée. En 1998, la publication de Au bord de la falaise. L'histoire entre certitudes et inquiétudes amène une grande visibilité aux propositions de Roger Chartier, qui lie l'étude des textes aux objets matériels et les usages qu'ils engendrent dans la société. Il définit l'histoire culturelle comme "une histoire culturelle du social" alors que pour Pascal Ory, une histoire culturelle est "comme une forme d'histoire sociale", ce qui revient presque au même, mais nous choisirons celle d'Ory pour une histoire sociale du paysage et de l'architecture. Ce travail adopte ainsi plusieurs points de vue : l'histoire sociale, basée sur les interviews de nombreux protagonistes de l'histoire locale, et l'histoire de l'art qui permet une sélection d'objets emblématiques ; l'histoire culturelle offre ainsi une méthode transversale pour lire et relier ces différents regards ou points de vue entre les paysages, les arts visuels, l'architecture, la littérature et le cinéma.
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BACKGROUND: Artemisinin-resistant Plasmodium falciparum has emerged in the Greater Mekong sub-region and poses a major global public health threat. Slow parasite clearance is a key clinical manifestation of reduced susceptibility to artemisinin. This study was designed to establish the baseline values for clearance in patients from Sub-Saharan African countries with uncomplicated malaria treated with artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs). METHODS: A literature review in PubMed was conducted in March 2013 to identify all prospective clinical trials (uncontrolled trials, controlled trials and randomized controlled trials), including ACTs conducted in Sub-Saharan Africa, between 1960 and 2012. Individual patient data from these studies were shared with the WorldWide Antimalarial Resistance Network (WWARN) and pooled using an a priori statistical analytical plan. Factors affecting early parasitological response were investigated using logistic regression with study sites fitted as a random effect. The risk of bias in included studies was evaluated based on study design, methodology and missing data. RESULTS: In total, 29,493 patients from 84 clinical trials were included in the analysis, treated with artemether-lumefantrine (n = 13,664), artesunate-amodiaquine (n = 11,337) and dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (n = 4,492). The overall parasite clearance rate was rapid. The parasite positivity rate (PPR) decreased from 59.7 % (95 % CI: 54.5-64.9) on day 1 to 6.7 % (95 % CI: 4.8-8.7) on day 2 and 0.9 % (95 % CI: 0.5-1.2) on day 3. The 95th percentile of observed day 3 PPR was 5.3 %. Independent risk factors predictive of day 3 positivity were: high baseline parasitaemia (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 1.16 (95 % CI: 1.08-1.25); per 2-fold increase in parasite density, P <0.001); fever (>37.5 °C) (AOR = 1.50 (95 % CI: 1.06-2.13), P = 0.022); severe anaemia (AOR = 2.04 (95 % CI: 1.21-3.44), P = 0.008); areas of low/moderate transmission setting (AOR = 2.71 (95 % CI: 1.38-5.36), P = 0.004); and treatment with the loose formulation of artesunate-amodiaquine (AOR = 2.27 (95 % CI: 1.14-4.51), P = 0.020, compared to dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine). CONCLUSIONS: The three ACTs assessed in this analysis continue to achieve rapid early parasitological clearance across the sites assessed in Sub-Saharan Africa. A threshold of 5 % day 3 parasite positivity from a minimum sample size of 50 patients provides a more sensitive benchmark in Sub-Saharan Africa compared to the current recommended threshold of 10 % to trigger further investigation of artemisinin susceptibility.
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Kartta kuuluu A. E. Nordenskiöldin kokoelmaan
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Sisältää kaksi luetteloa. - S. 11-16 myös: Förteckning å böcker tillhörige prosten J. M. Tolpos concursmassa, hvilka undertecknad anhåller att å offentlig auction få försälja. Allekirjoitus: Abr. Kingelin.
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Lewis Tyrell married Jane Gains on August 31, 1849 in Culpeper Court House, Virginia. Jane Gains was a spinster. Lewis Tyrell died September 25, 1908 at his late residence, Vine St. and Welland Ave., St. Catharines, Ont. at the age of 81 years, 5 months. Jane Tyrell died March 1, 1886, age 64 years. Their son? William C. Tyrell died January 15, 1898, by accident in Albany, NY, age 33 years, 3 months. John William Taylor married Susan Jones were married in St. Catharines, Ont. on August 10, 1851 by William Wilkinson, a Baptist minister. On August 9, 1894 Charles Henry Bell (1871-1916), son of Stephen (1835?-1876) and Susan Bell, married Mary E. Tyrell (b. 1869?) daughter of Lewis and Alice Tyrell, in St. Catharines Ontario. By 1895 the Bell’s were living in Erie, Pennsylvania where children Delbert Otto (b. 1895) and Edna Beatrice (b. 1897) were born. By 1897 the family was back in St. Catharines where children Lewis Tyrell (b. 1899), Gertrude Cora (b. 1901), Bessie Jane (b. 1902), Charles Henry (b. 1906), Richard Nelson (b. 1911) and William Willoughby (b. 1912) were born. Charles Henry Bell operated a coal and ice business on Geneva Street. In the 1901 Census for St. Catharines, the Bell family includes the lodger Charles Henry Hall. Charles Henry Hall was born ca. 1824 in Maryland, he died in St. Catharines on November 11, 1916 at the age of 92. On October 24, 1889 Charles Hall married Susan Bell (1829-1898). The 1911 Census of Canada records Charles Henry Hall residing in the same household as Charles Henry and Mary Bell. The relationship to the householder is step-father. It is likely that after Stephen Bell’s death in 1876, his widow, Susan Bell married Hall. In 1939, Richard Nelson Bell, son of Charles Henry and Mary Tyrell Bell, married Iris Sloman. Iris (b. 22 May 1912 in Biddulph Township, Middlesex, Ontario) was the daughter of Albert (son of Joseph b. 1870 and Elizabeth Sloman, b. 1872) and Josie (Josephine Ellen) Butler Sloman of London, Ont. Josie (b. 1891) was the daughter of Everett Richard and Elizabeth McCarthy (or McCarty) Butler, of Lucan Village, Middlesex North. According to the 1911 Census of Canada, Albert, a Methodist, was a porter on the railroad. His wife, Josephine, was a Roman Catholic. Residing with Albert and Josie were Sanford and Sadie Butler and Sidney Sloman, likely siblings of Albert and Josephine. The Butler family is descended from Peter Butler, a former slave, who had settled in the Wilberforce Colony in the 1830s. Rick Bell b. 1949 in Niagara Falls, Ont. is the son of Richard Nelson Bell. In 1979, after working seven years as an orderly at the St. Catharines General Hospital while also attending night school at Niagara College, Rick Bell was hired by the Thorold Fire Dept. He became the first Black professional firefighter in Niagara. He is a founding member of the St. Catharines Junior Symphony; attended the Banff School of Fine Arts in 1966 and also performed with the Lincoln & Welland Regimental Band and several other popular local groups. Upon the discovery of this rich archive in his mothers’ attic he became passionate about sharing his Black ancestry and the contributions of fugitive slaves to the heritage Niagara with local school children. He currently resides in London, Ont.
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Martin “Bud” Walsh served in the Canadian Merchant Navy during the Second World War as a fireman stoking boilers. He continued to serve in the Navy after the war, until December 1948. In 1949, he joined the Crowland Police Department as a constable. He subsequently worked as a constable with the Welland Police Department and was promoted several times, eventually to deputy chief in 1969. In 1971, he became superintendent of the St. Catharines detachment of the regional force. He has been the recipient of several prestigious awards honouring his contributions to his country, including the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal (1977) and the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal (2012).
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Letter sent to Mr. S.D. Woodruff from Elizabeth Cudney of Montrose acknowledging that she is sending a $48 post office order for interest on the land in Willoughby, Jan. 21, 1896.