999 resultados para Holy Year.
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Reprint of the 1900 ed. published by B. Herder, St. Louis, Mo.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Dedication.--Introduction: The enchanted woods.--Pisa and the Campo Santo.--Switzerland again.--Tuscan churches in summer.--Arles.--Nymphs and a river god.--Brive-la-Gaillarde.--Of Paris and the exhibition.--Trent.--The motor-car and the genius of places.--The ilex woods and the anchorites.--German fir trees.--Compiègne and Fontainebleau.--The forest of the Antonines.--Mont St. Michel.--A walk in the Maremma.--Les Charmettes.--In the Euganean hills.--The hospitality of the Black Madonna.--The holy year at Ravenna.--The Generalife.--Couci-le-Château.--The tapestry at Angers.--Germany once more.--The carillon.--The cardinal's villa.--In Gascony.--Era già l'ora.--All souls' day at Venice.--Et in Arcadia.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"... Four hundred and fifty copies have been printed on Van Gelder hand-made paper ..."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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This note describes changes to the relative extent of four structurally dominant submerged macrophytes in a pond on Holy Island National Nature Reserve, Northumbria, between 1991 and 1998. The estimated extent of the four submerged macrophytes and bare substratum between 1991 and 1998 showed dramatic changes with no obvious pattern or periodicity, as well as no identifiable natural or anthropogenic causes. Chaotic variation may be an important character of submerged pond plant populations, so that surveys taken in a single year may give an unreliable picture of plant populations.
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In the mid-nineteenth century, thousands of children in Europe and beyond were organized into battalions of fundraisers for overseas missions. By the end of the century these juvenile missionary organizations had become a global movement, generating millions of pounds in revenue each year. While the transnational nature of the children’s missions and publications has been well-documented by historians, the focus has tended to be on the connections that were established by encounters between the young western donors, missionaries overseas and the non-western ‘other’ constructed by their work. A full exploration of the European political, social and cultural concerns that produced the juvenile missionaries movement and the trans-European networks that sustained it are currently missing from historical accounts of the phenomenon. This article looks at the largest of these organizations, the Catholic mission for children, the French Holy Childhood Association (L’Œuvre de la sainte enfance), to understand how the principles this mission sought to impose abroad were above all an expression of anxieties at home about the role of religion in the family, childhood and in civil society as western polities were modernizing and secularizing in the nineteenth century.