921 resultados para Meeting in Oxford of the Joint Committee of the Greek and Roman Societies
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Fil: González de Tobia, Ana María. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación; Argentina.
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Fil: González de Tobia, Ana María. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación; Argentina.
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This article furthers recent gains made in applying globalization perspectives to the Roman world by exploring two Romano-Egyptian houses that used Roman material culture in different ways within the city known as Trimithis (modern day Amheida, in Egypt). In so doing, I suggest that concepts drawn from globalization theory will help us to disentangle and interpret how homogeneous Roman Mediterranean goods may appear heterogeneous on the local level. This theoretical vantage is broadly applicable to other regions in the Roman Mediterranean, as well as other environments in which individuals reflected a multifaceted relationship with their local identity and the broader social milieu.
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[Prices and buyers add in manuscript.]
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Original title page reads: Neue systematische darstellung der architektonischen ordnungen der Griechen, Römer ... 3. aufl. Potsdam, F. Riegel, 1845.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Photocopy.
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Latin medical texts transmit medical theories and practices that originated mainly in Greece. This interaction took place through juxtaposition, assimilation and transformation of ideas. 'Greek' and 'Roman' in Latin Medical Texts studies the ways in which this cultural interaction influenced the development of the medical profession and the growth of knowledge of human and animal bodies, and especially how it provided the foundations for innovations in the areas of anatomy, pathology and pharmacology, from the earliest Latin medical texts until well into the medieval world.
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["By the House of delegates Feb.29, 1832. Read the first time and ordered to lie on the table and be printed."-t.p.]