Search results for "Epigraph"
showing 10 items of 62 documents
The epitaph of the Citharoeda Jucunda (AE 2007, 805: Segobriga). New edition and commentary
2015
Nueva edición y comentario filológico del epitafio en verso de una joven esclava, cuya habilidad musical se ensalza tanto en el retrato en relieve que adorna el monumento (una estela) como en el texto. Se trata de un epigrama en dísticos elegíacos, precedido de un monóstico (un hexámetro dactílico) que debe entenderse como una sentencia sobre la immatura mors. El anónimo autor de la inscripción se revela como representante de una tradición epigramática culta. Los numerosos loci similes evidencian, sobre todo, la influencia de Ovidio, pero también la de Marcial y, probablemente, la de Juvenal. New edition and philological commentary about an epitaph in verse of a young slave. The monument (s…
Fabvla Nvlla Fvit. Annotations to a carmen Latinvm epigraphicvm, probably found in Gades
2017
Nueva lectura e interpretación de un carmen Latinum epigraphicum sepulcral, en el que hay una laudatio de la difunta por contraposición a la mítica Helena. New reading and interpretation of a sepulchral carmen Latinum epigraphicum with a laudatio of the deceased woman in contrast to the mythical Helen.
Les commissions coloniales rattachées au Comité des Travaux historiques et scientifiques
2000
The colonial Commissions connected to the Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques. In the late nineteenth century, the Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques became a bigger and bigger research organization, always closely linked to the successive political governments. With each new French conquest, a commission of parisian scientists and local correspondents was created and attached to it, as in 1864, the scientific commission for Mexico, in 1884, the commission for Tunisia, in 1908, the archeological commission for Indochina. The example studied here is that of the commssion for Tunisia, which coordonated researches in archeology and epigraphy in North Africa, thanks to …
Arabic Medieval Inscriptions from the Republic of Mali. Epigraphy, Chronicles and Songhay-Tuāreg History. By Paulo F. de Moraes Farias (ed.). Fontes …
2004
Pintura califal de Bédar (Almería, 355/966)
2020
Esta investigación se centra en un texto árabe pintado sobre un elemento inusual: una balsa de agua para riego en Bédar (Almería). Junto al epígrafe que la data, hay dibujados dos animales cuadrúpedos que quizá representen una escena de caza y una cenefa decorativa; conserva asimismo otros signos gráficos y diseños muy degradados que no ha sido posible descifrar totalmente. Como hasta ahora no se había determinado su cronología, en este estudio he seguido el método habitual en Epigrafía Árabe: dibujar los trazos visibles y restituir después las partes de pintura desaparecida o muy borrada. Como resultado de este estudio queda de relieve el valor de este destacado documento de la cultura pop…
Rewriting antiquity, renewing Rome. The Identity of the Eternal City through Visual Art, Monumental Inscriptions and the Mirabilia
2011
AbstractDuring the eleventh and twelfth centuries the Church began a process of renovation (renovatio) and the city of Rome was given new meanings. Antiquity is part of the identity of the Eternal City; the reuse or reframing of aspects of antiquity inevitably transformed the image of Rome. Public spaces, architecture and objects were given new Christian readings. Inscriptions, present both in sacred and secular settings, played an important role. A similar rewriting can also be found in travel literature and descriptions of the city, such as in the Mirabilia urbis Rome, where ancient monuments were re-interpreted to demonstrate the superiority of Christianity. Inscriptions were used as sym…
About Supergraphs. Part III
2019
Summary The previous articles [5] and [6] introduced formalizations of the step-by-step operations we use to construct finite graphs by hand. That implicitly showed that any finite graph can be constructed from the trivial edgeless graph K 1 by applying a finite sequence of these basic operations. In this article that claim is proven explicitly with Mizar[4].
Moral and Civic Education. The New School’s Contribution
2014
Our aim is to establish a reflexive analysis about the way in which the New Education’s movement understands morality and the way it is meant to be taught, as well as its particular entail with civic education. We offer a synthesis of the investigation, which has its base on some not vey spread primary sources of authors and institutional organs of the movement. With it we clarify the meaning and the ways through which pedagogical currents shaped, in the beginning of the 20th century, a new way of conceiving the practice of these formative areas. We also identify the perspectives of methodological renovation that in this moment arose. These contributions, the result of which are summarized …
Nueva lectura e interpretación de una inscripción latina de Villapando (Zamora)
2012
It is about the sepulchral inscription that a slave wet-nurse, identified as Amma Noua, dedicated to her master’s prematurely dead two daughters (duas dominas), who were raised (edocauit) by her together with their contubernalis (cum suo pare), nursing them with the same milk (uno lacte); that makes us guess that they were twins. Amma can be understood either as a proper name or as common noun indicating the wet-nurse’s job.
Épigraphie religieuse et communautés civiques au Haut-Empire : la délimitation du territoire de la ciuitas Aeduorum aux IIe et IIIe siècles
2013
Since the 19th century, many proposals have been made regarding the boundaries of the territory of the civitas Aeduorum. Although there is general agreement on many geographic sectors, there are still major discrepancies of opinion, principally in the regions of Autissiodurum / Auxerre and Alesia. The religious epigraphy of the Early Empire, in particular the use of a specific formulary, seems to demonstrate a single religious (and political) community in these regions, which would thus have all belonged to the civitas Aeduorum in the 2nd and 3rd centuries.