Search results for "classics"

showing 10 items of 377 documents

Endocrinology in the time of covid-19: A rapid evolution of knowledge and care

2021

American singer-writer and visual artist Bob Dylan produced the song “The Times They Are a-Changin” in the 1960s, which became a rallying cry for the civil rights and anti-war movements in that decade [...]

2019-20 coronavirus outbreakMedicine (General)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)business.industrySARS-CoV-2Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)MEDLINECOVID-19General MedicineUnited StatesEditorialn/aR5-920Civil rightsHumans SARS-CoV-2 United States COVID-19MedicineHumansbusinessClassics
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Remigius’s Commentary to the Disticha Catonis in Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts

2007

Anglo saxonmedia_common.quotation_subjectArtClassicsmedia_common
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A la búsqueda de la armonía cívica perdida: Eros, Afrodita y la reformulación dramática en las tragedias tardías de Sófocles

2013

En las últimas tragedias de Sófocles hay un replanteamiento de sus posiciones, perceptible en la reconfiguración de sus carácteres y en su relación con los dioses. En Antígona y Traquinias, obras tempranas, a través de sus coros vemos las diferentes formas de concreción de Eros-Afrodita. En Edipo en Colono se sirve otra vez de Afrodita, pero en una forma y sentido singulares.

AphroditeAfroditaCivilització gregaLiterature and Literary TheoryDramatic reworkingReformulación dramáticaErosGreek tragedyClassicsSophoclesTragedia griegaSófocles
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Response by C. Aranegui Gascó to E. Papi’s review of Lixus 3 (JRA 26 [2013] 800-7)

2015

ArcheologyGeographyVisual Arts and Performing ArtsClassicsJournal of Roman Archaeology
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Coinage and images of the imperial family: local identity and Roman rule

2013

In his speech “About harmony between the cities”, Publius Aelius Aristides, the famous orator of the mid-2nd c. A.D., admonishes the three most eminent cities of Asia — Pergamum, Ephesus and Smyrna — to put an end to their rivalries. He regards as useless their envy and struggle to be first among the cities in the province of Asia. He cautions against such rivalries, which could lead to an unwanted intervention by Roman authorities. He continues (Or. 23 [Keil = 42 Dindorf] 62): Is there a child or an old man so much out of mind that he would ignore that this is our present situation and that this is thank heaven the ruling law: one city, the first and greatest, has the whole world under one…

ArcheologyHarmony (color)HistoryVisual Arts and Performing Artsbiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectbiology.organism_classificationSmyrnaEliteRhetorical deviceRhetoricEmperorHeavenClassicsGovernorClassicsmedia_commonJournal of Roman Archaeology
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Book Review of Where Are We Heading? The Evolution of Humans and Things, by Ian Hodder

2019

ArcheologyHeading (navigation)HistoryClassicsAmerican Journal of Archaeology
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Book review

2013

ArcheologyHistoryBar (music)BeakerAncient historyClassicsJournal of Archaeological Science
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Economie, monnaie et société à Reims sous l'Empire romain. Recherches sur la circulation monétaire en Gaule septentrionale intérieure. By J.-M. Doyen…

2012

ArcheologyHistoryClassicsBritannia
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La rhétorique éléatico-gorgienne d'Alcidamas chez Diogene Laerce (IX, 54) et des quatre fonctions fondamentales du logos

2005

Alcidamas' Eleatic-gorgian Rhetoric in Diogenes Laertius (IX, 54) and the Four Fundamental Functions of the λόγος. This study aims to show that the testimony of Diogenes Laertius (IX, 54) regarding the four functions of the λόγος by Alcidamas (φάσις - άπόφασις - ἐρώτησις - προσαγόρευσις : affirmation - negation / question - answer) could be considered as justified from both rhetorical and philosophical points of view. It offers the opportunity for two trains of thought : the first pair (φάσις - ἀπόφασις) could be related to the anti -predicative function of λόγος, but also to the predicative function implied in Gorgias' own dialectics of ἀντίθεσις. The second pair (ἐρώτησις - προσαγόρευσις)…

ArcheologyHistoryClassics
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Funerary traditions and death worship in the church of the Borgia in Gandía: interpretations from archaeology

2008

The study of funerary customs in antiquity has enjoyed a long tradition in archaeology. By contrast, there has been little research of such a kind from the late Middle Ages onwards. This paper attempts to demonstrate what archaeology can contribute to the knowledge of funerary and death-worship practices, by analysing practices undertaken between the thirteenth and eighteenth century in the collegiate church and cemetery apud ecclesiam of Gandia in Valencia.

ArcheologyHistoryCollegiate churchmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesMiddle AgesWorshipArchaeologyClassicsmedia_commonWorld Archaeology
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