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1996, Acta Haematologica
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4 pages
1 file
Diremo insieme una collezione di oggetti definiti, detti elementi. Gli insiemi saranno denotati con lettere maiuscole (A, B, C, ...) e i suoi elementi con lettere minuscole (a, b, c, ...)
Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine, 2021
In the Archaic period, Mediterranean and Greek North Pontic imports, rather well represented in Early Scythian burials on the Lower Don, are practically unknown in the burials of the nomads in the Lower Volga and South Urals regions. The analysis of archaeological sources shows that in the second half of the 4th century BC imported beads and pendants made of glass, frit and amber reach the nomads of the Lower Volga and South Urals, and a little later, at the turn of the 4th and in the first third of the 3rd century BC — in addition, Greek pottery and possibly vessels made of precious metals, alabaster and onyx. Olbian bronze «borystheni» of the late 4th—3rd centuries BC also were found into the Lower Volga region. If for the 5th and most part of the 4th century BC. imports that entered the South Urals were mainly represented by products of the Achaemenid circle, then after the fall of the Achaemenid state and the resulting geopolitical changes in the Lower Volga region and the South...
tesserae iuris , 2023
The subject of the work is the analysis of the attitude towards the city of Rome and the Romans by the two intellectual leaders of the city of Antioch in Syria in the fourth century AD,, in the pagan and Christian field, Libanius and John Chrysostom. Libanius, of Antiochian origin, was for many years, until his death, a professor of rhetoric in his city and was also an important figure in the political sphere, especially under the emperor Julian. John Chrysostom, also of Antiochian origin, was a pupil of Libanius before his conversion to Christianity and his long activity as a presbyter appointed by the bishop to preach in the city. Both have never been at Rome and have only indirect knowledge of the ancient capital. Libanius had correspondence with personalities who lived in Rome and even with exponents of the Roman aristocracy, such as Quintus Aurelius Simmachus, and, in all probability, with the greatest historian, of Antiochian origin, of late antiquity, Ammianus Marcellinus, John Chrysostom is interested in Rome especially as the theater city of the preaching and death of the two great apostles Peter and Paul, coming from Antioch, and of the bishop of the city Ignatius, who suffered martyrdom in Rome, before his relationship with Pope Innocent, during the troubled period of his bishopric in Constantinople.
Smoothbore Ordnance Journal, Ken Trotman Publishing, 2024
This 14th volume of the Smoothbore Ordnance Journal was inspired by the insightful questions of Keith Madeira of the University of Gibraltar upon ranges and ballistics of British Guns used in the Defence of Gibraltar. He also supplied a number of the photographs including those on the cover. The transcription by Susan Law of the Shorncliffe Trust has been much appreciated deciphering the handwriting of Sir Howard Douglas. The stained-glass window of A Troop RHA was taken in the Sir John Moore Library at Shorncliffe. This is the first issue since the recent death of my friend and colleague, Digby Smith who inspired me to write upon technical subjects. 1. Contemporary papers on British Napoleonic Field Artillery Transcription of Sir Howard Douglas (c1810) paper; “Study on the bombardment of bodies of troops by British artillery, with tables of ranges” probably written for the Royal Military College where he was teaching. Also, an interesting letter by Arthur Wellesley advocating Horse Artillery when he had just arrived in India in 1797. 2. Ranges of British Ordnance (1736-1871) Tables for British bronze guns, iron guns, shell guns, carronades, howitzers and mortars compiled from contemporary manuals and artillery trials (1736-1871). 3. Scharnhorst Artillery Tests (1813) Gerhard von Scharnhorst’s Artillery Tests of 1813 translated by Dr Stephen Summerfield covers the different types of firing with ranges and effectiveness of cannon, howitzers and mortars; ricochet fire; canister shot. 4. Royal Laboratory Papers (1752-1815) An interesting series of papers written by Royal Artillery officers for the instruction of constructing round-shot, grape shot, case shot and shell for cannon, howitzers and mortars.
Historia i Świat, 2024
The paper explores and analyzes one of the darkest pages of the history of the Polish people linked to the deportation of the Poles from Ukraine in 1936 and from Ukraine and Belarus in 1940-1941 to Kazakhstan. The central argument of the study is that the deportation of Poles from their historical homeland was carried out based exclusively on their ethnicity. We argue that the real intention of the Soviet regime's genocidal policy was not confined only to the collective punishment and extermination of Poles as a distinct ethnic group, but the regime also sought to subject the deported Poles to slave labor exploitation for profit and to forced Russification. The assumption here is that Poles were uprooted from their homeland not only for extermination, but also the Soviet regime considered Poles to be an important component of its nation building project and their assimilation into Russian-dominated society was on the totalitarian regime's agenda. The theoretical basis of this study constitutes the concept of ethnification of Stalinism, yet we add another dimension to our research, namely we employ the concept of racialization as a theoretical underpinning of the study to further deepen our analysis and indicate how ethnic identity of Poles was racialized. The study draws upon archival sources and the extant literature on the history of deportation in the Soviet Union, specifically we increasingly focus on Polish deportees' collective and individual experiences who went through horrendous dehumanization and brutalization in exile in various parts of Kazakhstan between 1936 and 1956.
ÁNGEL GUERRERO GUERRERO, 2020
En este documento se dan a conoce el concepto de estructura organizacional, sus elementos(autoridad, tramo de control, centralización, decentralización, cadena de mando, entre otras) y tipos de estructuras.
Practica 1Arquitectura de Computadoras UNAM FI
Oxford Handbooks Online, 2014
The Slavic (or Slavonic) languages are traditionally divided into three groups: East Slavic, which includes Russian (Ru), Ukrainian (Uk) and Belarusian (Bel); West Slavic, which includes Polish (Pl), Czech (Cz), and Slovak (Slk), as well as Kashubian and Upper and Lower Sorbian, minority languages spoken in Baltic coast Poland and southeastern Germany, respectively; South Slavic, which includes Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian (or BCS), Slovenian (or Slovene, Sln), Macedonian (Mac) and Bulgarian (Bg). Slavic languages are notoriously rich in linguistic means expressing or sensitive to categories of information structure. This chapter will give a concise overview of these phenomena, concentrating mainly on descriptive generalisations and only touching upon theoretical issues that are more controversial. The first two sections, Intonation (section 37.1) and Syntax (section 37.2), focus on the two most widely discussed means of marking information structure (IS). Section 37.1 is concerned with position and shape of pitch accents, whereas section 37.2 deals, first and foremost, with the phenomenon of "free word order", as well as with processes such as ellipsis, clefting, and doubling. Both sections are divided into two subsections: one describing the expression of focus, and the other dealing with the IS categories background, given, topic and delimitation. These categories are grouped together because they tend to share the same patterns of expression. For reasons of space, the coverage of related issues will not be as comprehensive as would be desirable. The discussion of focus will be mainly limited to the issue of broad vs. narrow focus distinction, at the cost of information focus vs. contrastive focus, also prominent in IS literature on Slavic languages (see e.g. Mehlhorn, 2002; Bošković, 2002; Stjepanovic, 2003, for recent empirical and theoretical studies around the notion of contrastive focus). I will concentrate mostly on IS in simple SVO sentences, although intransitive sentences, as well as sentences with more complex structure surely deserve separate attention (see esp.
WALKING THE OLD WAYS IN A NEW WORLD, 2017
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Zeitschrift f�r Physik A Atomic Nuclei, 1986
Cancer Immunology Immunotherapy, 1989