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Handke, Peter --- Cézanne, Paul, --- Aesthetics --- Knowledge --- Art --- Influence. --- Ausstattung. --- Ezzo family --- Ezzonen --- Kirchenbau. --- Stiftung --- Stiftung. --- romanische --- Ezzonen. --- Ezzo, --- Geschichte 1024-1056. --- Architektur --- Christian art and symbolism --- Kunst --- Germany --- Medieval, 500-1500. --- Art patronage. --- Art. --- Aesthetics.
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Die ICILS-2018-Transferbroschüre bietet Informationen zu schulischen Digitalisierungsprozessen mit besonderem Fokus auf die Organisations-, Unterrichts-, Personal-, Kooperations- und Technologieentwicklung. Ergänzt werden diese um passende Selbstevaluationsbögen für Schulleitungen, Lehrkräfte, Schülerinnen und Schüler sowie IT-Koordinatorinnen und IT-Koordinatoren. Anknüpfend an die Daten und Ergebnisse der ICILS-2018-Studie werden damit Materialien für die Gestaltung digitaler Schulentwicklung bereitgestellt. Die ICILS-2018-Transferbroschüre richtet sich sowohl unmittelbar an Schulen als auch an die pädagogischen Landesinstitute der Bundesländer sowie an alle Institutionen und Phasen der Schulleitungs- und Lehrkräftebildung.
digitaler Unterricht --- digitale Medien --- Schulpädagogik --- digitale Schulentwicklung --- digitales Lernen --- Schulentwicklung --- Unterrichtsentwicklung --- Computational Thinking --- Digitalisierung --- Lehrerbildung --- Kooperation von Lehrkräften --- IT-Ausstattung an Schulen --- Medien- und Umweltpädagogik --- Kooperation von Lehrkräften --- Schulpädagogik
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However, some recent and especially stimulants works make it possible to establish a new approach that would address from several points of view the ongoing exchanges between the two "worlds": they have in common to consider as a priority agents and actors who were the vectors of these transfers. Structured in three parts -"Ambiguity of spaces", "Interactions: reciprocity and complementarity of exchanges ", "From public to private: transfer and appropriation of forms"- this volume brings together the contributions of twelve scholars and offers the result of an interdisciplinary approach, where the contribution of philology and history hinges on that of archaeology and iconography. Thereby, reflection reaches beyond the simple disciplinary framework to feed a global analysis contexts. Such an approach generates extensive and innovative studies on urban and social dynamics in the Roman city.(4e de couverture). Structuré en trois parties - "Ambiguïté des espaces", "Interactions : réciprocité et complémentarité des échanges", "Du public au privé : transfert et appropriation de formes" - ce volume regroupe les contributions de douze chercheurs et offre le résultat d'une démarche interdisciplinaire, où l'apport de la philologie et de l'histoire s'articule à celui de l'iconographie et de l'archéologie. La réflexion dépasse ainsi le simple cadre disciplinaire pour nourrir une analyse globale des contextes. Une telle démarche génère des études approfondies et novatrices sur les dynamiques urbaines et sociales dans la cité romaine. = A long historiographical tradition has contributed to fix the public and private spheres in the Roman world as essentially heterogeneous spaces and, as such, impervious to each other, governed by rules and behaviors thought as conflictual. Une longue tradition historiographique a contribué à figer les sphères publique et privée dans le monde romain comme des espaces essentiellement hétérogènes et, à ce titre, imperméables l'un à l'autre, régis par des règles et des comportements conçus sur le mode de l'opposition. Toutefois, des travaux récents et particulièrement stimulants permettent de fonder une nouvelle approche qui aborderait les échanges permanents et surtout réciproques entre les deux "mondes" de plusieurs points de vue : ils ont en commun d'envisager en priorité les agents et les acteurs qui furent les vecteurs de ces transferts.
Antiquités romaines. --- Archéologie funéraire --- Privatraum. --- Architektur. --- Ausstattung. --- Stadtleben. --- City and town life --- Vie urbaine --- Art --- Aspect social --- Social aspects --- Rome --- Civilisation --- Social life and customs. --- Art et société --- Espace personnel --- Interaktion. --- Öffentlicher Raum. --- Römisches Reich. --- Civilisation. --- Mœurs et coutumes. --- Classical antiquities --- Antiquités gréco-romaines --- Civilization --- Archéologie funéraire
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Monasteries --- Monasticism and religious orders --- Church and state --- Kings and rulers --- Monastères --- Monachisme et ordres religieux --- Eglise et Etat --- Rois et souverains --- History --- Religious aspects --- Histoire --- Aspect religieux --- Architektur. --- Ausstattung. --- Church and state. --- Herrscher. --- Klosteranlage. --- Monarchy --- Monarchy. --- Monasteries. --- Monasticism and religious orders. --- Stiftung. --- Spain. --- Spanien.
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This volume offers a comprehensive survey of Roman villas in Italy and the Mediterranean provinces of the Roman Empire, from their origins to the collapse of the Empire. The architecture of villas could be humble or grand, and sometimes luxurious. Villas were most often farms where wine, olive oil, cereals, and manufactured goods, among other products, were produced. They were also venues for hospitality, conversation, and thinking on pagan, and ultimately Christian, themes. Villas spread as the Empire grew. Like towns and cities, they became the means of power and assimilation, just as infrastructure, such as aqueducts and bridges, was transforming the Mediterranean into a Roman sea. The distinctive Roman/Italian villa type was transferred to the provinces, resulting in Mediterranean-wide culture of rural dwelling and work that further unified the Empire.
Architecture, Roman --- Farmhouses --- Romans --- Architecture romaine --- Maisons rurales --- Romains --- Homes and haunts --- Résidences et lieux familiers --- Architecture, Domestic --- Architecture and society --- Architecture --- Architecture and sociology --- Society and architecture --- Sociology and architecture --- Architecture, Rural --- Domestic architecture --- Home design --- Houses --- One-family houses --- Residences --- Rural architecture --- Villas --- Dwellings --- Social aspects --- Human factors --- Mediterranean Region --- Circum-Mediterranean countries --- Mediterranean Area --- Mediterranean countries --- Mediterranean Sea Region --- Antiquities, Roman. --- E-books --- Architecture, Domestic. --- Architecture, Roman. --- Architektur. --- Ausstattung. --- Classical antiquities. --- Funktion. --- Villa. --- Mediterranean Region. --- Mittelmeerraum. --- Römisches Reich. --- Roman architecture
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Aufgrund seiner Zugehörigkeit zur Mitgift ist der Mitgiftsklave (servus dotalis) eng mit dem römischen Mitgiftrecht verknüpft – dies unterscheidet ihn von anderen Sklaven und macht sein Schicksal abhängig von schwer prognostizierbaren und potenziell widerstreitenden Interessen der Eheleute. Benedikt Forschner untersucht Probleme, die aus diesem Spannungsfeld resultieren: Welche Antworten fanden die römischen Juristen auf Fragen der Eigentumsverhältnisse, des Erwerbs und der Freilassung von Mitgiftsklaven? Wie gestalteten sich die Zurückbehaltungsrechte des Ehemannes im Fall einer Scheidung? Hatte der Ehemann Ersatzpflichten gegenüber der Ehefrau bei dem Verlust, einer Verletzung oder einer Krankheit des Sklaven? Wer haftete für Delikte, die der Mitgiftsklave begangen hatte? Und wie sah das rechtliche Schicksal seiner Kinder aus? Ergänzend beleuchtet Forschner den Mitgiftsklaven aus sozialhistorischer Perspektive, insbesondere mit Blick auf Geschlechts- und Altersstrukturen, Bildung, Tätigkeiten und seine geographische Verbreitung.
Slavery (Roman law) --- Dowry (Roman law) --- Dot (Droit romain --- Esclavage (Droit romain) --- E-books --- Römisches Recht --- Sklave --- Mitgift --- (Produktform)Electronic book text --- Antike --- Asinaria --- Dotalrecht --- Dotalsklave --- Freilassung des Sklaven --- Impensen --- Mitgiftsklave --- Plautus --- Retentionsrechte --- Saurea --- actio rei uxoriae --- dominium --- dos --- impensae modicae --- impensae neccessariae --- impensae utiles --- manumissio --- partus ancillae --- römischer Eigentumsbegriff --- römisches Mitgiftrecht --- römisches Privatrecht --- servus dotalis --- (VLB-WN)9553 --- Freigelassener --- Sklaverei --- Unfreier --- Sklavin --- Versklavung --- Aussteuer --- Ausstattung --- Romanistik --- Römisches Reich
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The architectural jewel of Constantinople is the church of Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom), constructed 532-537 CE. Although the edifice built by Justinian remains almost intact, only some of its original mosaics survive. In the first comprehensive study, Natalia Teteriatnikov describes the original mosaic program of the church and its restorations after the earthquake of 558. Drawing from decades of her personal research and scholarship on St. Sophia, the author analyzes the material and decorative components of the Justinianic mosaics that survive. She considers the architectural and theological aesthetics, as well as the social conditions that led to the production of a distinctive, aniconic mosaic program. Lavishly illustrated, the book includes a catalog of the nineteenth-century watercolors created by Gaspare Fossati--the only surviving evidence for reconstructing mosaics that are no longer extant.--Summary by Harvard University Press.
Mosaics, Byzantine --- Mosaïque byzantine --- Conservation and restoration --- Ayasofya Müzesi. --- Ayasofya Müzesi --- Mosaïque byzantine --- Ayasofya Müzesi. --- Ausstattung. --- Fenster. --- Kirchenbau. --- Licht. --- Mosaics, Byzantine. --- Mosaik. --- Ornament. --- Raum. --- Restaurierung. --- Stiftung. --- Stil. --- Technik. --- Zeichnung. --- Conservation and restoration. --- Justinian --- Fossati, Gaspare, --- Trabzon Ayasofya Müzesi. --- Hagia Sophia --- Turkey --- Fossati, Gaspard, --- Trabzon Ayasofya Müzesi. --- Ayasofya Müzesi (Trabzon, Turkey) --- Aya Sofya (Church : Trabzon, Turkey) --- Hagia Sophia (Church : Trabzon, Turkey) --- Trabzon Ayasofyası (Museum) --- Agia Sofia (Church : Trabzon, Turkey) --- Church of Hagia Sophia (Trabzon, Turkey) --- Hagia Sophia Museum (Trabzon, Turkey) --- Haghia-Sophia (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Istanbul. --- Hagia Sophia (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Museum of St. Sophia --- Saint Sophia (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- St. Sophia (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Turkey. --- Chiesa di S. Sofia a Costantinopoli --- Ayasofya (Museum) --- S. Sofia (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Santa Sofia (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Sainte Sophie (Mosque : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Byzantine mosaics --- Mosaics, Byzantine - Turkey - Istanbul --- Mosaics, Byzantine - Conservation and restoration - Turkey - Istanbul
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