22,344 research outputs found

    [Letter from Thomas M. Adams to Leah R. Staiti - February 3, 1927]

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    Letter from Thomas M. Adams to Leah R. Staiti, informing her of the annual stockholder meeting of the Southern Brass Manufacturing and Plating Company

    [Letter from Thomas M. Adams to Leah R. Staiti - February 1, 1929]

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    Letter from Thomas M. Adams to Leah R. Staiti, informing her of the annual stockholder meeting of the Southern Brass Manufacturing and Plating Company

    [Letter from Thomas M. Adams to Leah R. Staiti - February 6, 1926]

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    Letter from Thomas M. Adams to Leah R. Staiti, informing her of the annual stockholder meeting of the Southern Brass Manufacturing and Plating Company

    Jarvis Adams and M. Allen to Thomas Rotch, Pittsburgh, 6th December 1814

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    Jarvis Adams and M. Allen inform Thomas Rotch that they have credited his account for 400,andwillshiphisgoodstoKendalbywagonassoonaspossible.HealsowritesthatMr.Clinghasnoboxstovesatpresentlessthan7plateswhichare400, and will ship his goods to Kendal by wagon as soon as possible. He also writes that Mr. Cling has no box stoves at present less than 7 plates which are 28.00 7.5" x 9.6" (19.1cm by 24.4cm

    Failed Censures: Ecclesiastical Regulation of Women’s Clothing in Late Medieval Italy

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    Churchmen in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries tried to regulate the costume of Italian women. These efforts failed, and regulation was largely left thereafter to civic authorities.The published version was published as Chapter 3 in Medieval Clothing and Textiles 5Izbicki, Thomas M. (2009), "Failed Censures: Ecclesiastical Regulation of Women’s Clothing in Late Medieval Italy" in Netherton, Robin and Owen-Crocker, Gale R., eds., Medieval Clothing and Textiles 5 (Boydell Press), 37-53ISBN: 9781843834519 (published book)Peer reviewe

    Forbidden Colors in the Regulation of Clerical Dress from the Fourth Lateran Council (1215) to the Time of Nicholas of Cusa (d. 1464)

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    Medieval canon law attempted to distinguish clergy from the laity by restricting their dress choices. The article focuses on prohibition of wearing red or green on the street. Both colors were identified with the nobility.The published version was published as Chapter 7 in Medieval Clothing and Textiles 1Izbicki, Thomas M. (2005), "Forbidden Colors in the Regulation of Clerical Dress from the Fourth Lateran Council (1215) to the Time of Nicholas of Cusa (d. 1464)" in Netherton, Robin and Owen-Crocker, Gale R., eds., Medieval Clothing and Textiles 1 (Boydell Press),105-114ISBN: 9781843831235 (published book

    Volutomitra H. Adams & A. Adams 1853

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    Genus <i>Volutomitra</i> H. Adams & A. Adams, 1853 <p> <b>Type species.</b> <i>Mitra groenlandica</i> Beck <i>in</i> Møller, 1842 (subsequent designation by Fischer 1884). Recent, Arctic Sea.</p>Published as part of <i>Hansen, Thomas, 2019, Gastropods from the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary in Denmark, pp. 1-196 in Zootaxa 4654 (1)</i> on page 144, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4654.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/3365803">http://zenodo.org/record/3365803</a&gt

    Graduate recital, choral conducting. Adams, C., 1994

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    Recorded during a live performance at Dalton Center Recital Hall, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, Michigan, April 15, 1994, 7:00 p.m., the 456th concert of the School of Music's 1993-1994 season.Westersingers, Catherine Adams, conductor. Instrumentalists in the 5th work: Leah Miller, flute ; Krista Blomgren, oboe ; Brian Lewis, synthesizer ; Cynthia Kortman, piano ; Cameron Taylor, glockenspiel ; Matthew Ownby, timpani.In partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Music degree in choral conducting, Western Michigan University, 1994.Sacred vocal music for mixed chorus, in part with instrumental accompaniment.Information from performance program.Sing we and chant it / Thomas Morley -- Ubi caritas / Maurice Duruflé -- Alleluia / Robert Mudzynski -- Ave Maria / Mark Keller -- Sanctus from Requiem / John Rutter

    Western medieval legal manuscripts in the collections of the University of Pennsylvania

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    Western legal manuscripts of the Middle Ages in North American collections are among the least known to scholars. The University of Pennsylvania has a rich collection of these texts, several of which were in the collection of the historian Henry Charles Lea. Included are works of civil law and canon law, as well as collections of papal letters and guides to pastoral care. The descriptions of most of these manuscripts in the catalog of Norman P. Zacour and Rudolf Hirsch are perfunctory, sometimes erring or omitting valuable information. Other manuscripts were added in recent years in the Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection. Much of this material is being added to the Franklin online catalog of the University’s libraries, but researchers frequently do not search these digital resources. This article provides more complete guidance to the University’s medieval legal manuscripts than any of the existing catalogs offers, whether in print or online. It also provides updated bibliographic information in print or online. Every manuscript has been examined by the author in situ. Among the important works represented in the collection is the Panormia (a work of canon law often attributed to Ivo of Chartres). Authors present include the curialist Thomas of Capua, canonists Petrus de Braco, William of Pagula, Bernardus Raimundi, Adam of Aldersbach, Raymond of Peñafort, and civil lawyers Baldus de Ubaldis, and Bartolus de Saxoferrato. Three of these manuscripts were owned in the past by Sir Thomas Phillipps

    Mœurs et hygiène publique au XVIIIe siècle. Quelques aspects des dépôts de mendicité

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    Adams Thomas-M. Mœurs et hygiène publique au XVIIIe siècle. Quelques aspects des dépôts de mendicité. In: Annales de démographie historique, 1975. Démographie historique et environnement. pp. 93-105
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