1,739,365 research outputs found
Literacy in Neapolitan Women's Convents in the Middle Ages and the Contribution of Digital Archives on Monasterium.Net
Antonella Ambrosio seeks a viable way of carrying out research on this topic: the palaeographic analysis of the few available sources using a multidisciplinary approach that combines diplomatics, archival, and historical research. This approach ensures the appropriate contextualization of the source both historically and culturally. In "Literacy in Neapolitan Women's Convents: An Example of Female Handwriting in a Late Fifteenth-Century Accounts Ledger", Ambrosio provides a case study, analysing a single piece of handwriting evidence. The source is an accounts ledger from the Dominican convent of Santi Pietro e Sebastiano compiled in the second half of the fifteenth century, from 1485 to 1496. Using an analytical approach, the author has identified the handwriting of a particular (anonymous) nun from the convent; Ambrosio studies the script the nun used and formulates hypotheses about her cultural background and how she learned to write. The palaeographic analysis is fully contextualized thanks to the reconstruction of the old convent archive, a reconstruction helped by using digital technologies now accessible online at Monasterium.net. As Ambrosio's work demonstrates, technological advances may aid codicological work but careful palaeographic analysis is necessary to ascertain the participation of female scribes. In this case we witness the scribal development of a nun who began with a basic knowledge of writing and who went on to perform her practical task not well but adequately for the purpose
Literacy in Neapolitan Women’s Convents: An Example of Female Handwriting in a Late Fifteenth-Century Accounts Ledger
This paper is about a research i on the literacy and writing skills of Neapolitan sisters in medieval convents, due to the lack of adequate historical study of such nuns and the extremely complex nature of the documentary sources. Surviving evidence is scattered far and wide, and the old convent archives have been dispersed. Given the state of the survivals, Antonella Ambrosio seeks a viable way of carrying out research on this topic: the palaeographic analysis of the few available sources using a multidisciplinary approach that combines diplomatics, archival, and historical research. This approach ensures the appropriate contextualization of the source both historically and culturally. In ‘Literacy in Neapolitan Women’s Convents: An Example of Female Handwriting in a Late Fifteenth-Century Accounts Ledger’, Ambrosio provides a case study, analysing a single piece of handwriting evidence. The source is an accounts ledger from the Dominican convent of Santi Pietro e Sebastiano compiled in the second half of the fifteenth century, from 1485 to 1496. Using an analytical approach, the author has identified the handwriting of a particular (anonymous) nun from the convent; Ambrosio studies the script the nun used and formulates hypotheses about her cultural background and how she learned to write. The palaeographic analysis is fully contextualized thanks to the reconstruction of the old convent archive, a reconstruction helped by using digital technologies now accessible online at Monasterium.net. As Ambrosio’s work demonstrates, technological advances may aid codicological work but careful palaeographic analysis is necessary to ascertain the participation of female scribes. In this case we witness the scribal development of a nun who began with a basic knowledge of writing and who went on to perform her practical task not well but adequately for the
purpose
An adaptive finite element approximation of a variational model of brittle fracture
The energy of the Francfort–Marigo model of brittle fracture can be approximated, in the sense of Gamma-convergence, by the Ambrosio–Tortorelli functional. In this work, we formulate and analyze two adaptive finite element algorithms for the computation of its (local) minimizers. For each algorithm, we combine a Newton-type method with residual-driven adaptive mesh refinement. We present two theoretical results which demonstrate convergence of our algorithms to local minimizers of the Ambrosio–Tortorelli functional
An adaptive finite element approximation of a generalized Amrosio-Tortorelli functional
The Francfort–Marigo model of brittle fracture is posed in terms of the minimization of a highly irregular energy functional. A successful method for discretizing the model is to work with an approximation of the energy. In this work a generalized Ambrosio–Tortorelli functional is used. This leads to a bound-constrained minimization problem, which can be posed in terms of a variational inequality. We propose, analyze and implement an adaptive finite element method for computing (local) minimizers of the generalized functional
Correction to: Malignant epithelioid neoplasm of the ileum with ACTB-GLI1 fusion mimicking an adnexal mass (BMC Women's Health, (2022), 22, 1, (104), 10.1186/s12905-022-01679-0)
Following publication of the original article (1), The author names were incorrectly published as Ambrosio Marco, Virgilio Agnese, Raffone Antonio, Arena Alessandro, Raimondo Diego, Alletto Andrea, Seracchioli Renato and Casadio Paolo. But this should have been Marco Ambrosio, Agnese Virgilio, Antonio Raffone, Alessandro Arena, Diego Raimondo, Andrea Alletto, Renato Seracchioli, and Paolo Casadio. The original article has been updated
Continuity equations and ODE flows with non-smooth velocity
In this paper we review many aspects of the well-posedness theory for the Cauchy problem for the continuity and transport equations and for the ordinary differential equation (ODE). In this framework, we deal with velocity fields that are not smooth, but enjoy suitable 'weak differentiability' assumptions. We first explore the connection between the partial differential equation (PDE) and the ODE in a very general non-smooth setting. Then we address the renormalization property for the PDE and prove that such a property holds for Sobolev velocity fields and for bounded variation velocity fields. Finally, we present an approach to the ODE theory based on quantitative estimates
Provincia Andalvsiae
1 mapa. Publicat probablement dins de la reedició de: Chorographica descriptio provinciarum et conventuum... capucinorum... de Montecalerio. Roma: Ambrosio Ramellati, 1713, amb mapes de Gio. B. Cassini. Datat al 1647 aproximadament.30 x 40 c
Ambrosio
Ambrosio De primera impresión uno podría asegurar que es niña -por el camisón con cenefa bordada y el corte de pelo a la paje- pero no es niño -no tiene ajugero en el lóbulo de la oreja- además el negativo dice su nombre Ambrosio. La ternura es inherente a esta imagen como quiera cuánto nos gustaría saber que esta haciendo el fotógrafo para mantener tan fija la atención de Ambrosio y del firuláis también
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