584 research outputs found
Avraham Faust, Hayah Katz, Pirchia Eyall. “Late Persian-Early Hellenistic Remains at Tel ‘Eton”
Le site de Tel ‘Eton, localisé dans la plaine de la Shéphélah à 3 km au nord de Tell Beit Mirsim, a déjà été mentionné dans AI 34-36, n° 62 (FAUST, Avraham ; KATZ, Hayah. « Survey, Shovel Tests and Excavations at Tel ‘Eton: On Methodology and Site History ». Tel Aviv 39, 2012, p. 158-185). C’est la raison pour laquelle le site est recensé ici, même si sa couche achéménide remonte à la toute fin de cette époque. Le site a été habité du IVème au début du IIIème s. av. n. è. et comprenait alors ..
Faust Rossi
From the video archives of the Cornell Law School Heritage Project. The interviewer is Peter W. Martin; the videographer, Michael d’Estries. This video covers Faust Rossi’s reflections on his career as a law professor. A 1960 graduate of Cornell Law School, Rossi began his legal career as a trial attorney in the United States Department of Justice Honors Program. He subsequently became a litigation partner in a Rochester law firm, and joined the Cornell Law School Faculty in 1966. He retired in 2013.
Professor Rossi is the author of a text on expert witnesses and coauthor of the Handbook of New York Evidence. He was a national winner of the Roscoe Pound Jacobson Award for excellence in teaching Trial Advocacy. Professor Rossi was a recurring visiting professor at Central European University in Budapest and a regular faculty member in the Cornell Summer Institute of International and Comparative Law in Paris. He has also given hundreds of lectures to lawyers and judges in the United States and Europe.
Faust Rossi is Samuel S. Leibowitz Professor of Trial Techniques, Emeritus
Illustrations to Goethe's Faust / By Paul Konewka, Author Of Illustrations .... The English Text From Bayard Taylor's Translation
ILLUSTRATIONS TO GOETHE'S FAUST / BY PAUL KONEWKA, AUTHOR OF ILLUSTRATIONS .... THE ENGLISH TEXT FROM BAYARD TAYLOR'S TRANSLATION
Illustrations to Goethe's Faust / By Paul Konewka, Author Of Illustrations .... The English Text From Bayard Taylor's Translation (1)
Cover (1)
Title page (3)
Titelseite (5)
Publisher's Note (7)
Illustrations to Goethe's Faust (9)
Kolophon (34
Illustrations To Goethe's Faust / By Paul Konewka, Author of Illustrations to ... The English Text From Bayard Taylor's Translation
ILLUSTRATIONS TO GOETHE'S FAUST / BY PAUL KONEWKA, AUTHOR OF ILLUSTRATIONS TO ... THE ENGLISH TEXT FROM BAYARD TAYLOR'S TRANSLATION
Illustrations To Goethe's Faust / By Paul Konewka, Author of Illustrations to ... The English Text From Bayard Taylor's Translation (1)
Cover (1)
Widmung (3)
Titelseite (7)
Publishers' Note (9)
Illustrations to Goethe's Faust (10
Faust
FAUST
Faust ( - )
Cover ( - )
Mephistopheles and Faust in Henry Clarke, Forest and Cavern, 1925 (II)
Titelseite (III)
Contents (V)
List of Illustrations (VII)
Notes on the Author and Contributors (XI)
Series Editor's Preface (1)
Introduction (3)
Acknowledgments (10)
Chapter One / Faust's Ancestors: The Earliest Sources (15)
Chapter Two / From Superstition to Scepticism (53)
Chapter Three / An Icon is Born (92)
Chapter Four / Romantics to Realists (125)
Chapter Five / Humanists versus Brown Shirts: Fausts for the Twentieth Century (161)
Chapter Six / From Bare Boards to Computer Graphics: Faust in Performance (192)
Chapter Seven / Musical Fausts: From Broadsheet to Rock Opera (241)
Chapter Eight / From Woodcut to Manga: 100 Images of a Magus (276)
Chapter Nine / The Moving Image (312)
Chapter Ten / Faust Globalised (347)
Chapter Eleven / The Popular Imagination (375)
Chapter Twelve / Cartoons and Comics (398)
Conclusion / 'Faustus and the Potters': A Short Story by Derek Sellen (419)
Postscript: 'Some little well-made Flask' (422)
Index (423
Faust News Article
News article titled Faust, author is unidentified.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/michaud-foyer-musicale/1000/thumbnail.jp
Archaeology and Ancient Israelite Religion
Israelite religions have always fascinated scholars. Initial studies used the Bible as their main source of information and attempted to read it critically in order to learn about the religion of ancient Israel. With the advent of modern research in the Near East, more and more information on other Ancient Near Eastern religions was accumulated and initially used to illuminate Israelite religious practices as described in the Bible, but gradually led to challenging some of the accepted truisms. The new information was collected mainly through archaeological excavations, and archaeology had gradually become a major player in the study of ancient Israelite religion(s) and religious practices. The massive amount of information on the various subthemes related to Israelite religions, the shifting trends in scholarship, the multiplicity of approaches, and the interdisciplinary nature of the field means that no single scholar can master all the data today. Indeed, there is currently no comprehensive and updated book that covers all or even most aspects pertaining to Israelite religion(s). This volume is a partial attempt to fill some of this lacuna. The volume includes a number of broad, summarizing studies, presenting readers with the up-to-date state of the research on a number of important issues, from Solomon’s temple to broader studies of the loci of cultic activity in ancient Israel through to analysis of the difference between the “official” and “popular” expression of religion, the place of women in Israelite cult(s), similarities and differences between the religious practices in Israel and Judah and those of other Iron Age religions, and the religion of some of Israel’s neighbors to the role of zooarchaeology in the study of religion, ancient Israelite festivals, and more
Archaeology and Ancient Israelite Religion
Israelite religions have always fascinated scholars. Initial studies used the Bible as their main source of information and attempted to read it critically in order to learn about the religion of ancient Israel. With the advent of modern research in the Near East, more and more information on other Ancient Near Eastern religions was accumulated and initially used to illuminate Israelite religious practices as described in the Bible, but gradually led to challenging some of the accepted truisms. The new information was collected mainly through archaeological excavations, and archaeology had gradually become a major player in the study of ancient Israelite religion(s) and religious practices. The massive amount of information on the various subthemes related to Israelite religions, the shifting trends in scholarship, the multiplicity of approaches, and the interdisciplinary nature of the field means that no single scholar can master all the data today. Indeed, there is currently no comprehensive and updated book that covers all or even most aspects pertaining to Israelite religion(s). This volume is a partial attempt to fill some of this lacuna. The volume includes a number of broad, summarizing studies, presenting readers with the up-to-date state of the research on a number of important issues, from Solomon’s temple to broader studies of the loci of cultic activity in ancient Israel through to analysis of the difference between the “official” and “popular” expression of religion, the place of women in Israelite cult(s), similarities and differences between the religious practices in Israel and Judah and those of other Iron Age religions, and the religion of some of Israel’s neighbors to the role of zooarchaeology in the study of religion, ancient Israelite festivals, and more
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