4,066 research outputs found

    The Rhone Caesar

    No full text
    It was probably between 49 and 46 BC, when Caesar had close relationships with Arles that, according to the French archaeologist Luc Long, who found it in 2007 after struggling with poor visibility, strong currents and the catfishes of Rhone, the famous marble bust of Arles had been carved. This beautiful portrait, discovered in the depths of the right bank of the river near Arles, has been undoubtedly attributed by Long to Julius Caesar. ... Here we compare the Arles bust with some others and propose the application of image processing and multimodal biometric systems to the ancient artifac

    Caesar Kleberg Tracks

    No full text
    Biannual newsletter of the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute documenting progress on various research projects, news, and other information of interest to subscribers

    Caesar Kleberg Tracks

    No full text
    Biannual newsletter of the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute documenting progress on various research projects, news, and other information of interest to subscribers

    Caesar Kleberg Tracks

    No full text
    Biannual newsletter of the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute documenting progress on various research projects, news, and other information of interest to subscribers

    Caesar Kleberg Tracks

    No full text
    Biannual newsletter of the Caesar Kleberg Wildlife Research Institute documenting progress on various research projects, news, and other information of interest to subscribers

    Commentarii

    No full text
    Gaius Iulius Caesar ; hrsg. von Hieronymus Bononius. Index commentariorum C. Iulii Caesaris / Raimundus Marlianu

    De praerogativa mulieris in bonis mariti : positiones, ex L. assiduis. & auth. duab. seqq. C. qui potior. in pign. habeant, desumptae

    No full text
    quas ... ex decreto Amplissimi Iureconsultorum Ordinis, in inclyta Basiliensium Academia, summi in U.I. gradus consequendi causa, publicè discutiendas proponit Ioannes Baptista Caesar, Augustanus. Disputabuntur in aula Iureconsultorum ... die 26. Novembr.Enthält 26 ThesenDiss. iur. Basel, 158

    C. Ivlivs Caesar, sive, Historiae imperatorvm Caesarvmqve romanorvm ex antiqvis nvmismatibvs restitvtae liber primvs : acessit C. Ivlii Caesaris vita et res gestae /

    No full text
    Includes indexes.The lvii pages of engravings of coins and medals include 3 half-titles (p. xx, xxiii and xxxvi).Engraved t.p.; printer's device on last page.Publisher from colophon: Brvgis Flandrorvm apud Hubertum Goltzium Herbipolitam Venlonlanum, Mense Septembri An. Sal. M.D.LXIII.Mode of access: Internet.Binding, c. 2: rebound, incorporating old leather on top and bottom boards, gold tooled with double fillets along edges, and a central panel and corner pieces with strapwork and arabesques. Spine now untooled. The edges gilt. Text enclosed by lines ruled in reddish brown, with additional lines above the running titles and outside the marginalia.Binding, c. 1: rebound, incorporating old calf on top and bottom boards, tooled in blind with fillets, rolls, and stamps. The initials D H I M appear at top of front cover, with 1564 at foot. Spine now stamped in gold with title: C.IVLIVS / CAESAR // HUBERT / GOLTZ // 1563. Parchment MS fragments tipped onto stubs following free endpaper at front and back. The edges red. Title written in brown ink across the page-ends at middle of foredge: DE NV / MISMATI / BVS; shelf mark at head of foredge: H / VI / 9

    The role of the Globe theatre in shaping Shakespeare's Tragedy of Julius Caesar

    No full text
    Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Letras/Inglês e Literatura Correspondente, Florianópolis, 2012Abstract : This study assesses the impact of a specific theatre space on Shakespeare's work along two broad lines of inquiry. The sociopolitical environment and the structural features and resources of the Globe theatre are examined in turn, in an effort to ascertain the extent to which they may have shaped the conception and enactment of Julius Caesar in 1599. The social, religious, and political concerns of contemporary London are elucidated by the identification of relevant evidence from the play text. Likewise, discussions of the Globe's structure and staging conditions are informed by the analysis of several key scenes from the play. The study relates the attributes of the Globe theatre and the Shakespearean stage in general to the concepts of Holy and Rough Theatre found in Peter Brook's The Empty Space, and employs Andrew Gurr's notion of the "Shakespearean Mindset" as well as J. L. Styan's theories concerning the imaginative neutrality of the stage space and the creative collaboration of the audience, to apprehend the connection between the language of Julius Caesar and the specific theatre space in which it was first enacted. The metaphorical potential of the stage space and theatre structure as a whole are discussed with reference to discernable metatheatrical moments in the play. The study verifies a complex connection between Julius Caesar and the Globe theatre and its surroundings, allowing for an improved understanding of the play's layered contextual significance, as well as informing of staging practices at the Globe that brought Shakespeare's words to life.Este trabalho avalia o impacto de um espaço de teatro específico sobre a obra de Shakespeare ao longo de duas amplas linhas de investigação. O ambiente sócio-político e as características estruturais e recursos do teatro Globe são analisados sucessivamente, em um esforço para determinar a medida em que eles podem ter formado a concepção e encenação de Julius Caesar em 1599. As questões sociais, religiosas e políticas da Londres contemporânea são elucidadas pela identificação de evidências relevantes no texto. Da mesma forma, as discussões sobre a estrutura do Globe e as condições de encenação são esclarecidas pela análise de várias cenas-chave da peça. O estudo relaciona os atributos do teatro Globe e do teatro Shakespeareano em geral aos conceitos de "Holy and Rough Theatre" de Peter Brook, e utiliza a concepção de Andrew Gurr chamada "Shakespearean Mindset", assim como as teorias de J. L. Styan relativas à neutralidade imaginativa do espaço do palco e à colaboração criativa do público, para compreender a conexão entre a linguagem de Julius Caesar e do espaço teatral em que foi inicialmente encenada. O potencial metafórico do espaço do palco e da estrutura do teatro como um todo é discutido no que tange a momentos metateatrais discerníveis na peça. O estudo verifica uma relação complexa entre Julius Caesar e o teatro Globe e os seus arredores, permitindo uma melhor compreensão da significância contextual multifacetada da peça, bem como registro de práticas de encenação no Globe que trouxeram as palavras de Shakespeare à vida

    Eumea caesar Aldrich 1916

    No full text
    Eumea caesar (Aldrich, 1916), Fig. 42 Host records ex. Choristoneura conflictana: Prentice 1955 (SK, MB); † Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar (SK, MB); † Huber et al. 1996 (America north of Mexico). Host records ex. Choristoneura fractivittana: † Wishart 1945, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips “practivittana” (North America); † Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar (North America); † Huber et al. 1996 (America north of Mexico). Host records ex. Choristoneura fumiferana: Wilkes & Anderson 1947, as Zenillia caesar ex. Archips fumiferana (ON, QC); Daviault 1950, as Aplomyia caesar (QC); Dowden et al. 1951, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips fumiferana (NY); Jaynes & Drooz 1952, as Aplomya caesar (NY, ME); Raizenne 1952, as Epimasicera caesar (ON); Dowden et al. 1953, as Aplomya caesar (ME); Miller 1955, as Aplomya caesar (NB); McGugan & Blais 1959 (ON); Blais 1960 (QC); MacDonald & Webb 1963, as Aplomya caesar (NB); † Miller 1963 (NB); Blais 1965 (QC); † Tilles & Woodley 1984, as Aplomya caesar (ME); Hébert et al. 1989 (QC); Huber et al. 1996 (NB). Host records ex. Choristoneura fumiferana and/or Choristoneura occidentalis: Tothill 1913, as Exorista nigripalpis ex. Tortrix fumiferana (BC, QC); Brown 1941, as Zenillia caesar ex. Cacoecia fumiferana (Canada); Sellers 1943, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips fumiferana (North America); † Wishart 1945, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips fumiferana (North America); Dowden et al. 1948, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips fumiferana (North America); † Zwolfer 1961, ex. C. fumiferana (North America); † Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar ex. C. fumiferana (BC, OR, ON, QC, NB, NF, NY, ME). Host records ex. Choristoneura fumiferana, Choristoneura occidentalis and/or Choristoneura pinus: † Ross 1952, as Aplomya caesar ex. spruce and/or jack pine budworm (Canada). Host records ex. Choristoneura occidentalis: McKnight 1974, as Aplomya caesar (CO); Harris & Dawson 1979, as Aplomya caesar (BC). Host records probably ex. Choristoneura occidentalis: Wilkes et al. 1949, as Aplomya caesar ex. C. fumiferana (BC); Coppel 1953, as Zenillia caesar ex. C. fumiferana (BC); Carolin & Coulter 1959, as Aplomya caesar ex. C. fumiferana (OR); † Coppel 1960, ex. C. fumiferana (BC). Host records ex. Choristoneura occidentalis and/or Choristoneura retiniana: Schaupp et al. 1991, as Aplomya caesar (OR). Host records ex. Choristoneura parallela: Sellers 1943, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips parallela (North America); † Wishart 1945, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips parallela (North America); † Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar (North America); † Huber et al. 1996 (America north of Mexico). Host records ex. Choristoneura pinus: Drooz & Benjamin 1956, as Aplomya caesar (Michigan); Kulman & Hodson 1961, as Aplomya caesar (Minnesota); Dixon & Benjamin 1963, as Aplomya caesar (Wisconsin); Allen et al. 1969, as Aplomya caesar (Michigan); † Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan); Nealis 1991 (ON); † Huber et al. 1996 (America north of Mexico). Host records ex. Choristoneura rosaceana: † Wishart 1945, as Aplomya caesar ex. Archips rosaceana (North America); Raizenne 1952, as Epimasicera caesar ex. Archips rosaceana (ON); † Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar (ON); † Huber et al. 1996 (America north of Mexico). Eumea caesar is a common tachinid found throughout temperate and boreal Canada, and south to California and Texas in the West and Virginia in the East (O’Hara & Wood 2004). Adults are generally 7–8mm long and mostly black with a black­and­gray banded abdomen. It was included in a key to the puparia of dipterous parasitoids of Choristoneura species by Ross (1952, as Aplomya caesar) and in a key to the adults of dipterous parasitoids of C. occidentalis (as C. fumiferana) in British Columbia by Coppel (1960). Wishart (1945) described and illustrated the immature stages of E. caesar (as Aplomya caesar) and provided a detailed account of larval development in the European corn borer (Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner)). Tilles and Woodley (1984) included E. caesar (as Aplomya caesar) among the five tachinids treated in their manual of spruce budworm parasitoids in Maine. Eumea caesar belongs to the Goniini, and like other members of that tribe produces microtype eggs that are laid on foliage and ingested by the host (see Cyzenis incrassata above for further information on goniine biology). It parasitizes fifth or sixth instar budworms, and the fully developed maggot emerges from the sixth instar or pupa and pupariates away from the host (Dowden et al. 1951; Carolin & Coulter 1959; Allen et al. 1969; Hébert et al. 1989). Eumea caesar has more than one generation per year and occasionally two maggots emerge from a single Choristoneura host (Dowden et al. 1951). Dowden et al. (1951) reported that E. caesar overwinters in an alternate host, whereas Tilles and Woodley (1984) stated that it overwinters as a pupa in the soil. Eumea caesar is recorded from a number of Tortricidae and six other families of Microlepidopera (Arnaud 1978, as Aplomya caesar). Parasitism of Choristoneura species in western North America is reportedly low (Carolin & Coulter 1959; McKnight 1974; Harris & Dawson 1979; Schaupp et al. 1991) and E. caesar (as Aplomya caesar) was not included by Wilkes et al. (1949) in the top 15 hymenopterous and dipterous parasitoids of C. occidentalis (as C. fumiferana) in British Columbia. Parasitism of budworms in the East is also usually low but there are several reports of rates in excess of 25 % (Dowden et al. 1948; Jaynes & Drooz 1952; Blais 1965). Parasitism of C. pinus was reported as low by Drooz and Benjamin (1956) in Michigan, by Dixon and Benjamin (1963) in Wisconsin, and by Nealis (1991) in Ontario, but as high as 13 % in a study by Allen et al. (1969) in Michigan.Published as part of O'Hara, James E., 2005, A review of the tachinid parasitoids (Diptera: Tachinidae) of Nearctic Choristoneura species (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), with keys to adults and puparia, pp. 1-46 in Zootaxa 938 on pages 22-24, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17115
    corecore