54,643 research outputs found

    Yates, Thomas J. P.1

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    Thomas J. Yates. Scientist and Theologian. Former electrical engineer of Utah Power & Light Co. First director in program establishing L.D.S. Seminaries and Institutes. Avard Fairbanks, sculptor. Nicholas G. Morgan, Donor

    Groesbeck, Nicholas-Residence P.1

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    7475 First home of Nicholas Groesbeck in Salt Lake City, located on the northeast corner of 2nd West and 1st No. They lived there from 1856-58. This later became the Union Academy, University of Deseret and Deseret Hospital. Gift of: Nicholas G. Morgan

    Groesbeck, Nicholas-Residence P.2

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    7476 First home of Nicholas Groesbeck in Salt Lake City, located on the northeast corner of 2nd West and 1st No. They lived there from 1856-58. This later became the Union Academy, University of Deseret and Deseret Hospital. Gift of: Nicholas G. Morgan

    Nicholas P. Cushner, S. L, Philippine Jesuits in exile

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    Guinard P.-J. Nicholas P. Cushner, S. L, Philippine Jesuits in exile. In: Bulletin Hispanique, tome 68, n°1-2, 1966. pp. 168-170

    Morgan, Nicholas G., Sr.-Residence P.1

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    8673 Located on Olympus Drive, Salt Lake City (Holladay area). Gift of: Nicholas G. Morgan, Sr. 2490 Olympus Drive

    Groesbeck, Nicholas Harmon-Residence P.1

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    7477 Located on Main Street in Springville, Utah. Built 1875. Gift of: Nicholas G. Morgan, Sr

    Adam-Ondi-Ahman, Missouri P.2

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    Mrs. Nicholas G. Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brazier at Adamondi-ahman, Missouri. Photo taken by Mr. Morgan. Gift of Nicholas G. Morgan, Sr

    The cult of St Nicholas in medieval Italy

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    St Nicholas was one of the most popular saints in medieval Italy. His cult attracted the attention of popes, kings and emperors, and his shrine at Bari became an important international pilgrimage destination. This thesis asks how the cult of St Nicholas came to be so widespread and popular in Italy, and why the saint attracted the attention of diverse groups and individuals. This thesis is structured around four chapters. The first demonstrates that through a process of Latinisation the cult of St Nicholas became integrated within Italian literary traditions and within a new spiritual era. Chapter Two reveals that this Latinisation also occurred within the saint’s iconography. Chapters Three and Four are case studies of the cult in Puglia and Venice, locations which claimed possession of the saint’s relics. These case studies show that the general developments that the cult of St Nicholas underwent in Italy, identified in Chapters One and Two, did not apply universally. Instead, the presence of the saint’s relics resulted in a different profile of the saint in Bari and Venice. Through the process of Latinisation, the cult of St Nicholas became updated and remained relevant for its new Italian audience; Chapters Three and Four show alternative ways that the cult of St Nicholas gained widespread popularity. This thesis presents for the first time an iconographical study of St Nicholas in Italian art, which develops existing research of the saint’s Byzantine iconography. Chapter Four presents a profile of the cult of St Nicholas in Venice in the Middle Ages, which is a significant oversight in the literature. The thesis uses a variety of visual and textual sources, in particular fresco and altarpiece representations, archival documents from Venice and Rome (including the Apostolic Visitations), and under-exploited contemporary and antiquarian Venetian sources

    Nicholas P. Vakr. The Taproot of Soviet Society. The impact of Russia's peasant culture upon the Soviet State

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    J. A. Nicholas P. Vakr. The Taproot of Soviet Society. The impact of Russia's peasant culture upon the Soviet State. In: Politique étrangère, n°2 - 1962 - 27ᵉannée. pp. 195-196
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