134,133 research outputs found
Ancestors of Henry Dewey Jacoby, Sr.
Family tree listing descendents for Henry Dewey Jacoby, Sr.The family tree mentions the family names Goldstucker, Jacoby, Kahnweiler, Loe, and Meyerson; as well as the towns of Alsenz, Grundstadt, Grünstadt and Münsterappel.Henry Jacoby was born in circa 1817 in Bavaria, Germany; he died in 1886 in Pensacola, Florida.digitize
Replication Data for: "The Endurance of Politicians' Values Over Four Decades: A Panel Study"
This Dataverse Dataset contains the replication materials for "The Endurance of politicians' Values Over Four Decades: A Panel Study" by Donald D. Searing, William G. Jacoby, and Andrew H. Tyner. Note that the Dataset only contains data and analyses involving MPs' value choices, party memberships, policy beliefs, and institutional attitudes. It does not include any of the data or analyses involving the MPs' background characteristics (education, mean age of entry into Parliament, length of tenure). The MPs were guaranteed complete anonymity when they were interviewed. Providing the background information would make it easy to identify
individual respondents
Replication Data for: "The Endurance of Politicians' Values Over Four Decades: A Panel Study"
This Dataverse Dataset contains the replication materials for "The Endurance of politicians' Values Over Four Decades: A Panel Study" by Donald D. Searing, William G. Jacoby, and Andrew H. Tyner. Note that the Dataset only contains data and analyses involving MPs' value choices, party memberships, policy beliefs, and institutional attitudes. It does not include any of the data or analyses involving the MPs' background characteristics (education, mean age of entry into Parliament, length of tenure). The MPs were guaranteed complete anonymity when they were interviewed. Providing the background information would make it easy to identify
individual respondents
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Letter from Daniel W. Kempner to Charles D. Jacoby thanking for the Christmas remembrance
Energy--markets and regulation : essays in honor of M.A. Adelman
Includes index.Bibliography: p. [343]-367.edited by Richard L. Gordon, Henry D. Jacoby, and Martin B. Zimmerman
Ivalia Jacoby
Ivalia Jacoby (Figs 1–8) Ivalia Jacoby, 1887: 100 (type species Ivalia viridipennis Jacoby 1887 designated by Maulik (1926), type locality Sri Lanka, type in BMNH). Ancyloscelis Ogloblin, 1930: 100 –101 (type species Mniophila ruficolle Motschulsky 1866 by monotypy, type locality Sri Lanka, type probably lost). Scherer, 1969: 234 (synonymy). Amphimeloides Jacoby, 1887: 95 (type species Amphimeloides dorsalis Jacoby 1887: 96 by monotypy, type locality Sri Lanka, type in BMNH). New synonym. Taizonia Chen, 1934: 182 (type species Taizonia bella Chen 1934 by original designation, type locality Taiwan, type in DEIM). New synonym. Schereria Medvedev, 1984: 60 (type species Chabria minima Scherer 1984 by original designation, type locality Nepal, holotype in NHMB). Gruev & Askevold, 1988: 140 (synonymy). Notes on generic synonymy. Based on the study of various specimens, including type specimens of the type species, we conclude that Taizonia and Amphimeloides are junior synonyms of Ivalia. They share the following character extremely rare among flea beetles: metasternum is expanded anteriorly, becoming vertical and covering mesosternum (Fig. 5 A) so the latter also becomes vertical and sometimes invisible in ventral view. This character is shared by the types of all the type species, but varies slightly among other studied species of Ivalia. In its most developed state, the character is known to occur only in Clavicornaltica Scherer (Konstantinov & Duckett 2005), also a humicole feeder but easily distinguishable from Ivalia by its clavate antennae and other features. Other uncommon characters occuring in Ivalia and some other Oriental genera include the following: a. Metatibia curved in dorsal view with long metatibial spur (Figs 1, 3 E, F), first metatarsomere as long as or longer than two following tarsomeres combined (Figs 2 D, 3 F); b. Labrum deeply emarginated (Fig. 3 A); c. Thoracic sternites with elevated processes; d. Head with frontal ridge wide and swollen together with anterofrontal ridge in one callosity (see Figs 2 C, E, 3 A–B); e. Antennal calli poorly separated from vertex and from each other, sometimes not separated at all (Figs 2 C, E, and 3 A); f. Anterolateral callosity of pronotum very long, commonly reaching midpoint of lateral margin of pronotum (Figs 1, 2); g. Vaginal palpi of female genitalia relatively short with proximal ends fused (Fig. 4 E). Overall there are no characters to separate Ivalia, Amphimeloides, and Taizonia. As Ivalia is senior to Taizonia, Ivalia remains valid and because Amphimeloides and Ivalia were published in the same paper, we here choose Ivalia as the name to use. Diagnostic characters of Ivalia. Adult beetles small to medium sized (2–5mm), convex in lateral view. Color metallic or nonmetallic dark or light shades with spots or stripes. Antennal calli poorly to moderately developed, flat to slightly raised, anterior ends somewhat triangular, entering into interantennal space, sulci surrounding antennal calli poorly developed. Eyes small, lateral, orbit narrow, antennal sockets separated by a distance subequal to two times width of orbit or more. Frontal ridge short, wide, flat to moderately raised; anterofrontal ridge wide, flat to moderately raised. Antenna hardly reaching middle of elytron, distal antennomeres widened. Labrum deeply incised. Maxillary palp long, second and third palpomeres moderately thick, distally enlarged, last pointed. Pronotum transverse, without impressions, anterior coxal cavities open behind. Elytron with irregular punctures, posteriorly narrowed; epipleuron wide, horizontal, reaching near apex. Hind wing present or absent. Thoracic sternites with raised process in middle: prosternal intercoxal process with longitudinal vertically raised ridge along middle, process on metasternum usually circular. Metacoxa greatly enlarged, ventrally with a groove and ridge for reception of femur. Metatibia in dorsal view characteristically curved with either ends directed laterally; dorsal surface with sharp lateral margin and flat mesal margin. Tarsal claw appendiculate. Vaginal palpi joined at proximal end. Spermathecal duct not coiled. Material examined. Amphimeloides dorsalis Jacoby: Holotype. Labels: 1) Type HT; 2) Ceylon, G. Lewis, 1910 – 320; 3) Dikoya, 3,800–4,200 ft. 6.XII– 16.I. 82; 4) Amphimeloides dorsalis Jac.; 5) Right hind leg mounted in balsam, S. Maulik, 1929; 6) HT found in dwr. parts missing G. A. Samuelson det. 1974 (BMNH). Ivalia viridipennis Jacoby: Syntypes male and female. Labels: 1) Ceylon, G. Lewis, 1910 – 320; 2) Dikoya, 3,800–4,200 ft. 6.XII– 16.I. 82; 3) Syntype Ivalia viridipennis Jacoby (2 BMNH). Taizonia bella Chen: Holotype male. Labels: 1) Kankau (Koshun) Formosa, H. Sauter V. 1912; 2) Holotypus; 3) Taizonia bella n. g. n. sp. S. H. Chen det. (DEIM). Schereria martensi Medvedev: Holotype male. Labels: 1) 179 a Kaski Dist., oberhalb, Dhumpus Berlese, 2100m, Martens & Ausobsky 8 / 10 Mai 80; 2) Holotypus; 3) Holotypus; 4) Schereria martensi m. L. N. Medvedev det. 1983; 5) Senckenberg Museum Frankfurt/Main (SMFM).Published as part of Duckett, Catherine N., Prathapan, K. D. & Konstantinov, Alexander S., 2006, Notes on identity, new synonymy and larva of Ivalia Jacoby (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) with description of a new species, pp. 49-68 in Zootaxa 1363 on pages 51-54, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17471
D. Jacoby, La féodalité en Grèce médiévale. Les « Assises de Romanie », sources, application et diffusion
Gautier Paul. D. Jacoby, La féodalité en Grèce médiévale. Les « Assises de Romanie », sources, application et diffusion . In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 32, 1974. pp. 418-420
D. Jacoby, La féodalité en Grèce médiévale. Les « Assises de Romanie », sources, application et diffusion
Gautier Paul. D. Jacoby, La féodalité en Grèce médiévale. Les « Assises de Romanie », sources, application et diffusion . In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 32, 1974. pp. 418-420
Jean Lascaris Calophéros, Chypre et la Morée
Jacoby D. Jean Lascaris Calophéros, Chypre et la Morée. In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 26, 1968. pp. 189-228
Phénomènes de démographie rurale à Byzance aux XIIIe, XIVe et XVe siècles
Jacoby D. Phénomènes de démographie rurale à Byzance aux XIIIe, XIVe et XVe siècles. In: Études rurales, n°5-6, 1962. pp. 161-186
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