533 research outputs found
[Stammbuch Johann Mathias Albrecht] / Johann MathiaÃY Albrecht
[STAMMBUCH JOHANN MATHIAS ALBRECHT] / JOHANN MATHIAÃY ALBRECHT
[Stammbuch Johann Mathias Albrecht] / Johann MathiaÃY Albrecht ( - )
Scherer, Sebastian Anton; Blatt 133v-134r (-)
Cover ( - )
Eintrag Christian Ulrich Wagner II., Bl. [1] ([0]v-[1]r)
"Register über alle hierinn befindliche Namen" Bl. [2r-v] ([1]v-[2]r)
Albrecht, Johann Mathias; Blatt 2-4 ([2]v-2r)
[Unbekannt], Bl. 4v (4v-5r)
[Unbekannt], Bl. 5 (4v-5r)
Kessler, Johann Elias; Blatt 25,1 (25,1-25r)
Hundbiß auf Waltrams, Marquard Jacob; Blatt 33 (32v-33r)
Kienlin, Johann Adam; Blatt 49v (49v-51r)
La Broue, E F D de; Blatt 86 (85v-86r)
Khonn, Johann Conrad; Blatt 94 (93v-94r)
Khonn, Maria Sibylla; Blatt 96v (96v-97r)
Sandtberger, Georg; Blatt 104v (104v-105r)
Zoller, Johann Georg; Blatt 106v (106v-107r)
Knaur, Johann; Blatt 109 (108v-109r)
Bürglen, Georg Ludwig; Blatt 117v (117v-118r)
Krantz, Johann Georg; Blatt 135,1-136r (135v-136r)
Rühl, Johann Georg Michael; Blatt 135,1-136 (135v-136r)
Maurer, Johann Ludwig; Blatt 135,1-136 (135v-136r)
Heerdegen, Georg; Blatt 135,1-136 (135v-136r)
Schwarzkopff, Sigmund; Blatt 135,1-136 (135v-136r)
Unseld, Johann Martin; Blatt 135,1-136 (135v-136r)
Strehlin, J J; Blatt 141 (140v-141r)
Hofmann, Christoph; Blatt 142 (141v-142r)
Richard, Franz; Blatt 142,1 (142v-142,1)
Kessler, Jakob Bernhard; Blatt 145v (145v-146r)
Müller, Johann Ulrich; Blatt 147v (147v-148r)
Tauber, Johann Michael; Blatt 149v (149v-150r)
Tauber, Andreas; Blatt 150-151v (149v-150r)
Halbach, Jacob Christian; Blatt 154v (154v-155r)
Mürdel, Johann Joachim; Blatt 162v (162v-163r)
Waldner, Elias Christoph; Blatt 171v (171v-172r)
Gärtner, Georg Martin; Blatt 173 (172v-173r)
Haiglin, Martin; Blatt 176v (176v-177r)
Krieg, David; Blatt 177 (176v-177r)
Hagen, Johann Georg; Blatt 182 (181v-182r)
Rau, Johann Christian; Blatt 183 (182v-183r)
Samwell, Thomas; Blatt 183v (183v-184r)
Wockenfuss, Peter Laurentius; Blatt 188v (188v-189r)
Neubronner von Eisenburg, Hans Eitel; Blatt 210 (209v-210r)
Algoewer, David; Blatt 212v (212v-213r)
Leopold, Johann Christoph; Blatt 213-214 (212v-213r)
Ritter, Johann Wolfgang; Blatt 218v (218v-219r)
Scheler, Johann Georg; Blatt 219v (219v-220r)
Riegraf, Georg Paul; Blatt 221v (221v-222r)
Baldinger, Marcus; Blatt 222v (222v-223r)
[Unbekannt], Bl. 224v (224v-225r)
Kluntz, Barbara; Blatt 226 (225v-226r)
Kluntz, Barbara; Blatt 226v (227v-228r)
Ringmacher, Daniel; Blatt 227 (227v-228r)
Schwilge, Georg Andreas; Blatt 228v (229v-230r)
König, Wolfgang Jacob; Blatt 229 (229v-230r)
König, Hieronymus Bartholomaeus; Blatt 235 (234v-235r)
Schneider, Abdias; Blatt 238 (237v-238r)
Schneider, Conrad Michael; Blatt 238v (238v-239r)
Langenmantel, Martin Hieronymus von; Blatt 239 (238v-239r
Treasury of Literature for Children
This book takes an original approach to presenting its thirty-one Aesopic fables, giving sets of three or four or six fables in the midst of the other literature. The translation is standard and not acknowledged. David Frankland does all of the Aesop illustrations in the nostalgic style he used in Aesop's Fables by Robert Mathias (1983). They are satisfactory.This is a hardbound book (hard cover)This book has a dust jacket (book cover
Numerical simulation of fog and radiation in complex terrain : results from COST-722
Two high resolution numerical 1D models, namely COBEL and PAFOG, have been adapted to compute a probabilistic fog forecast. Major modifications were made to the COBEL model. It was coupled to the NOAH land surface model to take into account the effects of soil and vegetation and furthermore a parameterization of precipitation was added. To deal with the large uncertainty inherent to fog forecasts, a whole ensemble of 1D runs is computed using the two different numerical models and a set of different initial conditions in combination with distinct boundary conditions. Initial conditions are obtained from variational data assimilation, which optimally combines observations with a first guess taken from operational 3D models. The design of the ensemble scheme computes members that should fairly well represent the uncertainty of the current meteorological regime. Verification reveals that the probabilistic forecast can significantly improve the current methods used at Z¨rich u Unique airport. The complex topography in Switzerland further complicates fog forecasting. In order to simulate processes like advection, cold air drainage flows and cold air pooling, the NMM 3D model of NOAA/NCEP is modified and extended with detailed fog microphysics. The resulting 3D fog model runs at a horizontal resolution ofkm and a vertical resolution comparable to the 1D models. First results look very promising and are able to reproduce the spatial distribution of fog as it is seen by satellite. With increasing horizontal resolution of numerical weather prediction models, topographical effects on radiation gain importance. With a newly developed parameterization it is possible to consider slope angle, aspect angle, shadows and restricted sky view on the subgrid scale and with negligible computational costs. Verification reveals that RMS and mean error ofm temperature forecasts are generally improved by 0.5 toK
Giustizia e lavoro nelle Summae di Antonino da Firenze, Angelo da Chivasso e Giovanni Battista Trovamala
The Summae confessorum have been often neglected, until today, by legal historians. Nevertheless, such a literature, from the XIIIth cent. onwards, provides materials of great interest, just connecting legal, moral and economic appreciations strictly interwoven in human concrete life. While a sort of monastic culture was initially suspicious of secular labour, mendicants orders, well inserted in urban milieu, made a decisive change of route. The most relevant author was Antonino Pierozzi, bishop of Florence (1389-1459). In his Summa he strongly raises the problem of justice between capitalist employers and subordinate workers, frequently exploited in many ways
Expertise as social institution : internalising third parties into the contract
Deutsche Fassung: Expertise als soziale Institution: Die Internalisierung Dritter in den Vertrag. In: Gert Brüggemeier (Hg.) Liber Amicorum Eike Schmidt. Müller, Heidelberg, 2005, 303-334
Author Correction: Disentangling the multiorbital contributions of excitons by photoemission exciton tomography
Szenische Orte - Mediale Räume
„Szenische Orte - Mediale Räume“ versammelt die Beiträge einer gleichnamigen Vorlesungsreihe am Institut für Medien und Theater der Stiftung Universität Hildesheim. In einem thematisch breit gefächerten Spektrum werden die vielfältigen Funktionen und Bedeutungsmuster des Raumes an so unterschiedlichen medialen Settings wie Text, Bild, Film, Theater, Tanz und Musik untersucht.
Gemeinsam ist den Beiträgen der genaue analytische Blick auf den ästhetischen Gegenstand: Von Peter Stein bis Forced Entertainment, von STAR WARS bis DOGVILLE, von der black box bis zum white cube, vom Kindertheater bis zum Fußballstadion reicht die Bandbreite der Sondierungen und eröffnet dabei eine transhistorische und transdisziplinäre Diskussion zu zentralen Konstituenten der szenischen Künste: Raum und Ort.
INHALT: JAN BERG, Mediale Räume in der Diskursgeschichte • HAJO KURZENBERGER, Das Fußballstadion als (intermedialer) Ereignisraum • HARTWIN GROMES, Anmerkungen zur Raumästhetik der „Schaubühne am Halleschen Ufer“ • MIEKE MATZKE, Strategien des zeitgenössischen „Site Specific Theatre“ • GEESCHE WARTEMANN, Interaktionsraum Kindertheater • JENS ROSELT, Medialität im Theater am Beispiel von Frank Castorfs Dostojewski-Inszenierungen • DAVID ROESNER, Musikalische Spiel-Räume • GERALD SIEGMUND, Der Raum des Körpers im zeitgenössischen Tanz • VOLKER WORTMANN, Bild und Raum • JÖRG METELMANN, Intermedialität und Raum (Lars von Trier) • MATHIAS MERTENS, Persönlichkeitsarchitekturen in Computerspielen und anderem Medienalltag • HANS-OTTO HÜGEL, Der Ausstellungsraum als populärer Ort • ACHIM STRICKER, In-Szenierung und Installation (Heiner Müller, Werner Schwab, Rainald Goetz)
Collected in this volume are papers from a lecture series of the same title held at the Institute for Media and Theatre at the University of Hildesheim. The multiple functions and meanings of space in media as varied as text, image, film, theatre, dance and music are examined across a wide thematic spectrum.
The different contributions have a common focus on the aesthetic subject: topics investigated range from Peter Stein to forced entertainment, from Star Wars to Dogville from the black box to the white cube, from children’s theatre to football grounds, opening a transhistorical and transdisciplinary discussion about the central components of scenic art: space and place
Ambiguity
Ambiguity refers to a decision situation under uncertainty when there is incomplete information about the likelihood of events. Different formal models of this notion have been developed with differing implications about the representation of ambiguity and ambiguity aversion.
When do special interests run rampant ? disentangling the role in banking crises of elections, incomplete information, and checks and balances
The author investigates the political determinants of government decisions that benefit special interest groups - especially government decisions to deal with banking crises. He finds that the better informed the voters, the more proximate elections, and the larger the number of political veto players ( conditional on the costs to voters of relevant policy decision), the smaller the government's fiscal transfer are to the financial sector and the less likely the government is to exercise forbearance in dealing with insolvent financial institutions. The results suggest that policies thatmight be appropriate for mitigating banking crises in the United States might be less effective in settings where voters are less informed, where elections are less competitive, and where there are fewer veto players, because in these settings checks and balances are missing. These policies include: a) Disseminating information about the costs of inefficient government decisions. b) Improving the structure of legislative regulatory oversight. c) Intervening early in insolvent banks. The author concludes that the more veto players there are, the less likely policies are to favor special interest groups (contrary to previous views). Moreover, the closer the elections, the less likely policies are to favor special interest groups.
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