4,063 research outputs found

    Partition des // M[otets] de M. Bernier

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    Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Motets. Voix (1 à 3), instruments, basse continue. Op. 1]Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Accurite fideles. Voix, violons (2), basse continue. Op. 1, no 11]Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Deus misereatur nostri. Voix, basse continue. Op. 1, no 12]Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Toto caelo. Voix, violons (2), basse continue. Op. 1, no 13]Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Alma redemptoris mater. Voix, basse continue. Op. 1, no 14]Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Venite, exultemus Domino. Voix, violons (2), basse continue. Op. 1, no 15]Titre uniforme : Bernier, Nicolas (1665-1734). Compositeur. [Benedictus qui venit. Voix, basse continue. Op. 1, no 16]Comprend : Motet Pour la S.te Vierge A voix Seule et 2. dessus de violons ; Motet Pour tous les Temps // A voix seule ; Motet Pour la nativité de nostre Seigneur ou Elevation // A voix seule avec deux dessus de violons ; Motet Pour La S.te Vierge // A voix seule ; Motet Pour tous Les temps // A voix seule. // deux dessus de violons ; Motet en maniere d'oratoire Pour S.t Benoist. // A voix seuleTitre propre pris au plat supérieur. - Contient 6 motets pour 1 voix avec ou sans symphonie, extraits de l'éd. de Paris : Foucault, 1703. - Réunit : "Accurite fideles" (p. 1) ; "Deus misereatur nostri" (p. 23) ; "Toto coelo quid stella" (p. 31) ; "Alma redemptoris mater" (p. 51) ; "Venite exultemus" (p. 56) ; "Benedictus qui venit" (p. 79). - Table des motets au f. [1]. - Daté d'après les parties séparées de la Collection Toulouse-Philidor (F/Pn Rés. F. 1501-1502). - Rel. en veau fauve aux armes du comte de Toulouse. - C. Massip, La collection Toulouse-Philidor, n° 74Présentation musicale : PartitionAppartient à l’ensemble documentaire : RISM2Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : Philidor0Appartient à l’ensemble documentaire : RISMMssPsaumes (musique) -- +* 1700......- 1799......+:18e siècle:Motets -- +* 1700......- 1799......+:18e siècle

    Juan Bernier: sujeto lector

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    Ilustración: "Nude", AMMLVersión del editor: http://ojs.impossibilia.org/index.php/impossibilia/article/view/121La publicación en 2011 de su Diario contribuye a completar el perfil intelectual de un escritor de la importancia de Juan Bernier. A su interés literario, hay que añadir su utilidad como instrumento para el estudio de su figura y de su obra. El presente artículo propone un acercamiento al Diario y al autor cordobés a partir de las lecturas que en él se consignan.The publication in 2011 of his diary helps to complete the intellectual profile of a writer of the importance of Juan Bernier . To the value as a literary work, it must be added its usefulness as a tool for the study of his figure and his work. This article proposes an approach to the Diary and the author from Cordoba from his readings

    Bernier, M/Sgt. Robert Arnold

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    M/Sgt. Robert Arnold Bernier - ROTC, Varsity Rifle Coach.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/univ_photos/1880/thumbnail.jp

    Theologie portative ou dictionnaire abrege de la religion chretienne. [electronic resource] : Par M. L'Abbe Bernier. Licencie en Theologie.

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    M. l'Abbe Bernier = Paul Heinrich Dietrich von Holbach.The imprint is false; printed in Amsterdam by M. M. Rey (MH-H).Copies known to have been in circulation in Paris, August 1767 (Vercruysse).Vercruysse, J. Bibliographie descriptive des ecrits du baron d'Holbach, 1971Electronic reproduction.English Short Title Catalog,Reproduction of original from Harvard University Houghton Library

    Five object-based sound compositions

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    This text is a commentary on the nature of my principle artistic preoccupations over a period of research-creation spanning 2011 and 2013. The works discussed cover, each in their own way, various approaches to sound composition linked to physical objects. In effect, the object proves to be a fundamental element at the heart of discourse, which, though anchored in sound, is often multi-disciplinary. The object here is thus taken apart in its affective, conceptual, performative, visual, as well as sonic properties. The first part of this text illustrates the nature of the relationship between the physical object and the works submitted for this doctoral thesis. It focuses on the journey of the works: from their genesis in the artist’s collections of objects to their life on stage where the objects are used as visual elements in a performative context. The second part is dedicated to the conceptual and aesthetic content of the works, from which flow the principal elements of their discourse. Here, the relationships between the work, the concept and the sonic material are established, which together make up their aesthetic

    Prevalence, emergence and factors associated with a Viral Papillomatosis and Carcinomatosis Syndrome in wild, reintroduced and captive Western Barred Bandicoots (Perameles Bougainville)

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    Once widespread across western and southern Australia, wild populations of the western barred bandicoot (WBB) are now only found on Bernier and Dorre Islands, Western Australia. Conservation efforts to prevent the extinction of the WBB are presently hampered by a papillomatosis and carcinomatosis syndrome identified in captive and wild bandicoots, associated with infection with the bandicoot papillomatosis carcinomatosis virus type 1 (BPCV1). This study examined the prevalence and distribution of BPCV1 and the associated syndrome in two island and four mainland (reintroduced and captive) WBB populations in Western Australia, and factors that may be associated with susceptibility to this syndrome. BPCV1 and the syndrome were found in the wild WBB population at Red Cliff on Bernier Island, and in mainland populations established from all or a proportion of founder WBBs from Red Cliff. BPCV1 and the syndrome were not found in the wild population on Dorre Island or in the mainland population founded by animals exexclusively from Dorre Island. Findings suggested that BPCV1 and the syndrome were disseminated into mainland WBB populations through the introduction of affected WBBs from Red Cliff. No difference in susceptibility to the syndrome was found between Dorre Island, Bernier Island, and island-cross individuals. Severity of lesions and the number of affected animals observed in captivity was greater than that observed in wild populations. This study provided epidemiological evidence to support the pathological and molecular association between BPCV1 infection and the papillomatosis and carcinomatosis syndrome and revealed increasing age as an additional risk factor for this disease

    Joseph Elzéar Bernier (1852-1934)

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    ... Joseph Elzéar Bernier belonged to the fading era of wooden ships and iron men. His father and grandfather were sea captains and shipbuilders. He attended school in L\u27Islet until he was 14 and then went to sea. Three years later he became master of his vessel. After a hundred voyages to many ports he came ashore to accept the unlikely position of governor of the Quebec jail. This fitted into Bernier\u27s scheme, for it gave him time to read and to study. Since 1872 he had been fascinated by arctic exploration, so now he absorbed all of the published accounts of British, American, Danish, and Norwegian expeditions. In 1898 he gave a lecture before the Quebec Geographical Society expounding on both how he might reach the North Pole by ship and dog-team and how he might sail through the Northwest Passage. This created a stir. He resigned from the jail and started campaigning. ... What appeared to be a key to the realization of his dreams in 1904 was the availability of a stoutly built 650-ton sailing ship with an auxiliary steam engine. This was the Gauss, named for a German astronomer and magnetician, built in Kiel in 1901 for a two-year Antarctic expedition that had been successfully completed. Bernier purchased her for the Canadian government at a bargain price of 75,000andsailedhertoQuebec,whereshewasrenamedArctic.But,alas,thegovernmenthadsurprisinganddisappointingplansforBernier.InsteadofheadinghisownexpeditiontotheNorthPole,hewastoserveonlyasmasteroftheArcticforayearlongpatroloftheNorthwestMountedPoliceintoHudsonBaytocontrolforeigntradersandwhalers.However,thisinterludegaveBernierexperienceinarctictravelandliving,standinghimingoodsteadforthefuture.Hisshipperformedwell,sohewasnowreadyforwhatevernorthernresponsibilitieshecouldassume....Onhis19081909expeditionBerniertooktheArcticthroughhalfthelengthofM2˘7ClureStrait.ItwasinvitinglyopenandhemighthaverealizedhisdreamofsailingthroughtheNorthwestPassage,whichRoaldAmundsenhadalreadydonewithamuchsmallervesselbyamoresoutherlyroutein19031906,butBernierlackedauthorizationtoproceedandreluctantlyturnedback.Onhisnextvoyagehehadtheauthorization,butthistimeM2˘7ClureStraitwasicechoked....In1912,...hehadlefttheserviceofthegovernmenttoengageinaprivategoldhuntingandfurtradingventurearoundPondInlet,BaffinIsland,...In1922theArcticwasrefurbishedforthefirstofaseriesofannualgovernmentexpeditionstotheEasternArcticArchipelago.Bernier,whohadfoundnoBaffingoldandwasnow70yearsold,wasgladtobeplacedinchargeofhisoldshipagain.Thetasksoftheexpeditionsweretomaintainsovereigntyamongthearcticislands(showingtheflag,asitwere),establishnewpostsoftheRoyalCanadianMountedPoliceandreprovisionandrotatethemenatexistingones,seetothehealthandwelfareoftheresidentInuit,andconductscientificinvestigations....In1927BerniercommandedtwotugstowingadredgeandsteelscowfromHalifaxtotheHudsonBayportofChurchill.Thatsameyearhewasgrantedagovernmentpensionof75,000 and sailed her to Quebec, where she was renamed Arctic. But, alas, the government had surprising and disappointing plans for Bernier. Instead of heading his own expedition to the North Pole, he was to serve only as master of the Arctic for a year-long patrol of the Northwest Mounted Police into Hudson Bay to control foreign traders and whalers. However, this interlude gave Bernier experience in arctic travel and living, standing him in good stead for the future. His ship performed well, so he was now ready for whatever northern responsibilities he could assume. ... On his 1908-1909 expedition Bernier took the Arctic through half the length of M\u27Clure Strait. It was invitingly open and he might have realized his dream of sailing through the Northwest Passage, which Roald Amundsen had already done with a much smaller vessel by a more southerly route in 1903-1906, but Bernier lacked authorization to proceed and reluctantly turned back. On his next voyage he had the authorization, but this time M\u27Clure Strait was ice-choked. ... In 1912, ... he had left the service of the government to engage in a private gold-hunting and fur-trading venture around Pond Inlet, Baffin Island, ... In 1922 the Arctic was refurbished for the first of a series of annual government expeditions to the Eastern Arctic Archipelago. Bernier, who had found no Baffin gold and was now 70 years old, was glad to be placed in charge of his old ship again. The tasks of the expeditions were to maintain sovereignty among the arctic islands (showing the flag, as it were), establish new posts of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and reprovision and rotate the men at existing ones, see to the health and welfare of the resident Inuit, and conduct scientific investigations. ... In 1927 Bernier commanded two tugs towing a dredge and steel scow from Halifax to the Hudson Bay port of Churchill. That same year he was granted a government pension of 2,400 annually, plus a medal, rewarding him for what he had done to strengthen Canada\u27s title to arctic islands whose potential value was still beyond anyone\u27s dreams - except perhaps his own. On December 26, 1934, at the age of 82, Joseph Elzéar Bernier died. Despite having been thwarted in his early ambition of going to the North Pole or through the Northwest Passage, he had earned a niche in the history of Canadian arctic exploration

    Groupe V/b Rapports sur le mémoire de M. Claude Van de Walle

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    Bernier Georges, Homès-Van Schoor Germaine. Groupe V/b Rapports sur le mémoire de M. Claude Van de Walle . In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, tome 71, 1985. pp. 366-368

    Concours annuel de 1984. Groupe V/b. Rapports sur le mémoire de M. Fabrice Franck

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    Sironval Cyril, Homès Marcel Victor, Bernier Georges. Concours annuel de 1984. Groupe V/b. Rapports sur le mémoire de M. Fabrice Franck. In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, tome 70, 1984. pp. 669-671

    Groupe V/b Rapports sur le mémoire de M. Claude Van de Walle

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    Bernier Georges, Homès-Van Schoor Germaine. Groupe V/b Rapports sur le mémoire de M. Claude Van de Walle . In: Bulletin de la Classe des sciences, tome 71, 1985. pp. 366-368
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