495 research outputs found
Sonata Es-Dur: für Harfe, Violine und Basso: Partitur
Der sächsische Premierminister Graf von Brühl gründete 1735 in Warschau eine eigene Hofkapelle. Brühl engagierte 1735 zunächst sechs Musiker, unter ihnen den Kapellmeister Gottlob Harrer sowie den Cembalisten Georg Gebel, den Cellisten Müller und den Lautenisten Johann Kropffgans, alle aus Breslau. Die Brühlsche Kapelle wuchs bis 1746 auf 15 und bis 1765 gar auf 24 Mitglieder an. Da sich der Hof zwischen Dezember 1734 und August 1736 sowie dann ab 1738 aller zwei Jahre zu den polnischen Reichstagen immer mehrere Monate in Warschau aufhielt, wurden die Musiker der Brühlschen Kapelle auch an die »Kleine Polnische Capelle« ausgeliehen, wie überhaupt die Grenzziehungen zwischen beiden Orchestern nicht streng waren. Während der Aufenthalte in Sachsen waren die Musiker auf den Brühlschen Schlössern, besonders in Pförten in der Niederlausitz, tätig. Mit 26 Jahren wurde Georg Gebel als Komponist und Cembalist Mitglied der privaten Kammermusik des Grafen Brühl. Anlass und Interpreten der vorliegenden Triosonate sind nicht bekannt. Die Vermeidung von leiterfremden Tönen und die idiomatische Schreibweise deuten auf die Verwendung einer einreihigen Harfe hin. Da bisher jedoch kein Dresdner Instrumentalist nachgewiesen werden konnte, der eine solche Harfe spielte, könnte Gebel das vorliegende Werk auch für eine Liebhaberin oder einen Liebhaber des Instruments komponiert haben, um es in einem Salon in einem der Brühlschen Schlösser zum Klingen zu bringen
Appendix – Supplemental material for Unemployment, well-being, and the moderating role of education policies: A multilevel study
Supplemental material, Appendix for Unemployment, well-being, and the moderating role of education policies: A multilevel study by Björn Högberg, Jonas Voßemer, Michael Gebel and Mattias Strandh in International Journal of Comparative Sociology</p
Sonata Es-Dur
Der sächsische Premierminister Graf von Brühl gründete 1735 in Warschau eine eigene Hofkapelle. Brühl engagierte 1735 zunächst sechs Musiker, unter ihnen den Kapellmeister Gottlob Harrer sowie den Cembalisten Georg Gebel, den Cellisten Müller und den Lautenisten Johann Kropffgans, alle aus Breslau. Die Brühlsche Kapelle wuchs bis 1746 auf 15 und bis 1765 gar auf 24 Mitglieder an. Da sich der Hof zwischen Dezember 1734 und August 1736 sowie dann ab 1738 aller zwei Jahre zu den polnischen Reichstagen immer mehrere Monate in Warschau aufhielt, wurden die Musiker der Brühlschen Kapelle auch an die »Kleine Polnische Capelle« ausgeliehen, wie überhaupt die Grenzziehungen zwischen beiden Orchestern nicht streng waren. Während der Aufenthalte in Sachsen waren die Musiker auf den Brühlschen Schlössern, besonders in Pförten in der Niederlausitz, tätig. Mit 26 Jahren wurde Georg Gebel als Komponist und Cembalist Mitglied der privaten Kammermusik des Grafen Brühl. Anlass und Interpreten der vorliegenden Triosonate sind nicht bekannt. Die Vermeidung von leiterfremden Tönen und die idiomatische Schreibweise deuten auf die Verwendung einer einreihigen Harfe hin. Da bisher jedoch kein Dresdner Instrumentalist nachgewiesen werden konnte, der eine solche Harfe spielte, könnte Gebel das vorliegende Werk auch für eine Liebhaberin oder einen Liebhaber des Instruments komponiert haben, um es in einem Salon in einem der Brühlschen Schlösser zum Klingen zu bringen
Gebel Adda and its environs: 50 years on
[First paragraph] Following the 2015 Kirwan Memorial Lecture delivered by Dr Grzymski (see also Grzymski 2010) this
further brief article concerning the ARCE excavations at Gebel Adda has been prepared drawing on
personal records of one of the participants (RH) and information provided by Horst Jaritz and the late
Richard Edlund1 relating to a range of archaeological material in and around Gebel Adda. This
summarises a much more extensive series of notes prepared by the first author (RH) along with
drawings and photographs. With the aid of aerial photographs from the collections of George Gerster
a composite map of Gebel Adda and its environs has also been prepared (fig.1) indicating some of the
main sites in and around the ARCE concession including the outlines of the main cemeteries. It is
hoped that this may be useful for those working with the various published reports which lack
supporting mapping/plans
Gebel Adda and its environs: 50 years on
[First paragraph] Following the 2015 Kirwan Memorial Lecture delivered by Dr Grzymski (see also Grzymski 2010) this
further brief article concerning the ARCE excavations at Gebel Adda has been prepared drawing on
personal records of one of the participants (RH) and information provided by Horst Jaritz and the late
Richard Edlund1 relating to a range of archaeological material in and around Gebel Adda. This
summarises a much more extensive series of notes prepared by the first author (RH) along with
drawings and photographs. With the aid of aerial photographs from the collections of George Gerster
a composite map of Gebel Adda and its environs has also been prepared (fig.1) indicating some of the
main sites in and around the ARCE concession including the outlines of the main cemeteries. It is
hoped that this may be useful for those working with the various published reports which lack
supporting mapping/plans
Remote sensing of endangered archaeology on Gebel Ataqah, Egypt
This paper reports on a recent survey of a range of archaeological sites on and around Gebel Ataqah, a mountain area to the west of Suez. These sites were identified through the analysis of publicly available satellite imagery, principally Google Earth (GE), as part of the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa (EAMENA) project, supplemented by historical references to the area and notes published by earlier travellers. The absence of existing archaeological data is due to a military presence in this area, from at least the 1950s, limiting access and exploration. The results of this survey show high levels of archaeological potential across large parts of Gebel Ataqah that require more detailed analysis on the ground, in an important, yet often underexplored, region. A series of major current and future threats to these archaeological sites are also identified which, alongside the presented survey data, will inform any future heritage management schemes
Supplementary table -Supplemental material for Long-term changes in liver elasticity in hepatitis C virus-infected patients with sustained virologic response after treatment with direct-acting antivirals
Supplemental material, Supplementary table for Long-term changes in liver elasticity in hepatitis C virus-infected patients with sustained virologic response after treatment with direct-acting antivirals by Veronika Pietsch, Katja Deterding, Dina Attia, Kristina Imeen Ringe, Benjamin Heidrich, Markus Cornberg, Michael Gebel, Michael Peter Manns, Heiner Wedemeyer and Andrej Potthoff in United European Gastroenterology Journal</p
Transitions to Adulthood in the Middle East and North Africa : Young Women's Rising?
This book offers new insights on young women's situation in the Middle East and Northern Africa. Adopting a life course perspective Gebel and Heyne develop a general micro-macro theoretical framework for understanding the chances and barriers young women face in their most crucial life period, namely the transition to adulthood. Drawing on large-scale individual-level longitudinal data from Egypt, Iran, Jordan, and Syria, the authors describe the incidence, timing, and characteristics of central transitions in the education system, the transition from education to work and family formation. They find that there is no standard pathway to adulthood, yet rather a great variety of individual early life courses inducing a high level of social inequality among young women. The book identifies a set of individual-level, familial, and contextual factors that hinder or pave young women's way in the different life domains and shows strong interrelationships between early life course conditions and transitions
Gebel Adda Cemeteries 3 and 4 (1963-1964)
The excavation team of the American Research Center in
Egypt, under the direction of Dr Nicholas B. Millet, first
arrived at Gebel Adda in January 1963, for what were to
be four excavation seasons. Excavations started in Cemetery
1, which included numerous tumuli, extending over
c. 450m from the southern end of the concession to north
east of the Citadel (Millet 1963). Work began in the south
of the cemetery and excavated c. 127 tumuli, dated to the
later post-Meroitic (X-Group) period. In the same area,
amongst the tumuli, c. 30 medieval (Christian) graves were
also found, thought likely to date to the earliest period
of Christianization at Gebel Adda. Four examples of the
double domed mud-brick tombs of the post-medieval
(Islamic) period were also excavated in Cemetery One.
In March 1963 excavations were also begun in Cemetery
3, lying some 160m south east of the Citadel hill (Figure
1, Plate 1), an area covered with much wind-blown sand,
exposing c. 400 tombs during the first season (Millet 1963,
154). This work was continued in the second (1963-1964)
season (Millet 1964) and the third season, for which no
preliminary report was published (see also Millet 1967b;
1968; 2005; Grzymski 2010).
Some preliminary observations of this area were published
as the excavations were still underway by Millet (Millet 1963;
1964), but little else relating to this important work has yet
been published. However, the first author (RH), as a member
of the ARCE team, can throw some further light on some features of the excavations. Most importantly, having carried
out much of the original preparation of site plans, it has been
possible to reconstruct here some partial plans of Cemetery
3, which together with personal photographs of the site
provide some useful new information concerning this part of
the Gebel Adda excavations. Until the surviving site archives
are more fully studied, and hopefully published, this brief
report, as with previous reports (Huber and Edwards 2009;
2010), can provide a few further insights into the fascinating
and clearly complex history of the Gebel Adda cemeteries
The Tomb of Petosiris at Tuna el-Gebel. A study of Egyptian and Greek aspects of the tomb's decorative program
The BA thesis deals with scenes from the tomb of Petosiris in Tuna el-Gebel, which combine Egyptian, Greek and even some Persian iconographic elements. The author will analyse individual scenes, define specific elements and aim to answer two main questions. The first one concerns whether the degree of the use of non-Egyptian (iconographic) elements relates to the motif of the scene or its location within the tomb. The second question regards the motives that might have led Petosiris to use these elements in that very place.Bakalářská práce se zabývá vybranými scénami z Petosiridovy hrobky na pohřebišti v Tuna el- Gebel, které kombinují egyptské, řecké, a dokonce i některé perské ikonografické prvky. Autorka rozebere každou scénu zvlášť, určí jednotlivé prvky a následně se pokusí zodpovědět otázku, zda míra použití neegyptských prvků souvisí s motivem scény, případně jejím umístěním v rámci hrobky, a jaké důvody mohly Petosirida vést k jejich použití na daném místě.Český egyptologický ústavCzech Institute of EgyptologyFaculty of ArtsFilozofická fakult
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