1,722,078 research outputs found

    Preface

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    Preface

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    The essays collected in these two volumes provide evidence of Patrizia Lendinara’s wide expertise and her impact in distinct academic fields, ranging from late antiquity to the early and late Middle Ages. The papers are offered as a tribute to Patrizia’s scholarship by colleagues from Italy and abroad, some of whom were once her students. The theme of this Festschrift was chosen in view of the honouree’s keen interest in and contribution to the study of the glosses and the lexicon of Germanic languages. Accordingly, although the essays collected in these volumes vary quite widely in both style and structure, they all ultimately focus on the various facets of glossography and lexicography of the medieval Germanic world

    Studies on Late Antique and Medieval Germanic Glossography and Lexicography in Honour of Patrizia Lendinara

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    This is a multilingual two-volume collection assembling 43 contributions on late antique and early medieval Germanic glossography and lexicography by the major experts in the field from Europe and North America. The essays present cutting edge research on a diverse of range of topics concerning the lexicon and the glossographical production in the late antique and early medieval Germanic world with a special emphasis on the relationship between the latter and the legacy of the classical world. The volumes are complemented with a very useful set of indexes (index of manuscripts and index of authors and works)

    Nuove paure (epidemie)

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    Rizzo (C.), Un centenaire étudié au moyen du test de Rorschach, Arch. internat Neurol.,1950, n°10

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    Anzieu Didier. Rizzo (C.), Un centenaire étudié au moyen du test de Rorschach, Arch. internat Neurol.,1950, n°10. In: Bulletin du groupement français du Rorschach, n°1, 1952. p. 27

    Rizzo (C.), Un centenaire étudié au moyen du test de Rorschach, Arch. internat Neurol.,1950, n°10

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    Anzieu Didier. Rizzo (C.), Un centenaire étudié au moyen du test de Rorschach, Arch. internat Neurol.,1950, n°10. In: Bulletin du groupement français du Rorschach, n°1, 1952. p. 27

    Old English byrððīnenu: the Anglo-Saxon midwife

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    Midwives were clearly viewed as professionalized figures in the Mediterranean world of antiquity and late antiquity and they were responsible for women’s healthcare, such as gynecological and obstetrical needs. They were referred to in Roman law, admonished in Christian edicts and memorialized in statues and inscriptions. Their status is attested to by medical texts specifically intended for midwives’ use dating from at least the third century B.C. to the sixth century A.D. According to Green, professional midwives disappeared along with the slow disintegration of the urban environments that supported medical specialization and reemerged as a specialized profession only in the thirteenth century, first in larger towns and then in smaller rural areas. We might surmise a similar scenario for Anglo-Saxon England, although textual References are very limited, related lexical items very scarce, and the figure of the Anglo-Saxon midwife altogether still little known and appreciated
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