463 research outputs found

    Theatrum D.N. Iesu Christi : atrociorum cruciatuum c. lectori spectatori propositum /

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    Includes index.Signatures: )(⁴ A-Z⁴. First 2 leaves of 1st gathering are unsigned engravings, last 2 leaves are signed )(2 and )(3.Engraved t.p., signed R.C. after M.K. (Matthäus or Melchior Küsel?). Engraved port. of Joachim von Gravenegg, Abbot of Fulda, to whom the work is dedicated. Two full-page engravings by Georg Andreas Wolfgang and 8 by another hand. Versos of these 10 ill. are blank & the leaves are not included in paging. Woodcut in-text ill., Y3v. Head- and tail-pieces, initials.Probably published in Augsburg. See VD17.VD17Mode of access: Internet.Inscription on t.p. of 1st title: B.M.V. in Salem (Cistercian Abbey of Salem, Baden). Devotional inscription in Latin on front free endpaper.Binding: old vellum. Rebacked, retaining original backstrip with title & author written at head. Page edges blue. Two pairs of slits for ties at foredge.Bound with: Emblemata Iosephina / Karl Stengel (Augsburg : V. Aperger, 1658) -- Hierologia in qua loca sacra / Karl Stengel (Ingolstadt : G. Haenlin, 1653) -- Revocatoriae tremellianae revocatio ad calculos veritatis et modestiae / Christoph Ott (Augsburg : V. Aperger, 1662)

    After Tocqueville – the curious adventures of Bernard-Henri Lévy and Don Watson

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    Review Details Date: 5 July 2013 Author: D.N. Byrne Publisher: Australian Review of Public Affairs (ARPA) Owning Institution(s): University of Sydney Book Details Title: American Vertigo: On the Road from Newport to Guantánamo (in the Footsteps of Alexis de Tocqueville) Publisher: Gibson Square Date Published: 2006 Author/s: Bernard-Henri Lévy Additional Books:  Title: American Journeys Publisher: Vintage Books Australia Author/s: Don Watson In 1830 and 1831, as the facts about the New World increasingly challenged the myths about the New World, the French political theorist, Alexis de Tocqueville, journeyed across the nascent American democracy. Two hundred years after de Toqueville’s birth, a French philosopher and an Australian historian made their own journeys around the United States, recording observations and reflections. The trope of the stranger in a strange land shapes their observations and reflections upon the forms of American life that they encounter—yet while both ostensibly write about American society, the reader finds narratives of two very different Americas. Read D.N. Byrne\u27s full article in the Australian Review of Public Affairs. Image: book cover

    Province in D.N. Mamin-Sibiryak's and A.P. Chekhov's Works: on the Topology of Fate

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    Рассматриваются творческие сближения писателей одного поколения, выходцев из провинции А. П. Чехова и Д. Н. Мамина-Сибиряка. Анализируется общее и различное в их творчестве, ярко проявившееся при обращении к теме заводского труда и жизни провинциальной России.The author reviews the artistic convergence between the two representatives of the same generation and provincial background, A.P. Chekhov and D.N. Mamin-Sibiryak, analyzing the similarities and differences in their creative work, reflected in their treatment of factory labour and life in provincial Russia

    One day in the life of David Hicks

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    David Hicks has just been cleared of the charges he faced in a US Military Commission, while imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay. His counsel, Michael Mori, has told the story of Hicks’ case: the problematic constitutionality of the military commissions and the charges laid under their authority; how Hicks was treated—and abused—by the military authorities; and the apparent indifference of the Howard Government to Hicks’ predicament. It’s a story that reveals and warns in equal measure … Read D.N. Byrne’s compelling review essay of Michael Mori’s book In the Company of Cowards: Bush, Howard and Injustice at Guantanamo in the Australian Review of Public Affairs.   Title: In the Company of Cowards: Bush, Howard and Injustice at Guantanamo Publisher: Penguin Viking Books Date Published: 2014 Author: Michael Mori Image: book cove

    Maslyuzhenko D.N. Turko-Mongol Traditions in the “State of Nomadic Uzbeks” of Abu al-Khair Khan

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    The author of this article identifies the daily and political traditions in the Khanate of Abu al-Khair, which researchers traditionally call the “State of nomadic Uzbeks”. This State was created in the south of Western Siberia in the 1430’s and annexed by military means to the land of Shiban’s (the younger brother of Batu) descendants. The overwhelming majority of researchers consider it as a Muslim State since its very foundation, substantiating their allegations by indication both on the reading of khutba in honor of Khan after he took the “throne of Sain Khan” and on the presence of the sheikhs and Sufis in his entourage. At the same time, the authority of Abu al-Khair had the strong support of nomadic elite of more than twenty tribes. Precisely this elite, its inquiries and interests, which were advocated on the nobility councils, formed the existing political and daily traditions. These traditions reflect the preservation of Turko-Mongol customs among nomadic populations. We can find analogies of these practices in the earlier customs among the precursors of post-Golden Horde State, i.e., in the Mongol Empire and the ulus of Jochi. Traditions of the Abu al-Khair’s Khanate represented a phenomenon of cultural inertia, which were restored in the conditions of Islamization and could become the adats. This effect is particularly significant in view of the specific attitude of Sufi tariqats to the phenomena of social life. In political terms, of particular importance among these was the restoration of the Toy and the related kurultay that could take place in accordance with the existing steppe (animals) calendar. The khans restored the ritual of robes and belts’ distribution as the main mechanism for redeployment of posts and responsibilities among the steppe aristocracy. Military tradition was also focused on samples of the previous time, which was particularly manifested in the selection of wings and avant-garde. In the course of military operations, there was the prevalent practice of magical rites known since the early Middle Ages and aimed at influencing the weather by means of the magic stone “yada” and Yadachi-sorcerers
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