3,965 results on '"RELICS"'
Search Results
202. A Brief Analysis of the Summit of the Future.
- Subjects
WORLD War II ,SUSTAINABLE development ,TWENTY-first century ,PRIME ministers ,RELICS - Published
- 2024
203. Using animals : the use of non-human animals from the material to the metaphorical, 1100-1380
- Author
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Glen, Abigail Lucy, Da Rold, Orietta, and Knox, Philip
- Subjects
animal studies ,medieval literature ,kilpeck ,ancrene wisse ,pigs ,antisemitism ,butchery ,hunting manuals ,Fitzwilliam MS 20 ,manuscripts ,animals ,judensau ,croxton play of the sacrament ,bestiaries ,relics ,st bartholomew ,st fanuel ,prejudice ,medieval art ,sculpture ,fact of interaction ,hum-animal studies ,critical animal studies ,codicology - Abstract
This thesis applies Animal Studies theory to a selection of texts from medieval literature and visual culture. In particular, it is concerned with the ways that the 'fact of interaction' impacts on an evaluation of non-human animal (NHA) and human-animal relationships. The thesis re-examines a selection of medieval texts by foregrounding the experience of the non-human animal in the human sphere, looking at how the two interact and seeking to emphasise the importance of NHAs. As the thesis progresses, I move from the material (manuscript skin; the flesh of animals in hunting and butchery) to the metaphorical (the use of animal sculpture and religious imagery). Although much of the thesis focusses on the ways in which animals are used in positive or affirming ways, I close with a consideration of the ways creatures were used to spread prejudice. I use a wide variety of sources (pragmatic manuscripts, images, sculpture, religious texts, lay texts, poetry) to demonstrate how far-reaching this concept is, and open up new avenues for scholarship. The concept of 'use' is also key here, as it includes both the pragmatic utilisation of animal bodies, but also the use of animals, as Lévi-Strauss had it, 'to think with'. In sum, I emphasise the importance of non-human animal experience in medieval human experience, and use relatively new critical apparatus from the field of Animal Studies to deepen our understanding of medieval texts.
- Published
- 2019
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204. Mimas: Frozen Fragment, Ring Relic, or Emerging Ocean World?
- Author
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Rhoden, Alyssa Rose
- Subjects
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OCEAN , *RELICS , *SATURN (Planet) - Abstract
Mimas, the smallest and innermost of Saturn's mid-sized moons, has a heavily cratered surface devoid of the intricate fracture systems of its neighbor, Enceladus. However, Cassini measurements identified a signature of an ocean under Mimas' ice shell, although a frozen ice shell over a rocky interior could not be ruled out. The Mimas ocean hypothesis has stimulated inquiry into Mimas' geologic history and orbital evolution. Here, we summarize the results of these investigations, which (perhaps surprisingly) are consistent with an ocean-bearing Mimas as long as it is geologically young. In that case, a ring origin for Mimas is favored over primordial accretion. An independently developed model for the formation of a gap in Saturn's rings provides a potential mechanism for generating a late-stage ocean within Mimas and may have assisted in the development of Enceladus' ocean and associated geologic activity. Rather than a battered relic, Mimas may be the youngest ocean moon in the Saturn system, destined to join Enceladus as an active world in the future. The presence of oceans within Saturn's mid-sized moons also has implications for the habitability of Uranus' moons; the Uranus system was chosen as the highest priority target for the next NASA Flagship-class mission. Models of Mimas' tides and rotation state support a present-day internal ocean. Mimas' craters, impact basin, and lack of widespread tectonism are compatible with a stable/warming ocean. The formation of the Cassini Division within Saturn's rings provides a potential pathway to a present-day ocean within Mimas. If Mimas has an ocean today, it is geologically young. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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205. Key to the conservation of calligraphy and painting relics in collection: proposing a lighting damage evaluation method.
- Author
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Wei, Zhihui, Feng, Zhichao, and Tan, Huijiao
- Subjects
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CALLIGRAPHY , *PRESERVATION of painting , *SPECTRAL imaging , *ACTION spectrum , *LIGHT emitting diodes , *EVALUATION methodology , *RELICS - Abstract
As an important supporting material for calligraphy and painting relics in collections, the silk substrate is generally in acidification. And owing to an extremely high light response, it is very prone to different forms of lighting damage, including color and mechanical aspects. Considering that the Light Emitting Diode (LED) with flexible spectral compositions is widely used in the lighting environment of collections, the spectral responsivity of acidified silk substrates is the core issue concerning the long-term conservation of calligraphy and painting relics. In this study, based on the accelerated aging experiment of nine narrowband LEDs with different wavelengths (λ) in the visible range on silk samples with different acidification degrees (pH values), the infrared spectrum was measured non periodically. Processed with the Principal Component Analysis (PCA), the obtained ΔPC1 was used to evaluate the lighting damage of silk samples. Based on the damage change curve, its spectral responsivity function, that is, the mathematical relationship between lighting damage and λ and pH values, was further fitted. Combined with the previous research on the spectral responsivity of colorants, an evaluation method for lighting damage was proposed, which is the key to the conservation of calligraphy and painting relics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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206. INSPIRE: INvestigating Stellar Population In RElics – IV. The initial mass function slope in relics.
- Author
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Martín-Navarro, Ignacio, Spiniello, C, Tortora, C, Coccato, L, D'Ago, G, Ferré-Mateu, A, Pulsoni, C, Hartke, J, Arnaboldi, M, Hunt, L, Napolitano, N R, Scognamiglio, D, and Spavone, M
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STELLAR initial mass function , *STELLAR populations , *DWARF stars , *RELICS , *STAR formation , *MILKY Way - Abstract
In the last decade, growing evidence has emerged supporting a non-universal stellar initial mass function (IMF) in massive galaxies, with a larger number of dwarf stars with respect to the Milky Way (bottom-heavy IMF). However, a consensus about the mechanisms that cause IMF variations is yet to be reached. Recently, it has been suggested that stars formed early-on in cosmic time, via a star formation burst, could be characterized by a bottom-heavy IMF. A promising way to confirm this is to use relics, ultra-compact massive galaxies, almost entirely composed by these 'pristine' stars. The INvestigating Stellar Population In RElics (INSPIRE) Project aims at assembling a large sample of confirmed relics, that can serve as laboratory to investigate on the conditions of star formation in the first 1–3 Gyr of the Universe. In this third INSPIRE paper, we build a high signal-to-noise spectrum from five relics, and one from five galaxies with similar sizes, masses, and kinematical properties, but characterized by a more extended star formation history (non-relics). Our detailed stellar population analysis suggests a systematically bottom-heavier IMF slope for relics than for non-relics, adding new observational evidence for the non-universality of the IMF at various redshifts and further supporting the above proposed physical scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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207. Millicharged relics reveal massless dark photons.
- Author
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Berlin, Asher, Dror, Jeff A., Gan, Xucheng, and Ruderman, Joshua T.
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PHOTONS , *DARK matter , *RELICS , *ELECTROMAGNETISM , *PARTICLE physics - Abstract
The detection of massless kinetically-mixed dark photons is notoriously difficult, as the effect of this mixing can be removed by a field redefinition in vacuum. In this work, we study the prospect of detecting massless dark photons in the presence of a cosmic relic directly charged under this dark electromagnetism. Such millicharged particles, in the form of dark matter or dark radiation, generate an effective dark photon mass that drives photon-to-dark photon oscillations in the early universe. We also study the prospect for such models to alleviate existing cosmological constraints on massive dark photons, enlarging the motivation for direct tests of this parameter space using precision terrestrial probes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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208. Initial opening of the Neotethyan Ocean in SE Asia: Constraints from Triassic magmatism and sedimentation.
- Author
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Shili Peng, Touping Peng, Weiming Fan, Guochun Zhao, Xiaohan Dong, Yongmin Liu, Limin Wu, Kyaing Seing, Hnin Min Soe, and Me Me Aung
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OCEAN , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *OPHIOLITES , *MAGMATISM , *ZIRCON , *RELICS - Abstract
How the Neotethyan Ocean evolved and extended southwards into Southeast Asia remains controversial. The paleographical correlation between India and the SE Asian blocks and/or terranes before the opening of the Neotethys and the initial opening time of the Neotethys is still unknown. The lack of this knowledge hampers our further understanding of the tectonic evolution of global Neotethys. Here we present a combined study on Triassic magmatism in the Tengchong Block and Triassic sedimentation in the Myitkyina area, located on the two sides of the Tagaung-Myitkyina Ophiolite Belt of northern Myanmar. Our results coupled with previous data demonstrate that a Triassic continental magmatic arc developed in the Tengchong Block and that the Triassic Myitkyina sedimentary sequence was part of the Tethyan Himalayan Langjiexue Group in northern India. Moreover, the Tengchong Triassic magmatic arc provided important detrital inputs to the whole Langjiexue Group of northern India. Such a provenance is the best explanation for the Permian--Triassic detrital zircons of the Langjuexue Group. Together, we propose that the Tagaung-Myitkyina Ophiolites in northern Myanmar are the relics of the Neotethyan Ocean rather than the Mesotethyan Ocean (Bangong-Nujiang Ocean) in SE Asia, and that the initial opening time of the Neotethys was the Early Jurassic of 200-190 Ma. Then, the earliest (185-165 Ma) intra-oceanic arc akin to the Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc in the West Pacific, developed soon after the Late Triassic opening of the Neotethys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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209. Martyrs and Madonnas: Inácio de Azevedo, the Brazil Martyrs, and the Global Circulation of the Madonna of Santa Maria Maggiore.
- Author
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Nelles, Paul
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MARTYRS , *CULTS , *NINETEENTH century , *JESUIT missions , *ROMANIES , *MISSIONARIES - Abstract
The article offers a revisionist account of the early circulation of copies of the Madonna of Santa Maria Maggiore, known since the nineteenth century as the Salus Populi Romani. Traditionally, the propulsion of the image into global circulation has been attributed variously to Pius V or Francisco Borja, the third Superior General of the Society of Jesus. The article argues that the circulation of the Saint Luke Madonna, as it was known at the time, was closely tied to the martyr's cult that grew up around the Jesuit missionary Inácio de Azevedo and the so-called Brazil Martyrs, a group of Jesuits murdered by Calvinist corsairs off the Canary Islands in 1570. Azevedo had intended to carry a copy of the Roman icon to Brazil, a copy that perished at sea with Azevedo and the party of Jesuit missionaries. The article suggests that the popularity of the image among Jesuits in Europe and the overseas missions was fueled by the nascent martyr's cult that followed Azevedo's death. Painted copies of the Saint Luke Madonna came to function, together with relics of the Eleven Thousand Virgins of Cologne, as proxies for the missing material remains of the martyred Jesuits. The article argues that while the distribution of the image was globally extensive, circulation was restricted to an internal Jesuit martyr's cult. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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210. Genome-Wide Identification of Gene Loss Events Suggests Loss Relics as a Potential Source of Functional lncRNAs in Humans.
- Author
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Wen, Zheng-Yang, Kang, Yu-Jian, Ke, Lan, Yang, De-Chang, and Gao, Ge
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GENE expression ,LINCRNA ,GENETIC variation ,GENES ,RELICS - Abstract
Gene loss is a prevalent source of genetic variation in genome evolution. Calling loss events effectively and efficiently is a critical step for systematically characterizing their functional and phylogenetic profiles genome wide. Here, we developed a novel pipeline integrating orthologous inference and genome alignment. Interestingly, we identified 33 gene loss events that give rise to evolutionarily novel long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) that show distinct expression features and could be associated with various functions related to growth, development, immunity, and reproduction, suggesting loss relics as a potential source of functional lncRNAs in humans. Our data also demonstrated that the rates of protein gene loss are variable among different lineages with distinct functional biases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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211. Study on the Performance of Acrylic Polyurethane for the Protection of Handwriting on Paper Relics.
- Author
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Mao, Tan, Li, Xufeng, Shi, Xiaoting, Hu, Ying, Zha, Junyan, Luo, Xueke, and Cheng, Youliang
- Subjects
POLYURETHANES ,HANDWRITING ,RELICS ,PERFORMANCE theory ,LASER microscopy ,CARBON nanofibers - Abstract
There are many important cultural relics in China, including many paper relics. Therefore, it is particularly important to find methods of protecting the handwriting in paper relics. This study focuses on the effects acrylic polyurethane materials have on preserving handwriting in paper relics by examining the color change and diffusion of handwriting before and after reinforcement treatments on handwriting materials, including ink, carbon ink, blue-black ink, pure blue ink, red ink, and pencil. The acrylic polyurethane materials have a certain degree of stability and enhance the handwriting of paper relics. We analyzed the acrylic polyurethane reinforcement material in terms of acid resistance, alkali resistance, oxidation resistance, dry heat aging resistance, and durability. The experimental results show that the optimal reinforcement concentration is within 15% for ink, 10% for carbon ink, 20% for blue-black ink, 15% to 20% for pure blue ink, and 3% for red ink and pencil. Finally, the surface of the reinforced paper and handwriting were observed through laser microscopy, SEM, EDS, and infrared spectroscopy and the protective effect of acrylic polyurethane reinforcement material on handwriting was determined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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212. K-Means++ Clustering Algorithm in Categorization of Glass Cultural Relics.
- Author
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Meng, Jie, Yu, Ziyang, Cai, Yuxin, and Wang, Xiuling
- Subjects
PRINCIPAL components analysis ,RELICS ,GLASS ,K-means clustering ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
We used statistical methods to study the classification of high-potassium glass and lead–barium glass and analyzed the correlation between the chemical composition of different types of glass samples. We investigated the categorization methodology of glass cultural relics, conducted a principal component analysis on the chemical composition data of the glass, and developed a case-specific clustering algorithm (K-Means++) to further categorize the glass cultural relics. K-Means++ was developed to reduce the sensitivity of a traditional K-Means clustering algorithm, by choosing the next clustering center with probability inversely proportional to the distance from the current clustering center. Then we verified the validity of the six subcategories we defined by inertia and silhouette score and evaluated the sensitivity of the clustering algorithm. We obtained a robustness ratio that maintained over 0.9 in the random noise test and a silhouette score of 0.525 in the clustering, which illustrated significant divergence among different clusters and showed the result is reasonable. With our proposed algorithm and classification result, a more comprehensive understanding of glass relics can be gained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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213. A failing anthropology of colonial failure: following a driver's uniform found at Amani research station, Tanzania.
- Author
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Geissler, P. Wenzel
- Subjects
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ANTHROPOLOGY , *LABORATORIES , *AUTOMOBILE drivers , *RELICS , *RESEARCH stations - Abstract
The remains of Amani, a century‐old scientific laboratory in Tanzania, are quintessential modern relics. When anthropologists turn to such infrastructures of, originally colonial, knowledge‐making, their own implication with the object of their study – and with its epistemological and political‐economic origins and order – becomes part of the ethnographic pursuit. This entanglement between researcher and research material should challenge familiar realist modes of ethnographic writing 'about' such places that elude the anthropologists' own, compromised position within them. Matters are complicated further when the studied knowledge‐making sites already are broken, having failed their purpose – as in the case of the vestiges of an abandoned colonial institution. In this essay, I wonder how such ruins of knowledge‐making might transform the knowledge made by anthropologists working within them. Instead of just adding 'reflexive' confessions to realist accounts, could writing take part in the defeat that the scientific station's remains seem to embody – writing not 'after/beyond' but 'going along with' failure? Drawing on non‐representational ethnography, and poet‐anthropologist Hubert Fichte's embrace of epistemic defeat as anticolonial method, I trace my engagements with just one fragment of the scientific station – a driver's uniform. In doing so, I experiment with an object ethnography that 'fails' to detach author and object, or settle the question of failure, and instead foregrounds performativity, ambiguity, and mirth as starting points for an ethnography of, and in, our modern ruins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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214. Faku's Tusks: Colonialism, Resistance and Accommodation in Early 20th‐Century South Africa.
- Author
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Webb, Denver A.
- Subjects
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IMPERIALISM , *BUREAUCRACY , *TUSKS , *RELICS , *PONDO (African people) - Abstract
An African ploughing his fields in western Mpondoland in 1910 uncovered two elephant tusks at the site of what had once been King Faku's homestead. This obscure incident in the Transkeian Territories of South Africa provides an entry point to examining the consolidation of colonial bureaucratic control, and African responses to it, in the second decade of the 20th century by the Union of South Africa government. The unearthing of the tusks illuminated, on the one hand, Mpondo attempts to control the relics of Faku, and the memories associated with them, and to reassert traditional authority over the allocation of land; and on the other, efforts by the colonial administration of the Transkei to tighten control over land and strengthen 'native affairs' administration. In the process it explores how differing approaches to dealing with the government and contestations for power within Mpondo society impacted on their relations with the colonial state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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215. A FELSZÍNBORÍTÁS VÁLTOZÁSA A KARCSAI KARCSA-TÓ KÖRNYEZETÉBEN 1966-2020 KÖZÖTT.
- Author
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BÁLINT, NAGY and PHINZI, KWANELE
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LAND cover ,LAKES ,RELICS ,RIVER channels - Abstract
In our research, we investigated the surface cover of the Karcsa Lake, a relic of the former Tisza riverbed, by digitising and evaluating images from several dates (1966, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2011, 2020) over the past 50 years. In addition to monitoring the changes in land cover over the past decades, our results have been used to draw conclusions about the extent to which the lake environment may be pressuring the lake and the proportion of ecologically valuable areas. By evaluating the above, we can draw conclusions about the future of a valuable lake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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216. URBAN AND SUBURBAN LAND FRAGMENTATION IN NORTHEASTERN POLAND.
- Author
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SZEWCZYK, Jarosław, ŁAPIŃSKA, Halina, and STRZYŻ, Małgorzata
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FRAGMENTED landscapes ,RELICS ,SOCIAL processes ,SUBURBS - Abstract
Copyright of Studia Miejskie is the property of University of Opole / Uniwersytet Opolski and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
217. We Must Make Them Modern Orthodox: State Religious Education in Israel and Its Attitude to Mizrahi Religiosity in the Nineteen Eighties.
- Author
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Trabelsi, Erez
- Subjects
RELIGIOUS education ,RELIGIOUSNESS ,ULTRA-Orthodox Jews ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RELICS ,LEAD time (Supply chain management) - Abstract
The Israeli state-religious-education system (SRES) held an unfavorable view of Mizrahi religiosity in the 1980s. Text analyses of religious-education heads' writings indicate that they saw Mizrahi religiosity as a primitive relic of the past and as a "low-level religiosity" and regarded Mizrahi students as uncommitted and compromising. The large numbers of Mizrahi students in the SRES and the "melting pot" ideology prevalent at the time led to a systemic view of Mizrahi students as "religiously disadvantaged"—that is, children whose religion was flawed but rectifiable, with the task of rectifying it entrusted to the system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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218. DE CUERPOS Y CONTIENDAS: EL CADÁVER COMO RELIQUIA, DESECHO Y FETICHE EN MÉXICO (SIGLO XIX).
- Author
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Bermúdez Hernández, Luz del Rocío
- Subjects
POLITICAL opportunity theory ,RELICS ,RELIGIOUS articles ,ANTIQUITIES ,BISHOPS - Abstract
The article focuses on implication of changes in terms of political processes and sociocultural issues of greater importance and important individual and social catalyst of affective attributes, religious and eschatological "religiosity" to indicate the practices and compliance with precepts of Mesoamerican antiquity. It mentions passages on the Captaincy General of Guatemala and in particular on the bishopric of Chiapa and Soconusco and process of desacralization and at the same.
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- 2023
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219. The Duke of Gloucester's Sword: Prosthetic Props in the Repertory of Edmund Kean.
- Author
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MacLeod, Emily
- Subjects
DUKES (Nobility) ,RELICS ,TOMBS - Abstract
Edmund Kean played the role of Richard III for almost twenty years, in which time the most enduring images of his performance included his sword. Theatrical legend has it that this sword was passed down through generations of Shakespearean actors and found its resting place in Laurence Olivier's tomb. The significance of the sword as a theatrical relic can be located in the archival traces of Kean's performance style, particularly in James H. Hackett's 1826 annotated copy of Richard III. The sword's role in the performance takes on even more significance as Kean aged and became more physically debilitated. A performer known for his dynamic physicality, Kean was also recorded as struggling with physical impairments as a child. Moving from a mythical 'overcoming' of bodily challenges to simulating disability onstage as Richard to actual physical debility later in life, Kean continued to use his sword to 'prop' him up, literally and figuratively, on the stage. The sword becomes a prosthetic object, an addition to the body that shapes its movement and becomes an extension of the body itself. I argue that Kean's sword throughout his career showed off his prodigious physical skill and then became enmeshed in his bodily decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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220. Forgotten forest relics: Apple trees (Malus spp.) in eastern U.S. forests.
- Author
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Woodall, C. W., Liknes, G. C., Bunker, J. P., Peace, C. P., and Frank, J. M.
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ORCHARDS ,DEAD trees ,FOREST surveys ,TREES ,APPLE growing ,AGRICULTURE ,RELICS ,APPLES - Abstract
One potential legacy of the widespread deforestation of the 1700-1800s and subsequent agricultural abandonment and reforestation across the eastern United States (U.S.) during the 1900s is the establishment of introduced apple trees (Malus domestica) exclusive of naturally occurring native crab apple species. As these apple trees might provide ecological services and a genetic reserve of long-forgotten apple cultivars, a region-wide forest inventory was used to estimate the current extent, condition, and changes in the population of apple trees across eastern forests of the U.S. It was found that hundreds of millions of apple trees currently exist in the forests of the northern U.S. with indications of population senescence as the abundance of seedlings and saplings decline while the abundance of the largest-sized trees and standing dead trees increase. The distribution of forest apple trees is only aligned with native crab apple distributions in limited areas, suggesting distinct feral apple populations derived from agricultural abandonment decades ago. As these extant apple trees are likely relics of former orchards and/or their naturally dispersed progeny, these populations may serve as an in-situ gene bank representing hundreds, if not thousands, of apple cultivars forgotten long ago but adapted to local conditions and perhaps of importance to ensuring the future resilience of domestic apple production in the context of global change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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221. The Hagiographic Dossier of Ss Cyrus and John and Its Latin Translations: A Contribution to the Study of a Seventh-Century Migration by Means of Manuscripts and Texts.
- Author
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Ronconi, Filippo
- Subjects
- *
CULTS , *MANUSCRIPTS , *TRANSLATING & interpreting , *CORPORA , *COPYING , *INSCRIPTIONS - Abstract
This article focuses on the western cult of two saints, Cyrus and John, which was founded in Egypt – where Sophronios of Jerusalem composed the anargyroi 's hagiographic dossier in the seventh century – and quickly spread to Italy. The analysis of the manuscripts containing the Latin translations of Sophronios's texts allows us to trace the diffusion of this hagiographic corpus in Rome, and to link its transfer and first reception in Italy to a broad Mediterranean migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. 明代茶具文物视角下的“瀹饮法”研究.
- Author
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乐素娜
- Subjects
- *
RELICS , *TEA , *AESTHETICS ,MING dynasty, China, 1368-1644 - Abstract
From the perspective of cultural relics of tea sets in the Ming Dynasty, the paintings of the Ming Dynasty with tea drinking scenes and the cultural relics of tea sets in the Ming Dynasty are mutually compared and confirmed, which provides powerful physical evidence for the study of the "Yue drinking style" in the Ming Dynasty. The aesthetics of tea sets in the Ming Dynasty highlights the taste and interest of Chinese traditional culture and reflects the aesthetic orientation and the significance at that time, having profound impacts on later generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
223. Forgotten Traces of the Buddhist Incantation Spell Practice from Early Korea: Amulet Sheets of the Incantation of Wish-Fulfillment (Mahāpratisarā) from Silla.
- Author
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Han, Joung Ho and Kim, Youn-mi
- Subjects
- *
AMULETS , *PAGODAS , *BUDDHISTS , *TOMBS , *ORTHOGRAPHY & spelling , *RELICS , *FUNERAL homes , *BUDDHISM ,SILLA (Kingdom) - Abstract
Through an investigation of two recently discovered paper sheets of the Incantation of Wish-Fulfillment from the Silla kingdom, this paper reveals that early Korea had more diverse forms of dhāraṇī practices than previously assumed. Through analyses of these incantation sheets, this paper contributes toward filling the gap in our current understanding of the material practice pertaining to the Incantation of Wish-Fulfillment of medieval East Asia. Previously, all known traces of material dhāraṇīs from early Korea, with just a few exceptions, were related to the Sūtra of the Pure Light Incantation enshrined in the relic crypts of pagodas—a practice that has little connection to contemporaneous Chinese dhāraṇī practice. However, the newly discovered Incantation of Wish-Fulfillment sheets, whose date this paper infers to be between the eighth and ninth century, show that Unified Silla had a dhāraṇī practice closely linked to coeval Chinese practice. The Incantation of Wish-Fulfillment sheets from Silla show the modification and continuation of Chinese dhāraṇī practice. Unlike the Chinese amulet sheets of the Incantation of Wish-Fulfillment that were buried in tombs, the Silla amulet sheets were likely enshrined in one of the pagodas erected on Mount Nam in Silla's capital. At the same time, they were placed in the pagoda to wish for good afterlives of the soldiers who died at the battle, suggesting that they had a mortuary function similar to those buried in Chinese tombs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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224. The Miracle of the Bloody Foreskin at the Council of Charroux in 1082: Legatine Authority, Religious Spectacle, and Charismatic Strategies of Canonical Reform in the Era of Gregory VII.
- Author
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Brown, Peter Scott
- Subjects
- *
MIRACLES , *CHARISMATIC authority , *REFORMS , *CHARISMA , *PAPACY , *CANON law , *POPES - Abstract
In 1082, at the council of Charroux convened by the papal legate Amatus of Oloron, astonished witnesses observed the Holy Prepuce, a rare body relic of Christ himself, to be miraculously spotted with fresh blood. This spectacular miracle holds implications for our understanding of charismatic strategies of religious reform in France in the era of Pope Gregory VII. Gregory's use of standing legates with regional mandates, such as Amatus, was a novelty in papal administration, but the legates, though empowered as proxies of the pope, were often weak lieutenants. When they could not induce or coerce cooperation, they frequently confronted the impotence of their legal–canonical mandates. The miracle at Charroux, I will show, exemplifies an alternative charismatic strategy, harnessing liturgical art and spectacle to magnify the legate's stature as an authority in the context of the Eucharistic controversy and religious reform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
225. The Politics of Relics: The Charisma of Rulers and Martyrs in the Middle Ages.
- Author
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Herrero, Montserrat
- Subjects
- *
RELICS , *MIDDLE Ages , *CHARISMA , *POWER (Social sciences) , *HEADS of state , *MARTYRS , *PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
Among the symbols used for representing power in the Middle Ages were the relics of saints and martyrs. When it came to political power, relics were one of the most cherished symbolic instruments to achieve legitimation of political power. However, no texts from the Middle Ages can be found that reflect the practice of associating relics with power. Rather, we have to assume or derive that reflection indirectly through narratives and stories around the relics present in the culture and religion of the time. This article reflects on the symbolic use of relics from a theological–political perspective: What kind of power acts through relics? What meaning of power is embodied in their political use of them? The thesis that the article will defend is that reflection on the politics of relics leads to a resignification of the idea of power in the Middle Ages, which is closely connected to the idea of charisma originating in the writings of the Apostle Paul. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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226. Capizzi fra Tre e Seicento in un mondo mediterraneo di tensioni.
- Author
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Cristina Pascerini, Maria
- Subjects
SIXTEENTH century ,MIDDLE Ages ,POLITICAL autonomy ,RELICS ,PROVINCES - Abstract
Copyright of Librosdelacorte.es is the property of Instituto Universitario "La Corte en Europa" - IULCE and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
227. Relics of Extreme Land Fragmentation in Białystok.
- Author
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Bajerska, Aleksandra, Boratyńska, Urszula, Łapińska, Halina, and Szewczyk, Jarosław
- Subjects
RELICS ,SUBURBS ,VILLAGES - Abstract
Białystok, the capital of the Podlaskie region, N-E Poland, covers 102 km² and has ca. 293 000 inhabitants. In recent centuries the city has been incorporating its suburban villages. In effect, relics of village-like plot structures have been retained and immersed into the whole cadastral structure of the city. In the article, distribution of cadastral relics of extreme land fragmentation have been surveyed, based on two www.GIS portals: http://gispodlasia.wrotapodlasia.pl and https://gisbialystok.pl. We extracted data about areas with extremely narrow and elongated plot structure, i.e. plots which are 1 to 20 m narrow while hundreds of meters long, sometimes of geometric proportions even as extreme as 1:600. About 50 areas with relics of extreme land fragmentation have been recognized, of which 15 areas seem to be essential for the city functional structure. Therefore, Białystok can be seen as an unique city in terms of its rural-derived structure with numerous remnants of extreme land frgmentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Blood Kinetics and Narrative Performance in Early Modern Devotions to the Shroud of Turin.
- Author
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Casper, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
HOLY Shroud , *RELICS , *RESURRECTION , *DEVOTIONAL literature - Abstract
The Shroud of Turin experienced its most intense devotional enthusiasm in the century after its first public exhibition in Turin in 1578. During this period, the cloth and its mysterious imprint of Christ’s body transcended the static nature of an icon by becoming a performative image in the context of private devotional worship. Operating in consort with devotional texts, the figuration of Christ’s crucified body activates the otherwise static depiction of flowing of blood. Furthermore, the Shroud permitted beholders to witness a narrative performance of Christ’s death and resurrection through the possession and manipulation of reproductions, making the movement of Christ’s body in and out of the tomb a kinetically visible phenomenon. These performative qualities of the Shroud of Turin, as well as the beholder’s active interaction with it, guaranteed its devotional prestige and facilitate new considerations of the role of images in religious devotion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. Narrative Mourning: Death and Its Relics in the Eighteenth-Century British Novel by Kathleen M. Oliver (review).
- Author
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Fulk, Mark
- Subjects
- *
BEREAVEMENT , *RELICS , *ATTITUDES toward death , *GHOST stories - Abstract
Kathleen M. Oliver, Narrative Mourning: Death and Its Relics in the Eighteenth-Century British Novel (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell Univ. If the David Simple novels become novels of sensibility I par excellence i in Oliver's analysis, then Mackenzie's loses some status but gains a richer reading as a result. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. The Badger State Archaeological Society...the Early Years.
- Author
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Wilson, Yvonne
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL societies , *ARCHAEOLOGY , *ANTIQUITIES collecting , *RELICS - Abstract
The article offers information on the history of the Badger State Archaeological Society (B.S.A.S.). It highlighting its founding and evolution; its role in promoting archaeology in Wisconsin, U.S.; and its significant contributions to artifact collection and preservation over the past 50 years. It also discusses the unique artifacts and relics found in Wisconsin, U.S., showcasing the state's archaeological richness.
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- 2023
231. The Aura of Confucius: Relics and Representations of the Sage at Kongzhai Shrine in Shanghai.
- Author
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Flath, James A.
- Subjects
- *
SHRINES , *RELICS , *SAGE , *SOCIAL status , *ELITE (Social sciences) - Abstract
As a writer and researcher, Murray tends to stay within the disciplinary boundaries of Sinology and does not significantly compare or contrast Kongzhai with any ritual site outside of China. In Chapter 2, "Proposing a History of Kongzhai", Murray turns to the local, inquiring into the ways in which Confucian orthodoxy and local activism worked together or in conflict to develop and then extinguish Kongzhai's Confucian "aura." During the Sui dynasty (589-618), so the story goes, a lineal descendant of Confucius (Kongzi) acquired the robe and cap of his famous ancestor and buried them together with a set of jades near what is now the city of Shanghai. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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232. Spolia Sancta. Reliquias y arte entre el Viejo y Nuevo Mundo.
- Author
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González Segura, Jorge
- Subjects
SPANISH monarchy ,RELICS ,MODERNITY ,SIGNS & symbols - Abstract
Copyright of Librosdelacorte.es is the property of Instituto Universitario "La Corte en Europa" - IULCE and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
233. Early Childcare and Education in a Post-Industrial Landscape: Inequalities in Proximity to Active and Relic Manufacturing in Metropolitan Providence, Rhode Island.
- Author
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Tollefson, Jonathan, Frickel, Scott, Gonsalves, Summer, Marlow, Thomas, Sucsy, Robert, Byrns, Michael, and Orpen-Tuz, Melissa
- Subjects
URBAN land use ,INDUSTRIAL contamination ,CHILD care ,POLLUTANTS ,RELICS - Abstract
Children are uniquely vulnerable to environmental health risks associated with industrial contamination, and early childcare and education (ECE) facilities are important sites for potential exposure to environmental contaminants. Emerging research on historic urban industry has additionally demonstrated that urban environmental risk accumulates historically and spatially across urban landscapes. Accordingly, this study pairs cross-sectional data on licensed childcare facilities with longitudinal manufacturing site data in Providence, Rhode Island. We use these data to investigate the proximity of ECE facilities to active and relic manufacturing sites, controlling for a range of organizational- and tract-level characteristics. Results show that type of childcare facility (center-based vs. in-home) and language of instruction (Spanish vs. English) are important predictors of children's proximity to industrial lands, past and present. These findings indicate that Spanish-speaking children in Providence may experience a "double jeopardy" in the form of disproportionate legacy environmental hazards at ECE as well as at home—suggesting that the historical nature of urban industrial land use is an important mechanism of environmental inequality for young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Louis IX and the Triumphal Cross of Constantine.
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Gaposchkin, M. Cecilia
- Subjects
- *
MIDDLE Ages , *RELICS , *KINGSHIP of God ,BYZANTINE emperors - Abstract
This article examines the material and ideological meaning of the three relics of the True Cross acquired by Louis IX in 1241 and 1242, which were venerated, along with the Crown of Thorns, in the Sainte-Chapelle, as part of the broader project of building Capetian sacral kingship in the High Middle Ages. Although cross relics flooded Western Christendom after 1204, these three relics, acquired directly from the Byzantine emperor, were specifically associated with Constantine and Heraclius and their historic military victories against enemies of Christian empire. The article identifies one of the three relics, known to contemporaries as the crux triumphalis in Latin and the croix de victoire in French, which Byzantine emperors were said to have carried into battle, as a relic that Louis IX then brought with him on his crusade of 1249–50 to Egypt, in hopes of martialing its historic power against the infidel in battle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Charismatic Politics: From Relics to Portraits.
- Author
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Herrero, Montserrat
- Subjects
- *
MIDDLE Ages , *SEMIOTICS - Abstract
In his book Le portrait du roi, Louis Marin seems to continue Ernst Kantorowicz's work on the Middle Ages, extending it to Early Modernity. Marin's book adds another body to the historical and juridical political bodies of Kantorowicz's King described in The Two King's Bodies, namely the portrait of the King. According to Marin, this body drives the interchange between the historical and juridical bodies; hence, the absolutist king has three bodies in one: the historical, the semiotic-sacramental, and the juridical. Following Kantorowicz and Marin's argumentative line, this paper addresses the ways in which absent or dead bodies can act politically, in particular, the shift in political legitimation that goes hand in hand with the transition from a politics of relics to a politics of images. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Deep Paleoproteotyping and Microtomography Revealed No Heart Defect nor Traces of Embalming in the Cardiac Relics of Blessed Pauline Jaricot.
- Author
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Bourdin, Virginie, Charlier, Philippe, Crevat, Stéphane, Slimani, Lotfi, Chaussain, Catherine, Kielbasa, Mélodie, Pible, Olivier, and Armengaud, Jean
- Subjects
- *
HEART abnormalities , *EMBALMING , *RELICS , *AMINO acid sequence - Abstract
Scientific examination of the heart of Blessed Pauline Jaricot—a French missionary figure—was carried out in 2022. As tandem mass spectrometry proteotyping has proven to be valuable to obtain the broad taxonomic repertoire of a given sample without any a priori information, we aimed at exploring the conditions of preservation of the relics and possible conditions of death. Metaproteomics and high-resolution microtomography imaging approaches were combined. A dataset comprising 6731 high-resolution MS/MS spectra was acquired and 968 of these spectra could be assigned to specific peptidic biomolecules. Based on the taxonomical information encompassed by the identified peptide sequences, 5 phyla were identified amongst eukaryota (94% of the biomass): Ascomycota (55%), with the species Aspergillus versicolor, Trichophyton mentagrophytes and Aspergillus glaucus, corresponding to expected cadaverous fungal flora; Chordata (42%), represented by a unique species, Homo sapiens; Streptophyta (3%); and Arthropoda (traces). Bacteria (6% of the biomass) were poorly represented. No trace of embalming substance could be retrieved, nor any pathogens. Imaging evidenced no heart defect nor embalming traces. No evidence that was inconsistent with natural and spontaneous conservation could be retrieved. This study prefigures the power of modern molecular techniques such as paleoproteotyping coupled to microtomography to gain insight into historical relics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. MeerKAT's view of double radio relic galaxy cluster Abell 3376.
- Author
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Chibueze, James O, Akamatsu, Hiroki, Parekh, Viral, Sakemi, Haruka, Ohmura, Takumi, Rooyen, Ruby van, Akahori, Takuya, Nakanishi, Hiroyuki, Machida, Mami, Takeuchi, Tsutomu T, Smirnov, Oleg, Kleiner, Dane, and Maccagni, Filippo M
- Subjects
- *
RADIO galaxies , *GALAXY clusters , *MEERKAT , *THERMAL noise , *RELICS - Abstract
We present the initial results of our MeerKAT L-band observations of Abell 3376. We achieved higher (5″) angular resolution and better (∼4 μ Jy beam−1) sensitivity compared to the previous observations. Our achieved sensitivity is only a factor of 2 larger than the thermal noise of MeerKAT. Astrometric and flux comparison of discrete compact sources in the field between MeerKAT and the Very Large Array (VLA) indicated that our calibration procedures were successful. We detected West and East relics, and radio galaxies, which have been observed in previous works. With minimal missing flux problem in our MeerKAT observations, we derived the spectral indices of the West relic (−1.22 ± 0.05), East relic (−1.33 ± 0.08) and central radio galaxies (−0.94 ± 0.05). The improved images revealed faint, extending radio arcs for relics, and connection between the East relic and radio galaxies. It is probable that (at least some of) the re-accelerated electrons of the East relic are supplied by the jets of the radio galaxies. No significant diffuse radio emission was found in cluster central part, supporting previous works with a much better upper limit of radio flux of <1.8 × 1023 W Hz−1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. Experimental research on the integrated treatment of de‐acidification and reinforcement of paper cultural relics by electrosorption.
- Author
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Fan, Yunjie, Huang, Qiao, Yang, Chengda, and Qin, Ying
- Subjects
- *
RELICS , *DISRUPTIVE innovations - Abstract
The de‐acidification method has always been a hotspot in the research of paper‐based cultural relics conservation science. The existing de‐acidification methods are either not thorough enough or not easy to operate, requiring innovation and breakthrough. Moreover, the strength of the paper cannot be significantly improved by the simple de‐acidification treatment. To achieve the reinforcement of paper, another intervention process is often required, and each intervention may cause damage to the fragile paper cultural relics. This study introduces electrosorption deionization technology to the conservation treatment of paper cultural relics. Based on the electrosorption technology, an integrated treatment of paper de‐acidification and reinforcement was applied to sample papers using a composite electrolyte of de‐acidification and reinforcement materials and a self‐made electrosorption device. The experimental results show that both the de‐acidification and reinforcement effects on the paper samples obtained a significant promotion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Materializing Nostalgia: Feet, Youtube, and the Pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela.
- Author
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Sime, Jennifer n.
- Subjects
- *
PILGRIMS & pilgrimages , *RELICS , *SOCIAL media , *NOSTALGIA , *CATHEDRALS - Abstract
Every year thousands of pilgrims, most on foot, travel to Santiago de Compostela, a medieval pilgrimage destination in northwestern Spain. Recent scholarship has mapped a historical shift of the focus in contemporary pilgrimage from the relics of St. James, ostensibly held in the crypt in Santiago's cathedral, to the journey itself as a primary site of meaning and transformation. However, this scholarship has not addressed the ways in which the meaning of pilgrimage is bound up with pilgrims' practices relating to their own and others' bodies. Pilgrims' feet, in particular, have become a fraught focus of contemporary pilgrimage. Pilgrims' practices of walking the pilgrimage, together with recorded images of their feet in social media videos, work to materialize two forms of nostalgia. The first involves the desire to return to a past time of imagined authentic pilgrimage. The second encompasses a melancholic recognition of the fragility of the present moment and longing for human connection. A detailed reading of two YouTube videos documenting the care of pilgrims' own and others' injured feet allows for an analysis of how recorded images of feet posted by pilgrims on social media reveal the complex relationship between bodies, social media, and nostalgia in pilgrimage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Resisting imperial erasures: Matigari ruins and relics in Nairobi.
- Author
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Kimari, Wangui
- Subjects
POOR communities ,MNEMONICS ,RELICS ,CITY dwellers ,URBAN poor - Abstract
Building on ethnographic fieldwork and interdisciplinary theoretical approaches, this article historicizes poor urban settlements in Nairobi as ruins – the product of systemic ruination from the colonial period to the present. In so doing, it offers the provocation to think 'slum' dwellers as relics: remains of past/present conterminous ruins who are treated as subhuman hauntings of a foregone time and understood to be constituted by the decayed and unwanted material of city margins. In these embodiments they are perceived as ruining the city, even when they have been produced by longue durée political processes of ruination, captured by vernacular identities such as Matigari. Yet, as I show here, like unexpected relics, the inhabitants of poor urban settlements continue to insert vital bids for survival in city landscapes. And, in these layered movements, they act as mnemonic devices that bridge the oppressions of what are seen as separate times, while shedding light on often normalized colonial city and national governance processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Vulnerability Assessment Method for Immovable Cultural Relics Based on Artificial Neural Networks—An Example of a Heavy Rainfall Event in Henan Province.
- Author
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Xu, Can, Gong, Adu, Liang, Long, Song, Xiaoke, and Wang, Yi
- Subjects
ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,RELICS ,BACK propagation ,HAZARD Analysis & Critical Control Point (Food safety system) - Abstract
Cultural relic conservation capability is an important issue in cultural relic conservation research, and it is critical to decrease the vulnerability of immovable cultural relics to rainfall hazards. Commonly used vulnerability assessment methods are subjective, are mostly applied to regional conditions, and cannot accurately assess the vulnerability of cultural relics. In addition, it is impossible to predict the future vulnerability of cultural relics. Therefore, this study proposed a machine learning-based vulnerability assessment method that not only can assess cultural relics individually but also predict the vulnerability of cultural relics under different rainfall hazard intensities. An extreme rainfall event in Henan Province in 2021 was selected as an example, with a survey report on the damage to cultural relics as a database. The results imply that the back propagation (BP) neural network-based method of assessing the vulnerability of immovable cultural relics is reliable, with an accuracy rate higher than 92%. Based on this model to predict the vulnerability of Zhengzhou City's cultural relics, the vulnerability levels of cultural relics under different recurrence periods of heavy rainfall were obtained. Among them, the vulnerability of ancient sites is higher than those of other cultural relic types. The assessment model used in this study is suitable for predicting the vulnerability of immovable cultural relics to heavy rainfall hazards and can provide a technical means for cultural relic conservation studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Analysis of microbial community and biodeterioration of maritime cultural relics (ironware, porcelain, axes, hull wood) from the Nanhai No. 1 shipwreck.
- Author
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Pan, Jiao, Han, Yeqing, Wang, Cen, Du, Jing, Wang, Yu, Chen, Yue, Huang, Xinduo, Ma, Kaixuan, Zhang, Zhiguo, and Li, Naisheng
- Subjects
WOOD ,BIODEGRADATION ,RELICS ,PORCELAIN ,COLONIZATION (Ecology) ,MICROBIAL communities ,WOOD decay ,BACTERIAL leaching - Abstract
Purpose: Maritime cultural relics from the Nanhai No. 1 shipwreck were immersed in a buffer to maintain stability. To better monitor the changes in the composition of microorganisms in the buffer and, thus, prevent the damage to artifacts caused by harmful microorganisms. Methods: In September and November 2019, we conducted high-throughput sequencing of water samples from four types of maritime cultural relics (ironware, porcelain, axe, and hull wood) to reveal the composition and changes in microbial communities. In addition, we isolated culturable microorganisms and conducted biocide sensitivity tests and lignin and cellulose degradation tests. Results: Visible microbial colonization was observed in the water samples collected from the buffer solutions of ironware, porcelain, axe, and hull wood of the Nanhai No. 1 shipwreck; additionally, apparent differences in the composition of microorganisms in the water samples collected from different cultural relics and different collection times of the same cultural relics were noted. Few species of bacteria and fungi from the microbial community observed in the maritime cultural relics were cultured, and it was noted that various biocides had certain inhibitory effects on them. Some dominant strains had lignin and cellulose degradation abilities and could only grow under specific environmental conditions. Conclusion: We found apparent differences in the composition of microorganisms obtained from different cultural relics and different collection times of the same cultural relics. This study can provide data support for better protection of maritime cultural relics obtained from the Nanhai No. 1 shipwreck and provide a theoretical basis for the biological protection of other maritime cultural relics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. 唐代红地团窠对鸟纹锦半臂结构研究 与数字化3D复原.
- Author
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谷雨珊 and 刘大玮
- Subjects
TANG dynasty, China, 618-907 ,RELICS ,DEMOGRAPHY ,POSTURE ,COSTUME ,DIGITAL technology - Abstract
Copyright of Wool Textile Journal is the property of National Wool Textile Science & Technology Information Center and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. RESEARCH ON AUGMENTED REALITY DISPLAY TECHNOLOGY OF CULTURAL RELICS – TAKE THE BELL AND DRUM TOWER ON THE CENTRAL AXIS OF BEIJING, CHINA AS AN EXAMPLE.
- Author
-
Ma, Y. and Yu, T.
- Subjects
AUGMENTED reality ,DIGITAL technology ,RELICS ,DRUM playing - Abstract
The current global digital technology is in the era of accelerated iteration, with 5G, AR, VR and other technologies of scientific and technological research, new application scenarios of heritage buildings have also achieved innovative breakthroughs. This paper comprehensively reviews the development status of augmented reality display technology, and takes Beijing Drum Tower, an important conservation display technology innovation pilot of Beijing's central axis heritage application, as a theoretical and practical research blueprint. With full respect for the conservation requirements of the heritage buildings, the most appropriate and lightest augmented reality display means are used to fully express and explain the architectural heritage connotation and strengthen the public interactive experience. Through case analysis, a systematic technical process of augmented reality display design for heritage buildings is summarized and formed, and a practical guide for the technical adaptation of heritage buildings is established. Finally, facing the trend of innovative exploration of augmented reality technology and devices, the future development of AR technology in the field of cultural and museums was foreseen. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. RESEARCH ON THE DIGITAL EXHIBITION OF CULTURAL RELICS FOR CROSS-CULTURE COMMUNICATION: CASE STUDY ON CHINA-GREECE COOPERATION ON TERRACOTTA WARRIORS.
- Author
-
Ma, Y., Li, W., and An, N.
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,TERRA-cotta ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL museums & collections ,RELICS ,HISTORIC sites ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
With epidemics blocking offline interactions, it is difficult to organise events such as tours of major heritage sites and outbound exhibitions of cultural relics, and new paths need to be expanded for the presentation of cultural heritage and intercultural education efforts. With the booming development of digital technology, the integration of online virtual presentation and interactive technology and the innovative design of 3D scenes provide new solutions for the intercultural communication of these precious and immovable cultural relics (e.g. archaeological sites), etc. This project is based on the Sino-Greek cooperation around the online presentation of heritage items such as the Terracotta Warriors and Horses of China and the precious collection of the National Archaeological Museum of Greece, in order to present and On the basis of communicating the value of heritage and the connection between Chinese and Greek civilisations, the project explores the development of a virtual space that integrates the Terracotta Warriors and Horses pits, the interactive virtual display of cultural relics, and the display of the achievements of scientific and technological conservation of cultural relics, so as to realise the cross-cultural exchange between China and Greece and fulfil the educational function of heritage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. RELICS: Small-scale Star Formation in Lensed Galaxies at z = 6–10.
- Author
-
Welch, Brian, Coe, Dan, Zitrin, Adi, Diego, Jose M., Windhorst, Rogier, Mandelker, Nir, Vanzella, Eros, Ravindranath, Swara, Zackrisson, Erik, Florian, Michael, Bradley, Larry, Sharon, Keren, Bradač, Maruša, Rigby, Jane, Frye, Brenda, and Fujimoto, Seiji
- Subjects
- *
GALAXY formation , *STAR formation , *GRAVITATIONAL lenses , *GALACTIC evolution , *RELICS - Abstract
Detailed observations of star-forming galaxies at high redshift are critical to understanding the formation and evolution of the earliest galaxies. Gravitational lensing provides an important boost, allowing observations at physical scales unreachable in unlensed galaxies. We present three lensed galaxies from the RELICS survey at z phot = 6–10, including the most highly magnified galaxy at z phot ∼ 6 (WHL 0137–zD1, dubbed the Sunrise Arc), the brightest known lensed galaxy at z phot ∼ 6 (MACS 0308–zD1), and the only spatially resolved galaxy currently known at z phot ∼ 10 (SPT 0615–JD). The Sunrise Arc contains seven star-forming clumps with delensed radii as small as 3 pc, the smallest spatial scales yet observed in a z > 6 galaxy, while SPT 0615–JD contains features measuring a few tens of parsecs. MACS 0308–zD1 contains an r ∼ 30 pc clump with a star formation rate (SFR) of ∼3 M ⊙ yr−1, giving it an SFR surface density of ΣSFR ∼ 103 M ⊙ yr−1 kpc−2. These galaxies provide a unique window into small-scale star formation during the epoch of reionization. They will be excellent targets for future observations with JWST, including one approved program targeting the Sunrise Arc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Testing for relics of past strong buckling events in edge-on galaxies: simulation predictions and data from S4G.
- Author
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Cuomo, Virginia, Debattista, Victor P, Racz, Sarah, Anderson, Stuart Robert, Erwin, Peter, Gonzalez, Oscar A, Powell, J W, Corsini, Enrico Maria, Morelli, Lorenzo, and Norris, Mark A
- Subjects
- *
GALAXIES , *STELLAR structure , *BULGING (Metalwork) , *RELICS , *ORBITS (Astronomy) , *GALACTIC bulges - Abstract
The short-lived buckling instability is responsible for the formation of at least some box/peanut (B/P) shaped bulges, which are observed in most massive, z = 0, barred galaxies. Nevertheless, it has also been suggested that B/P bulges form via the slow trapping of stars on to vertically extended resonant orbits. The key difference between these two scenarios is that when the bar buckles, symmetry about the mid-plane is broken for a period of time. We use a suite of simulations (with and without gas) to show that when the buckling is sufficiently strong, a residual mid-plane asymmetry persists for several Gyrs after the end of the buckling phase, and is visible in simulation images. On the other hand, images of B/P bulges formed through resonant trapping and/or weak buckling remain symmetric about the mid-plane. We develop two related diagnostics to identify and quantify mid-plane asymmetry in simulation images of galaxies that are within 3° of edge-on orientation, allowing us to test whether the presence of a B/P-shaped bulge can be explained by a past buckling event. We apply our diagnostics to two nearly edge-on galaxies with B/P bulges from the Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies, finding no mid-plane asymmetry, implying these galaxies formed their bulges either by resonant trapping or by buckling more than ∼5 Gyr ago. We conclude that the formation of B/P bulges through strong buckling may be a rare event in the past ∼5 Gyr. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Visualizing water seepage dynamics in grotto relics via atom-based representative model.
- Author
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Wang, Junxia
- Subjects
- *
WATER seepage , *CAVES , *RELICS , *PIPE flow , *FLUX flow , *EMULSION paint - Abstract
Water seepage in grotto relics, i.e., Yungang Grottoes, Dazu Rock Carvings, is a key issue to accurately describe the deterioration and weathering process of grotto rock mass. Considering rainfall infiltration, Finite element simulation was performed for studying the water flow through macro-channel of fractured rock in the 4th cave of Yungang Grottoes, where a group of joints with directions of S62°E and N5°W are widely developed. A 3D atom-based representative model was derived from X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns and the related semi-quantitative calculation of grotto rock powders, for visualizing the associated seepage characteristics through micro-channel by means of molecular dynamics simulation, for the first time. By analyzing various properties, ranging from the configuration and energetic behaviors to the dynamic characteristics, the calculated water flux and mass flow rate were equal to 270 ns−1 and 8.10 × 10–12 g s−1, respectively. A dynamic process of water transport from the entrance region to the exit region was examined and it is consistent with the relative concentration profiles at the corresponding stage. The tagged O atoms experienced a zigzag movement instead of linear motion as expected, roughly exhibited the same target direction. The seepage characteristics in grotto relics experienced a complex evolution process and three types can be summarized: water infiltrates through micro-channels with a low flow rate; it flows through fracture with a relatively high flow rate; it turned into a kind of analogous pipe flow in inter-connected fracture network, resulting in water seepage hazard. Current simulation studies provide helpful insights for understanding the water flow-infiltration behavior of fractured rock in grotto relics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Bian Que's Twelve Channels?: Using Excavated Relics as a Way of Understanding Early Chinese Medicine.
- Author
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Li, Jianmin and Yang, Dolly
- Subjects
- *
CHINESE medicine , *HISTORY of medicine , *RELICS , *FIGURINES ,CHINESE history - Abstract
The name Bian Que, like that of the Yellow Emperor (Huangdi), has reverberated through the development of Chinese medicine since the time of the Warring States. The discovery of a human figurine showing channels and strategic points, together with a number of medical texts, during the excavation of the Laoguanshan Han tomb in Chengdu, Sichuan, in 2012–13 has reignited controversies about whether it is correct to speak of a specific Bian Que school, or whether, as this paper argues, these texts were written by the Han physicians who used Bian Que as a mouthpiece to record their own medical expositions. The paper begins by examining the main characteristics of the Laoguanshan human figurine and discusses what this excavated artifact reveals about the early history of Chinese medicine. It questions the existence of the so-called Bian Que school and, obliquely, the suggested relationships between the school and the figurine and between the school and medical texts found in the same tomb. The paper shows how diverse the disjointed knowledge of medicine was and that the idea of a "school" does not accurately reflect what was happening in the transmission of medical knowledge during the Warring States, Qin, and Han periods (475 BCE–220 CE). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. GIS Mapping of the Buddhist Relics of Hazara Division, Pakistan.
- Author
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Shakirullah and Zahoor, Muhammad
- Subjects
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GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *HERITAGE tourism , *BUDDHISTS , *RELICS , *ROMANIES , *CULTURE diffusion , *CREDIT departments - Abstract
The cultural activities of the Hazara region can be traced back to the early Stone Age in Pakistan, although systematic and planned archaeological investigations throughout the region in the pre- and postindependence period were scantily available. During the colonial period, there were certain efforts, largely targeted at removing treasures from Buddhist monuments and other archaeological sites. For paying attention to the culturally rich and fertile land of the Hazara Division, the Hazara University (Mansehra) got the credit to establish the Department of Cultural Heritage and Tourism Management in 2006, which later (in 2008) grew into the School of Cultural Heritage and Creative Technologies comprising of five teaching departments (i.e., Archaeology, Architecture, Art & Design, Tourism & Hospitality, and Conservation. The Department of Archaeology made serious efforts to map up the cultural relics of the Hazara region with the help of many national and international funding agencies. The current research focusses on the GIS mapping of the rich Buddhist heritage of the present eight districts of Hazara division namely, Haripur, Abbottabad, Mansehra, Batagram, Torghar, Kohistan Lower, Kohistan Upper, and Kolai Palas. The GIS technology allows for the spatial analysis of Buddhist relics' distribution. This analysis revealed patterns of religious activities, trade routes, and cultural diffusion. By overlaying GIS data with historical records, researchers can develop new theories and insights into the dynamics of ancient civilizations in the region. GIS mapping of these relics will help develop the tourism industry by making it easier for travellers and tourists to locate and study these assets of archaeological and historical interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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