Results 11 to 20 of about 186 (172)
Introduction. The publication is a review of a monograph by Anna-Valerie Pont, Professor of the Sorbonne, devoted to an attempt to determine the time of the disappearance of an ancient city (polis) on the material of Asia Minor.
Alexander Kozlov
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Compte-rendu du livre édité par Niccolò Mugnai (éd.), Tripolitania in the Roman Empire and Beyond, Londres, British Institute for Libyan and Northern African Studies, 2024, p. 226, ISBN: 9781915808103 (40 £).
Mohamed-Arbi Nsiri
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Scandalisation, gender and space in ancient Rome: The case of Cicero and Clodia
Abstract This article analyses the public attack on Clodia Metelli, a Roman aristocratic woman, by the orator Marcus Tullius Cicero in a trial in 56 BCE. Drawing on modern scandal theory, this article analyses how Cicero uses scandal dynamics to turn Clodia, the witness in the case, into the culprit.
Muriel Moser
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The Bug‐Network (BugNet) is a novel global collaborative research network that implements standardized consumer‐reduction experiments in herbaceous‐ or shrub‐dominated ecosystems to assess the impacts of invertebrate herbivores and fungal pathogens on plant communities and ecosystem functioning.
Anne Kempel +77 more
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Recent research on primitive gothic architecture in Germany has mainly reflected the results of various restoration projects and of methodologically complex architectural analyses.
Bruno Klein
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Information in the Brain: From Metaphor to Truth
ABSTRACT Despite explicit warnings from Shannon to tread carefully when applying Information Theory to fields for which it was not designed, contemporary neuroscientists adopting the framework of Information Theory have fallen right into the traps Shannon and others cautioned against. What makes the neuroscientist more than anyone prone to fall prey to
Farid Zahnoun
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“Laid to Rest in Australian Soil”: The Legacies of Repatriation Policy Change during the Vietnam War
For the first half of the twentieth century, Australia maintained a firm policy of non‐repatriation. Military personnel who died overseas were buried in vast military cemeteries administered by the Imperial (later Commonwealth) War Graves Commission. In 1966, however, the Australian government decreed that Australia's war dead could be repatriated, at ...
Kristen Alexander, Kate Ariotti
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Religion romaine et esclavage au Haut-Empire
La réalité juridique de l’esclave à Rome et l’approche économique de l’esclavage ont longtemps figé nos représentations de la place de l’esclave dans la société romaine. C’est l’objet de cet ouvrage, à partir de la confrontation des sources littéraires et de la riche documentation épigraphique, iconographique et archéologique de Rome, du Latium et de ...
openaire +3 more sources
Restoring Food System Resilience in a Turbulent World: Supply Chain Actors' Shared Responsibility
ABSTRACT Ecological and economic crises increasingly affect the long‐term resilience of the food supply chain. This qualitative study draws on semistructured interviews and public evidence to analyse the perspectives of British supply chain actors. Asking which pathways towards food system resilience arise and which forms of social and environmental ...
Steffen Hirth +6 more
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Detecting Millimetric Slow Slip Events Along the North Anatolian Fault With GNSS
Abstract Active faults release part of the elastic strain energy stored in the crust via aseismic slip, either through slow slip events (SSEs) or steady slowly creep. However, spatial and temporal interactions between these different styles of aseismic slip have yet to be quantified especially at depth.
Alpay Özdemir +7 more
wiley +1 more source

