Results 41 to 50 of about 32,274 (212)
Bishop Torhthelm’s letter to Boniface
In c.738, St Boniface distributed a circular letter to a broad audience of ecclesiastics in England. One response to that letter survives, written by Torhthelm, bishop of the Middle Angles (737–64). The letter is written in an allusive style and borrows heavily from its main source, Pope Vitalian’s letter to Oswiu, king of Northumbria.
Peter Darby
wiley +1 more source
Penerapan Augmented Reality dalam Visualisasi Katalog Apartemen Berbasis Android
Apartemen menjadi hunian yang diminati masyarakat sehingga banyak dibangun oleh para pengembang properti. Pengembangan apartemen yang pesat menimbulkan persaingan dalam pemasaran, sehingga diperlukan cara pemasaran yang lebih inovatif untuk menarik ...
Citra Arum Sari +2 more
doaj
O potrzebie dalszych badań nad polonikami bibliologicznymi w Szwecji
Kolekcje polskiego dziedzictwa piśmienniczego najpoważniej ucierpiały w trakcie wojen polsko-szwedzkich w XVII i na początku XVIII w. Podczas każdej z trzech kampanii wojennych Szwedzi grabili i wywozili za Bałtyk polskie biblioteki kościelne (klasztorne,
Maria Juda
doaj +1 more source
Detaillierte Analyse der Bindepräferenz von Roquin an RNA‐Stammschleifen
sRBNS (strukturiertes RNA Bind‐n‐Seq) ermöglicht die präzise Kartierung von RNA‐Protein‐Interaktionen inklusive RNA‐Strukturen auf Nukleotidebene. Mit dieser neuen Methode haben wir die RNA‐Bindepräferenzen von Roquin‐Proteinen gegenüber RNA‐Stammschleifen untersucht, neue hochaffine Motive identifiziert und den mRNA‐Targetraum in Zellen erweitert ...
Lasse Oberstrass +7 more
wiley +1 more source
A polyptych in the margins: accounting notes from early tenth‐century Laon
This paper provides the first edition and thorough examination of marginal notes added to a ninth‐century Carolingian manuscript (Laon, Bibliothèque municipale, MS 424). A detailed paleographic, codicological, linguistic, and historical analysis of these additions allows us not only to trace their provenance to the early tenth‐century see of Laon but ...
Ildar Garipzanov
wiley +1 more source
I, monster: queerness and the Liber Monstrorum in early medieval St Gall
This article analyses a ninth‐century copy of the Liber monstrorum from St Gall in which the first monster, a ‘human of both sexes’, speaks in the first person. The scribe also put the Liber monstrorum into dialogue with Isidore of Seville’s Etymologiae, in which Isidore argued that monsters were not ‘contrary to nature’.
Michael Eber
wiley +1 more source

