Results 161 to 170 of about 1,087 (201)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Late completion of Cologne and St. Vitus Cathedral

open access: yes, 2014
Completions of Cathedrals were, in some cases (e.g. Sagrada Familia in Barcelona) still are large scale and unique projects which were carried out across Europe at the end of the 19th and even during the course of the 20th century. The aim of this dissertation is a comparison of the late completion of St.
Tomas, Brichta
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St. Vitus – die ehemalige Pfarrkirche zu Wasenweiler

2021
Unser Münster / Die Informationsschrift des Münsterbauvereins Breisach e.V., Nr.
Heim, Ernst, Grom, Erwin
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Sydenham's Chorea: Physical and Psychological Symptoms of St Vitus Dance

Pediatrics, 1993
Eleven children with Sydenham's chorea (8 girls and 3 boys, mean age = 8.4 ± 2.2 [SD] years) underwent comprehensive physical, neuropsychologic, and psychiatric examination. The chorea was manifested as dysarthria, gait disturbances, and frequent adventitious movements of the face, neck, trunk, and extremities.
S E, Swedo   +6 more
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Revisiting the Habsburg Mausoleum in St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague

Austrian History Yearbook, 2021
AbstractThe Habsburg Mausoleum in St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague, designed and constructed in the second half of the sixteenth century by Alexander Colin from Mecheln in the Low Countries, is often noted in modern scholarship as an early manifestation of the influence in Bohemia of the Habsburg dynasty, which had ascended the Bohemian throne in 1527 and
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St. Vitus Cathedral, Rijeka

2010
Today the Cathedral, once the Jesuit Church of St. Vitus in Rijeka, is the only Baroque Jesuit central-plan church in Croatia. Its spatial organisation, accomplished in 1638, is characterised by a regular octagon originally surmounted by a high dome and surrounded with oval chapels, an architectural solution influenced by the famous Italian architects,
Repanić-Braun, Mirjana   +1 more
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St. Vitus’s Women of Color: Dancing with Hegel

Comparative and Continental Philosophy, 2017
ABSTRACTIn the first section of this essay, I offer a brief overview of Hegel’s dozen or so mentions of dance in his Lectures on Aesthetics, focusing on the tension between Hegel’s denigration of dance as an “imperfect art” and his characterization of dance as a potential threat to the other arts.
openaire   +1 more source

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