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The importance of taste: a comparative study on wild food plant consumption in twenty-one local communities in ItalyGhirardini, M.P., Carli, M., del Vecchio, N., Rovati, A., Cova, O., Valigi, F., Agnetti, G., Macconi, M., Adamo, D., Traiina, M., Laudini, F., Marcheselli, I., Caruso, N., Gedda, T., Donati, F., Marzadro, A., Russi, P., Spaggiari, C., Bianco, M., Binda, R., Barattieri, E., Tognacci, A., Girardo, M., Vaschetti, L., Caprino, P., Sesti, E., Andreozzi, G., Coletto, E., Belzer, G., Pieroni, Andrea January 2007 (has links)
Yes / A comparative food ethnobotanical study was carried out in twenty-one local communities in Italy, fourteen of which were located in Northern Italy, one in Central Italy, one in Sardinia, and four in Southern Italy. 549 informants were asked to name and describe food uses of wild botanicals they currently gather and consume. Data showed that gathering, processing and consuming wild food plants are still important activities in all the selected areas. A few botanicals were quoted and cited in multiple areas, demonstrating that there are ethnobotanical contact points among the various Italian regions (Asparagus acutifolius, Reichardia picroides, Cichorium intybus, Foeniculum vulgare, Sambucus nigra, Silene vulgaris, Taraxacum officinale, Urtica dioica, Sonchus and Valerianella spp.). One taxon (Borago officinalis) in particular was found to be among the most quoted taxa in both the Southern and the Northern Italian sites.
However, when we took into account data regarding the fifteen most quoted taxa in each site and compared and statistically analysed these, we observed that there were a few differences in the gathering and consumption of wild food plants between Northern and Southern Italy. In the North, Rosaceae species prevailed, whereas in the South, taxa belonging to the Asteraceae, Brassicaceae, and Liliaceae s.l. families were most frequently cited. We proposed the hypothesis that these differences may be due to the likelihood that in Southern Italy the erosion of TK on wild vegetables is taking place more slowly, and also to the likelihood that Southern Italians' have a higher appreciation of wild vegetables that have a strong and bitter taste.
A correspondence analysis confirmed that the differences in the frequencies of quotation of wild plants within the Northern and the Southern Italian sites could be ascribed only partially to ethnic/cultural issues. An additional factor could be recent socio-economic shifts, which may be having a continued effort on people's knowledge of wild food plants and the way they use them.
Finally, after having compared the collected data with the most important international and national food ethnobotanical databases that focus on wild edible plants, we pointed out a few uncommon plant food uses (e.g. Celtis aetnensis fruits, Cicerbita alpine shoots, Helichrysum italicum leaves, Lonicera caprifolium fruits, Symphytum officinale leaves), which are new, or have thus far been recorded only rarely.
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Pastoralism in Sardinia : ethnoarchaeological research into the material and spatial features of pastoralism in a regional contextMientjes, Antoon Cornelis January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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The renaissance studioli of Federico da Montefeltro and the architecture of memory /Kirkbride, Robert January 2002 (has links)
This investigation of the studioli, small contemplation chambers in the ducal palaces of Urbino and Gubbio, considers their position in the western tradition of the memory arts. Drawing upon select images in the studioli, as well as text sources readily available to Duke Federico da Montefeltro (1422--82) and the members of his court, this inquiry examines how the discipline of architecture equipped the late quattrocento mind with a bridge between the mathematical arts, which lend themselves to mechanical practices, and the art of rhetoric, a discipline central to the cultivation of memory and eloquence. As ramifications of material and mental craft, the studioli offered the Urbino court models for education and prudent governance.
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Venetian humanism in the Mediterranean world : writing empire from the marginsMaglaque, Erin January 2014 (has links)
My dissertation examines the cultural history of the Renaissance Venetian maritime empire. In this project I bring into conversation two historiographical subfields, the intellectual history of Venetian Renaissance humanism and the colonial history of the early modern Mediterranean, which have previously developed separately. In doing so, I examine the relationship between power and knowledge as it unfolded in the early modern Mediterranean. The ways in which Venetian Renaissance intellectual culture was shaped by its imperial engagements - and, conversely, how Venetian approaches to governance were inflected by humanist practices - are the central axes of my dissertation. In the first part of the dissertation, I examine the ways in which writing and textual collecting were used by elite Venetian readers to represent the geopolitical dimensions of their empire. I consider a group of manuscripts and printed books which contain technical, navigational, and cartographic writing and images about Venetian mercantile and imperial activity in the Mediterranean. In the second part, I undertake two case-studies of Venetian patrician governors who were trained in the humanist schools of Venice, before being posted to colonial offices in Dalmatia and the Aegean, respectively. I examine how their education in Venice as humanists influenced their experience and practice of governance in the stato da mar. Their personal texts offer an alternative intellectual history of empire, one which demonstrates the formation of political thought amongst the men actually practicing and experiencing imperial governance. Overall, I aim to build a picture of the ways in which literary culture, the physical world of the stato da mar, and political thought came to be entwined in the Venetian Renaissance; and then to describe how these dense relationships worked for the Venetian administrators who experienced them in the Mediterranean.
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The renaissance studioli of Federico da Montefeltro and the architecture of memory /Kirkbride, Robert January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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A comparative analysis of developments in architecture and landscape architecture during the Renaissance period in ItalyJohnson, Leroy Charles. January 1964 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1964 J67
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Post-prehistoric changes in the Tavoliere coastlandsDelano-Smith, Catherine January 1974 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with related aspects of physical and settlement changes in the coastal portion of the largest lowland in peninsular Italy, the Tavoliere of Poggia (Apulia). It is an empirical study, summarising the state of archaeological and geographical information, offering new archaeological and sedimentary evidence, and reassessing many interpretations concerning settlement, economic activity and the environment from the mid-Holocene and Early Neolithic times to the present. Formerly there were a number of lagoons in the coastlands, wide open to the Adriatic or almost wholly closed by the barrier island. Today much of this is cultivated land. Before the implications of such a physical change on past settlement and economy can be assessed, the ancient settlement patterns have to be discovered; the buried topography revealed; and the nature and phasing of the sedimentation that has all but obliterated the lagoons outlined. These are the main objectives in the present study. A perhaps wider range of source material than is orthodox in historical geography is investigated to these ends. The study of written and cartographic sources, from the Roman period onward, is intimately combined with the study of field evidence both archaeological and sedimentary. In this way, much of the evidence falls in to place as a better understanding of the former physical environment is achieved. For instance, cognizance of the openness of one lagoon leads to a more accurate interpretation of the route directions of the Roman itineraria and a better coincidence of archaeological and written evidences for lost settlements. But, bearing in mind that the thesis is essentially an interim statement on an active and longterm research programme, no conclusions are attempted although the study has implications reaching beyond the local area. Instead, the three important factors of change - climatic change, changes in sea level, and the anthropogenic factor - are introduced as the basis of the next stage in the research programme.
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The last Florentine republic, (1527-1530)Roth, Cecil January 1924 (has links)
No description available.
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The influence of the Italian Risorgimento on British public opinion, with special reference to the period, 1859-1861Mackay, Donald F. January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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Bettino Ricasoli politico nell'Italia unita (1861-1880) / Bettino Ricasoli homme politique dans le Royaume d'Italie (1861-1880) / Bettino Ricasoli statesman in the Kingdom of Italy (1861-1880)Satto, Christian 03 March 2018 (has links)
L'analyse de l'action politique de Bettino Ricasoli (1809-1880) au lendemain de l'unité italienne, notamment en tant que Président du conseil des ministres (1861-62 et 1866-67), aide à mieux comprendre quelques-uns des moments décisifs du processus de construction de l'État et de la nation après 1861 en Italie. En ces deux occasions, en effet, l'homme d'État florentin dû affronter une série de défis considérables, dont le problème de la stabilité du cabinet et de ses rapports avec la Couronne, les rapports entre l’État et l’Église et entre la religion catholique et la société civile, les relations internationales, en particulier avec la France de Napoléon III, la création d'un système administratif unitaire et l'achèvement de l'unité politique et territoriale du nouvel État. Les réponses données par Ricasoli à ces problèmes constituent les éléments fondamentaux permettant de le situer dans le cadre de l'Italie libérale et de la « Droite historique », appelée à gouverner le Royaume après la mort de Cavour, dont l’homme politique toscan, soulignons-le, fut le premier successeur. / The analysis of Bettino Ricasoli’s (1809-1880) political action after the Risorgimento, with particular attention to his role as Prime Minister (1861-62 and 1866-67), is interesting to understand some of the turning points in the construction of State and Nation in Italy. On both occasions, indeed, the Florentine statesman dealt with a number of important issues, including the problem of the Executive’s stability and its relationship with the Crown; the relationship between Church and State and between religion and society; relations with France; the establishment of a unitary administrative system; and the completion of the new state’s political and territorial unity. His answers to these problems are essential to contextualize his figure within Liberal Italy and the Historical Right, the political movement which was to lay the foundations of the new unitary state after Cavour’s death, whose first successor was Ricasoli.
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