Spelling suggestions: "subject:"alicia"" "subject:"galicia""
1 |
Un modelo de sociedad rural de antiguo régimen en la Galicia costera la Península del Salnés : (jurisdicción de La Lanzada) /Pérez García, José Manuel. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--Santiago de Compostela, 1975. / Limited ed. of 300 copies. No. 300. Includes bibliographical references (p. [346-358] (2d group)).
|
2 |
A peasant society in transition: Ukrainian peasants in five East Galician counties: 1880-1900Hryniuk, Stella M. 08 May 2013 (has links)
While late nineteenth century Galicia has been the subject of
attention of many writers, past literature about East Galicia has
generally given a limited and at times distorted picture of this region.
It has rarely been treated separately, and generalizations about its
society have been made, and perpetuated, on the basis of erroneous data
or inadequate and/or unsystematic study of the sources. The picture
which has emerged has been of a people living in extremes of political
and socio-economic deprivation; particularly pervasive has been the view
that material poverty was a general feature of that society.
This dissertation challenged the accepted interpretations through
an examination of some aspects of East Galicia, specifically focussing
on the Ukrainian peasantry in five Southern Podillian counties.
Contrary to the received version of its history there were evident signs
of change and improvement. In the area of education, there were more
elementary schools, more teachers, and the teaching of a more varied and
modern curriculum; greater activities of the Ukrainian enlightenment
societies; a growing popular didactic press and a large increase in the
number of reading clubs. All of these contributed to substantial
improvements in literacy and an expanded knowledge base for that society.
The effect was most evident in the agricultural sector, the main source of
income for the population. Average sizes of landholdings were not in any
case as small as has been supposed. Significant improvements in yields of
cereal grains and other field crops were achieved. Also there was a movement
towards production of other commercial crops. Particularly significant
was the increased attention devoted to animal husbandry by the
smallholding peasants. Expansion of agricultural education contributed to
the general improvement in agricultural productivity; particularly notable
is the fact that larger numbers and better quality animals were being
raised by the peasantry of the region. Better marketing opportunities
were made available to the population of the region due to advances in
communications, particularly railways. A wider network of maintained
roads provided greater and easier access to both the major road and rail
connections to other regions of Galicia and Europe.
Dissemination of more health information and better nutrition
contributed to increased quality and length of life. Mortality rates
dropped, and major diseases, specifically cholera and smallpox, were
more effectively contained. Along with adaptations to material changes
in their environment, there came a perceptible change in attitudes on
the part of the people of Southern Podillia. Even while traditional
attachment to the Greek Catholic church and to communal self-reliance
remained, there was a growing acceptance of innovative activities such
as the establishment of consumer and producer cooperatives, fire
insurance and communal credit associations. Especially proninent was
the appearance of political awareness, particularly in respect of local
political affairs. With increased knowledge and awareness came
greater self-confidence and risk-taking, and an increased sense
of control on the part of the peasantry over their own lives - in short,
attributes of a modernizing population. Taken together, these
developments show that Southern Podillian society was undergoing a
transition from a static, subsistence-based society motivated by
traditional behavior patterns, to a more mobile, forward-looking
society. Many problems remained, but the legacy of the past historical
interpretations of this society can no longer be sustained.
|
3 |
A peasant society in transition: Ukrainian peasants in five East Galician counties: 1880-1900Hryniuk, Stella M. 08 May 2013 (has links)
While late nineteenth century Galicia has been the subject of
attention of many writers, past literature about East Galicia has
generally given a limited and at times distorted picture of this region.
It has rarely been treated separately, and generalizations about its
society have been made, and perpetuated, on the basis of erroneous data
or inadequate and/or unsystematic study of the sources. The picture
which has emerged has been of a people living in extremes of political
and socio-economic deprivation; particularly pervasive has been the view
that material poverty was a general feature of that society.
This dissertation challenged the accepted interpretations through
an examination of some aspects of East Galicia, specifically focussing
on the Ukrainian peasantry in five Southern Podillian counties.
Contrary to the received version of its history there were evident signs
of change and improvement. In the area of education, there were more
elementary schools, more teachers, and the teaching of a more varied and
modern curriculum; greater activities of the Ukrainian enlightenment
societies; a growing popular didactic press and a large increase in the
number of reading clubs. All of these contributed to substantial
improvements in literacy and an expanded knowledge base for that society.
The effect was most evident in the agricultural sector, the main source of
income for the population. Average sizes of landholdings were not in any
case as small as has been supposed. Significant improvements in yields of
cereal grains and other field crops were achieved. Also there was a movement
towards production of other commercial crops. Particularly significant
was the increased attention devoted to animal husbandry by the
smallholding peasants. Expansion of agricultural education contributed to
the general improvement in agricultural productivity; particularly notable
is the fact that larger numbers and better quality animals were being
raised by the peasantry of the region. Better marketing opportunities
were made available to the population of the region due to advances in
communications, particularly railways. A wider network of maintained
roads provided greater and easier access to both the major road and rail
connections to other regions of Galicia and Europe.
Dissemination of more health information and better nutrition
contributed to increased quality and length of life. Mortality rates
dropped, and major diseases, specifically cholera and smallpox, were
more effectively contained. Along with adaptations to material changes
in their environment, there came a perceptible change in attitudes on
the part of the people of Southern Podillia. Even while traditional
attachment to the Greek Catholic church and to communal self-reliance
remained, there was a growing acceptance of innovative activities such
as the establishment of consumer and producer cooperatives, fire
insurance and communal credit associations. Especially proninent was
the appearance of political awareness, particularly in respect of local
political affairs. With increased knowledge and awareness came
greater self-confidence and risk-taking, and an increased sense
of control on the part of the peasantry over their own lives - in short,
attributes of a modernizing population. Taken together, these
developments show that Southern Podillian society was undergoing a
transition from a static, subsistence-based society motivated by
traditional behavior patterns, to a more mobile, forward-looking
society. Many problems remained, but the legacy of the past historical
interpretations of this society can no longer be sustained.
|
4 |
Galician cultural identity in the works of Ramón Otero Pedrayo (1888-1976)Patterson, Craig January 2002 (has links)
In the 1920's, the grouping of Galician intellectuals known as the Xeración Nós began, through their wide-ranging literary output and more specifically political activities, to articulate and reinterpret essential notions of Galician cultural identity after several centuries of cultural repression and centralisation. This thesis examines both the nexus of inherited positions informing this cultural recovery, and its original reformulation, through the works of the most prominent intellectual of the Xeración Nós, Ramón Otero Pedrayo (1888 1976). Otero was an important figure in Galician intellectual and cultural life over the larger part of the twentieth century, especially when expression of Galician distinctiveness, whether political or cultural, was severely limited and largely discouraged by the Franco regime. He is particularly deserving of an in-depth study, especially since this theme so intrinsically associated with him has not yet been written upon from a perspective of cultural history. In order to provide as accurate an analysis as possible of Otero's conception of Galician reality and the developmental nature of his ideas, I have consulted a large number of texts, ranging from brief journalistic sketches to dense biographical tomes. In particular, I focus on the large body of essays written by Otero such as the Ensaio histórico sobre a cultura galega (1932) and the more imaginative configuration of Galician identity contained in the trilogy of novels Os camiños da vida (1928), Arredor de si (1930) and Devalar (1935). This allows for an analysis of the writer's perspective on the essential bases of Galician culture via the recuperation through literature (most notably the influence of the broad cultural revival initiated in the 1860's, or Rexurdimento, and the influence of historical and cultural co-ordinates ultimately derived from Romantic thought). Crucial in shaping Otero's definitive vision is an eclectic array of references from cultural history both ancient and modern, ideological import through the Celtic ideal, and contemporary social issues (such as the political climate of the Second Republic). To be seen firmly within the parameters of an intellectual history, this thesis has as its objective an explanation how these intrinsic and extrinsic sources of influence condition Otero's evaluation of Galician distinctiveness, and what that quality actually embodies, within the context of the cultural activity prevalent in Galicia from 1918 to 1936 and beyond.
|
5 |
National regeneration in the Diaspora : Zionism, politics, and Jewish identity in late Habsburg Galicia, 1883-1907 /Shanes, Joshua Michael. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
|
6 |
Zur Geschichte der ukrainischen Notenausgaben in Galizien im 19. und beginnenden 20. JahrhundertOssadzja, Olga 15 February 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Die ersten gedruckten Notenhefte erscheinen in den ostslawischen Gebieten im 16. Jahrhundert.
|
7 |
Agricultural Temples in the Iberian Landscape, Larders from the PastLorenzo-Luaces Pico, Veronica January 2011 (has links)
The Galician hórreo is a traditional rural building of Northern Spain used for desiccation and conservation of cereal grains. This detached building provides natural ventilation, an unfavourable environment for biotic agents such as fungi and insects, and prevents the access of other animals, such as rodents. The essential typology of the Galician hórreo emerged historically as a result of many different cultures interacting with changing harvesting techniques related to growing cycles.
Types are those persistent architectural elements that give form to the collective life of the city. This thesis examines the significance of the ‘hórreo’ typology in the context of Aldo Rossi’s advocacy of ‘type’ as a persistent architectural element that gives form to the collective life of a city or region and raising the issue of permanence in architecture within the fluid tides of history. The hórreo is perceived as an irreducible element encoded within the historical permanence of the regions of Galicia and Asturias.
The thesis proposes an architecture that embodies time and memory in a world where space and time become increasingly compressed. In recognizing the limitations of typology in an era of accelerated experience, the thesis argues for its relevance by creating an architecture that bridges different eras and time periods for a culture like Galicia, that still remembers.
|
8 |
Agricultural Temples in the Iberian Landscape, Larders from the PastLorenzo-Luaces Pico, Veronica January 2011 (has links)
The Galician hórreo is a traditional rural building of Northern Spain used for desiccation and conservation of cereal grains. This detached building provides natural ventilation, an unfavourable environment for biotic agents such as fungi and insects, and prevents the access of other animals, such as rodents. The essential typology of the Galician hórreo emerged historically as a result of many different cultures interacting with changing harvesting techniques related to growing cycles.
Types are those persistent architectural elements that give form to the collective life of the city. This thesis examines the significance of the ‘hórreo’ typology in the context of Aldo Rossi’s advocacy of ‘type’ as a persistent architectural element that gives form to the collective life of a city or region and raising the issue of permanence in architecture within the fluid tides of history. The hórreo is perceived as an irreducible element encoded within the historical permanence of the regions of Galicia and Asturias.
The thesis proposes an architecture that embodies time and memory in a world where space and time become increasingly compressed. In recognizing the limitations of typology in an era of accelerated experience, the thesis argues for its relevance by creating an architecture that bridges different eras and time periods for a culture like Galicia, that still remembers.
|
9 |
Galicia en el comercio marítimo medievalFerreira Priegue, Elisa María. January 1988 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universidad de Santiago, 1987. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [23]-42).
|
10 |
El lenguaje ecológico de Manuel Rivas: retranca, resilencia y reexistenciaCastro-Vázquez Isabel. Cappuccio, Brenda L. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Florida State University, 2004. / Advisor: Dr. Brenda L. Cappuccio, Florida State University, College of Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Modern Languages and Linguistics. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed Oct. 4,2004). Includes bibliographical references.
|
Page generated in 0.0439 seconds