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British strategy in the Mediterranean, 1803-1810Mackesy, Piers January 1953 (has links)
No description available.
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The journal of Roberto da Sanseverino (1417-1487) : a study on navigation and seafaring in the fifteenth centuryVidoni, Tullio 11 1900 (has links)
Roberto da Sanseverino went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1458. He travelled from Venice to Jaffa on a galley and made his return, from Acre to Ancona, on a three-masted sailing ship. During both voyages he kept very accurate logs of distances, courses and wind directions. He described the sails employed for different modes of sailing and other activities pertaining to the safe operation of the vessels. These logs are contained in Sanseverino's diary of his pilgrimage and are an essential part of an original manuscript kept at the University of Bologna. This diary is the first documentation, and the only one known to exist up to this time, which presents a complete description of the methods employed by medieval shipmasters to navigate and handle their ships overlong voyages. The accuracy and reliability of the numeric data and of the other facts contained in the logs are such that, among other unusual findings, they make it possible to deter-mine the length of the Venetian sea mile, the angles of tack of medieval ships to windward and the speeds attainable under various conditions of sailing. Other original descriptions encompass the handling of ships in anchorages and some of the technical considerations that were essential to ensure ship seaworthiness under different conditions of cargo. Further reflections on all these data make it possible to arrive at certain conclusions about the economic constraints of sea ventures in different seasons of the year.
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L'expansion phénicienne en Méditerranée: Etude critique de la tradition littéraireBunnens, Guy January 1974 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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The journal of Roberto da Sanseverino (1417-1487) : a study on navigation and seafaring in the fifteenth centuryVidoni, Tullio 11 1900 (has links)
Roberto da Sanseverino went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1458. He travelled from Venice to Jaffa on a galley and made his return, from Acre to Ancona, on a three-masted sailing ship. During both voyages he kept very accurate logs of distances, courses and wind directions. He described the sails employed for different modes of sailing and other activities pertaining to the safe operation of the vessels. These logs are contained in Sanseverino's diary of his pilgrimage and are an essential part of an original manuscript kept at the University of Bologna. This diary is the first documentation, and the only one known to exist up to this time, which presents a complete description of the methods employed by medieval shipmasters to navigate and handle their ships overlong voyages. The accuracy and reliability of the numeric data and of the other facts contained in the logs are such that, among other unusual findings, they make it possible to deter-mine the length of the Venetian sea mile, the angles of tack of medieval ships to windward and the speeds attainable under various conditions of sailing. Other original descriptions encompass the handling of ships in anchorages and some of the technical considerations that were essential to ensure ship seaworthiness under different conditions of cargo. Further reflections on all these data make it possible to arrive at certain conclusions about the economic constraints of sea ventures in different seasons of the year. / Arts, Faculty of / History, Department of / Graduate
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Using and reusing the monumental past in the late antique Mediterranean West, 300-600Underwood, Douglas R. January 2015 (has links)
Scholarship on late antique cities has largely conceptualized them as singular entities, either decaying or transitioning as Roman imperial power and economic structures shifted. Improved archaeological data from urban sites, accompanied by a number of broad synthetic studies, now allow for fresh exploration of the details of urbanism in this transformative era. This study examines the ways that a select group of public buildings were used and reused in the Mediterranean West between 300 and 600 CE. This examination is primarily carried out through the collection of a broad catalogue of archaeological evidence (supplemented with epigraphic and literary testimony) for the constructions, work projects, abandonments and reuses of key public monuments across the Western Mediterranean region—principally Italy, southern Gaul, Spain, and North Africa west of Cyrenaica. This broad survey is augmented with case studies on select cities. Such an analysis of the late antique histories of baths, aqueducts, and spectacle buildings (theaters, amphitheaters, and circuses) shows that each of the building types had a distinct history and that public monuments were not a unitary group. It also reveals unexpectedly few regional trends, suggesting that these histories were broadly common across the West. Further, this study shows that each building type was reused differently, both in terms of purposes and chronology. Finally, by considering economic, technological, cultural and legal factors affecting patterns of use, abandonment and reuse, this study establishes that the primary cause for the transformations to public building was largely a change in euergetistic practices in late antiquity. Cities with access to imperial or other governmental patronage used and maintained their public monuments longer than those without. Together these observations demonstrate the complexities of urban change in this period and prove that the idea of a single pattern of decline in late antique cities is no longer tenable.
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The transformative ethos of Ephesians 5:21-33 and its implications for a contemporary South African contextAdams, David 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2003. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The New Testament passage that treats the dynamics of the marriage relationship most
extensively is Ephesians 5:21-33. This passage is embedded in the Ephesian domestic
code, which employs a conventional form used widely in the first-century Mediterranean
world and which consequently reflects a patriarchal hierarchy. Does this, however, imply that
Ephesians is advocating a marriage relationship that is patriarchal and hierarchical, or does
this passage point beyond the particular first-century cultural context to a loftier ideal?
Scholars are today divided in their assessments of Ephesians 5:21-33. Some regard the
passage as a reactionary accommodation to the status quo, while others excuse this social
conformity as being necessitated by a struggle for survival in a hostile first-century world.
This thesis seeks to re-read Ephesians 5:21-33 rhetorically against the background of the
socio-historical context of the first-century Mediterranean world and prevailing perspectives
on the status of women, domestic social structures, and marriage. It takes into consideration
the general rhetorical thrust of Ephesians as a whole, the particular way in which Ephesians
5:21-33 is framed textually, as well as the structure, content and uniquely Christological
context. Such a re-reading shows that the conventional household code of the first century is
in fact infused with a radical transformative ethos which subtely, but significantly, challenges
the patriarchal hierarchy. For, it invites readers to step into a new, alternative reality in
Christ, thereby entering a place of ongoing reorientation in their marriage relationships,
embracing an attitude of mutual submission and other-centred service towards each othera
marriage relationship modeled on the relationship between Christ and the church.
This points to the conclusion that it is this transformative ethos in Ephesians 5:21-33 that is
transculturally normative rather than the first-century patriarchal hierarchy in which it is
embedded. This has profound implications for pastoral ministry in present-day South Africa,
for readers from more traditional backgrounds often read this passage as simply reinforcing
the patriarch ally hierarchical status quo, while readers from less traditional backgrounds may
tend merely to dismiss it as archaic and irrelevant. In reality, the transformative ethos of
Ephesians 5:21-33 provides an ongoing challenge to both authoritarian hierarchical marriage
structures on the one hand, and laissez faire egalitarian marriage relationships on the other,
while holding out a compelling vision - a vision of a magnificent other-centred marriage
partnership under the lordship of Christ. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Efesiërs 5:21-33 is by uitstek dié gedeelte in die Nuwe Testament wat die dinamika van die
huweliksverhouding op die mees uitgebreide wyse behandel. Hierdie gedeelte is
onlosmaaklik verbonde aan die Efesiese huisreëls, wat weer gebaseer is op die
konvensionele vorm wydverspreid in die eerste-eeuse Mediterreense wêreld, en weerspieël
gevolglik 'n patriargale hiërargie. Die vraag is egter of hierdeur geïmpliseer word dat
Efesiërs 'n patriargale en hiërargiese huweliksverhouding verkondig, of wys hierdie gedeelte,
verby die bepaalde eerste-eeuse kulturele konteks heen, na 'n hoër ideaal? Geleerdes is
vandag verdeeld in hulle beoordeling van Efesiërs 5:21-33. Sommige beskou die gedeelte
as 'n behoudende aanpassing van die status quo, terwyl ander hierdie sosiale
behoudendheid verskoon as genoodsaak deur die stryd om oorlewing in 'n vyandige eersteeeuse
wêreld.
Hierdie tesis beoog om Efesiërs 5:21-33 retories te herlees teen die agtergrond van die
sosio-historiese konteks van die eerste-eeuse Mediterreense wêreld en die heersende
sienings van die status van vroue, huishoudelik-sosiale strukture en die huwelik. Dit neem in
aanmerking die algemene retoriese strekking van Efesiërs as geheel, die bepaalde tekstuele
omraming van Efesiërs 5:21-33, sowel as die struktuur, inhoud en unieke Christologiese
konteks. So 'n herlees toon dat die konvensionele huishoudelike kode van die eerste eeu in
werklikheid besiel was met 'n radikaal herskeppende etos wat op subtiele, maar
betekenisvolle, wyse die patriargale hiërargie uitdaag. Want, dit nooi lesers om 'n nuwe,
alternatiewe werklikheid in Christus te betree vanwaar hulle hulself voortdurend kan
heroriënteer in hul huweliksverhouding, en 'n houding van wedersydse onderworpenheid en
ander-gesentreerde diens aan mekaar aanvaar - 'n huweliksverhouding gemodelleer op die
verhouding tussen Christus en die kerk.
Só 'n herlees lei tot die gevolgtrekking dat dit hierdie herskeppende etos van Efesiërs 5:21-
33 is wat transkultureel normatief is, eerder as die eerste-eeuse patriargale hiërargie
waaraan dit onlosmaaklik verbonde is. Dit bring diepgaande implikasies vir die pastorale
bediening in die hedendaagse Suid-Afrika mee, want lesers met 'n meer tradisionele
agtergrond lees dié gedeelte dikwels as 'n versterking van die patriargale, hiërargiese status
quo, terwyl lesers met 'n minder tradisionele agtergrond mag neig om die gedeelte bloot af te
maak as argaïes en irrelevant. In werklikheid voorsien die herskeppende etos van Efesiërs
5:21-33 'n volgehoue uitdaging aan beide outoritêr-hiërargiese huwelikstrukture aan die een
kant, en laissez faire gelykmakende huweliksverhoudinge aan die ander kant, terwyl dit 'n
dwingende visie voorhou - 'n visie van 'n heerlike ander-gesentreerde huweliksvennootskap
onder die heerskappy van Christus.
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City centres of the apostle PaulHardenberg, Benedict Ralph January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2002 / On title page: Master of Philosophy (Bible Skills) / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The apostle Paul was called and commissioned to the city centres of the eastern
Mediterranean world. These city centres were places of power, trade, wealth and travel.
They were the nerve centres of civilisation in the East. People from various parts of the
Roman Empire were found in these major cities. The city was therefore a highly significant
institution in the Roman Empire. The governing authorities wanted hellenization and
romanization to spread from these cities. The Christian leaders also decided that
Christianity had to spread in the Roman Empire from its city centres. The apostle Paul's
Christian mission was therefore to the various cities in the Roman Empire. The sociohistorical
realities in these cities therefore formed the context of Paul's life and apostolic
work and determined his relation to a city. The political, social, cultural and religious
factors in a city could therefore impinge on his life and work. The apostle Paul was usually
drawn to these large cities where he could find Jewish communities. As Christianity was
resting on a Jewish foundation, his initial strategy was his work in the synagogues amongst
the Jews. Paul also needed an alternative venue for his Christian work in the city. These
alternate venues were usually the private homes of individuals who had become Christians.
In these homes Paul established his church in a city. The hosts in these homes would
usually become the benefactors and leaders in the church. Paul's apostolic work in a city
was also done in the city streets. His church therefore became thoroughly mixed in terms of
social status, however, the church gave all equal rights and privileges. When Paul left a
city, he also placed on them the responsibility to reach their surrounding regions and
provinces with the Christian message. These cities therefore had to be strategically located.
The apostle Paul chose five specific cities that had an advantageous geographical position
in the Roman provinces to complete his apostolic work in the eastern Mediterranean world. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die apostel Paulus was geroep en opgedrag vir die stedelike sentrums van die ooste
Middellandse wereld. Hierdie stedelike sentrums was plekke van invloedryke mag,
ekonomiese handel, rykdom en reis aktiwitiete. Hulle was ook die kern van menslike
beskawing in die Ooste. Bevolkings groepe vanuit verskeie dele van die Romeinse ryk was
in hierdie groot stede te vinde. Stede was 'n hoogs betekensvolle instelling in die Romeinse
ryk. Die politieke owerhede wou he dat hellenization en romanization moes sprei van
hierdie stede. Die Christelike leiers het ook besluit dat Christendom moes in die stede van
die Romeinse ryk sprei. Die apostel Paulus se Christelike sending was dus tot die
verskillende stede in die Romeinse ryk. Die sosio-historiese realiteite in hierdie stede was
die samehang van Paulus se apostoliese werk en het ook sy verhouding met die betrokke
stede bepaal. Die politieke, maatskaplike, kulturele en godsdienstige faktore in 'n stad kon
dus 'n invloed uitoefen op sy lewe en werk. Paulus was gewoonlik aangetrokke tot hierdie
groot stede waar Joodse gemeenskappe te vinde was. Aangesien Christendom in die Joodse
geloof gegrondves was, was sy aanvanklike strategie om sy werk te loots in sinagoge waar
Joode te vinde was. Paulus het ook 'n alternatiewe ontmoetings plek vir sy Christelike werk
in die stede nodig gehad. Hierdie alternatiewe ontmoetingsplekke was gewoonlik in die
huise van indiwidue wat Christene geword het. Die eienaar van hierdie huishouding het
gedien as gasheer, weldoener en leier in die kerk. Paulus het ook sy apostoliese werk
voortgesit in die stedelike strate. Sy kerke het as gevolg hiervan 'n gemende samelewing
status gehad, nogtans het hy gepoog om alle Christene gelykwaardig te stel. Wanneer
Paulus 'n stad verlaat het, het hy het ook aan hulle die verantwoordelikheid gegee om uit te
reik na hulomliggende streke en provinsies met die Christen boodskap. Hierdie stede moes
dus strategies gelee wees. Paulus het vyf spesifieke stede wat 'n voordelig geologiese
posisie in die Romeinse provinsies uitgeken om sy apostoliese werk te voltooi in die ooste
Middellandse wereld.
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