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The audiences and reception of the book of Sir John MandevilleTzanaki, Rosemary Teresa January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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'The strife of words' : violence in the writing of Dorothy RichardsonWestbury, Louisa Minna January 1999 (has links)
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Langages pellegrins : pilgrimage and narrative in the French RenaissanceWilliams, Christopher Wesley Charles January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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A critical edition of Wilfrid Holme's 'The Fall and Evill Successe of Rebellion From Time to Time.'Ryan, Francis Xavier January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Ottoman pilgrimage narratives and Nabi s Tuhfetu l-HaremeynCoskun, Menderes January 1999 (has links)
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The Art of Esthetic Narration in the Sequel of Pilgrimage to the WestLin, Jiing-Long 06 July 2000 (has links)
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TEXTUAL AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR PILGRIMAGE IN THE CENTRAL HILL COUNTRY OF THE SOUTHERN LEVANT DURING THE LATE BRONZE AGE-IRON I TRANSITION PERIOD, CA. 1300-1000 BCE.Adams, Kerry Lyn January 2010 (has links)
This research evaluates the textual and archaeological evidence for pilgrimage in the Iron I central hill country of the southern Levant during the Late Bronze Age-Iron I transition period (ca. 1300-1000 BCE). The central hill country comprises the Judean and Samarian hills that are located west of the Jordan River and rise near Hebron to the south and end in the north near Dothan. This location and time period reflect the nascent stages of Israelite identity. Pilgrimage provides new perspectives through which to evaluate a specific aspect of early Israelite religion and culture. This research demonstrates that pilgrimage to ceremonial sites, where processions and ritual performances were held, provided avenues for families and clans to come together for a collective purpose and to fulfill collective needs. Pilgrimage has many facets that transect social, economic, and political agendas. By looking at the entire network of sites availed in the archaeological and textual record that apply to the Iron I central hills, from household shrines to shrines of regional and cross-clan appeal, this research suggests that there were several scales of pilgrimage evident in the central highlands. Each scale of pilgrimage had different sociological implications, but primarily pilgrimage provided avenues for people to exchange goods and services without losing honor, negotiate status, and bond over a collective awareness of kinship and community that provided avenues for disparate tribes to coalesce into a coherent political body.
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Reverent Terroir: Placemaking through Pilgrimage – the Design of an Okanagan WineryPendleton, Ryan 18 March 2013 (has links)
The thesis critically addresses the current architectural condition of the majority of the Okanagan region’s wineries. Their superficial nature, eager to pander to the area’s tourism industry, has left a noticeable void to architecture that truly engages with its surroundings and the emotional investment of its inhabitants and users. The resulting lack of “place” has sparked me to reinvestigate the qualities of the Okanagan landscape, the industrial processes of winemaking, and the patterns and rituals of both winemaker and visitor in an effort to create meaningful architecture.
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An examination of land use patterns in Makkah, a pilgrim cityAlrahman, Hossny Aziz January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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Transcendence of bodily suffering : an anthropological study of English Catholics at LourdesDahlberg, Andrea Liane Gillam January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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