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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The sequences of Verona, Biblioteca capitolare CVII and the Italian sequence tradition

Brunner, Lance William, January 1977 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1977. / Typescript. Vol. 2 contains transcriptions of the sequences of Verona, Biblioteca capitolare CVII. Includes bibliographical references (v. 2, leaves [118]-125).
2

Collateral Promoters of the Venetian Myth: Veronese Chronicles in the Age of Venetian Hegemony

veronesi, gene p. January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
3

Friars in the City: Mendicant Architecture and Pious Practice in Medieval Verona, c. 1220-c. 1375

Labunski, Meagan Green January 2010 (has links)
<p>This dissertation explores how the combination of pious practice, economic activity, and religious poverty shaped the architecture of the mendicants in medieval Verona. It also examines how the presence of the friars affected the city. By the thirteenth century, the populated centers of northern Italy were fertile grounds for heretical movements, religious skepticism, and anti-clerical attitudes. The mendicant orders developed as a response to the crisis of the medieval church in the city and provided a new concept of the religious vocation, one committed to voluntary poverty and the conversion of heretics. The most important representatives of the new orders were the Franciscans and Dominicans, who centered their religious mission in an urban context where the growth of commerce and a literate and numerate middle class required a new approach to pastoral care, one that directly addressed both doctrinal and social issues. The friars revolutionized traditional religious practice: they used exterior sites as extensions of liturgical space and their innovative approach to church architecture emphasized function and utility.</p><p>Existing studies on mendicant building have traditionally emphasized the formal characteristics of the monuments, examining churches in isolation, with little concern for context, use, and sequence of construction. This dissertation moves beyond this approach to consider the broader circumstances that frame the appearance of mendicant houses. It examines how the Franciscan church of S. Fermo Maggiore, the Dominican church of S. Anastasia, and their respective communities, responded to the dynamics of urban Verona. The study includes revised construction narratives and new dates for S. Fermo and S. Anastasia that emphasize the <italics>process<italics> of construction--how the friars approached their building projects--and the role of lay patronage in the configuration of architectural space. As research reveals, the friars began to erect their conventual complexes before instigating construction or reconstruction of the churches themselves, and this sequence had significant implications for how the friars used the spaces in and around their convent for preaching and liturgical celebrations. They planned or reconfigured their architectural space to both appeal to and accommodate the lay public and their pious practices, including sermon attendance, burial, and the veneration of local saints. Modifications to the exterior spaces around the convents likewise indicate their liturgical importance. By investigating the specific interactions between the mendicants and the city of Verona, this dissertation explores how the architecture of the friars expressed aspects of the society in which they operated.</p> / Dissertation
4

An Interpretation of Modern: Costume Designs for An Adaptation of Shakespeare's The Two Gentlemen of Verona

Hao, Priscilla Ruth 19 July 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Shakespeare's The Two Gentlemen of Verona, is accredited as being one of his early comedies. It is not as widely popular as Taming of the Shrew or A Midsummer's Night, and is also known "as the comedy with a problem ending", this being the immediate forgiveness of Silvia to Valentine and Julia to Proteus. My initial reaction to this ending was of disgust and wonderment of how a 21st century audience would react to this. The director, Alex Mackenzie, a fellow graduate MA student, approached the script with very strong initial concepts but at the same time her approach was very loose and fluid. She wanted to create a world with a modern feel, yet one that was not divorced from Shakespeare. She saw their world as being off kilter, a world that did not necessarily exist. Costumes in this world would be the main element to bridge the worlds of modern and period. Her definitions of periods for this production were the Renaissance and Romantic. With the set design minimalistic and the lights stylized, my approach was to find costumes that not only fit the character's personalities, but also to bring a connection with the audience to this modern world while maintaining a feel of the shows original roots. Since this play has a sense of a class system of servants and nobles, merging of ideals was necessary to find a safe place to show class in a classless modern society. I planned to mark class distinction in three areas: silhouette, color, and texture, using costume research from Elizabethan England, the ideas of modern high fashion's adaptation of period clothing, and the runway work of high fashion designers, particularly those from Milan, Italy. By combining these elements, I was able to bring a modern look that was not only fashionable, but also intriguing. The sources of inspiration that were under consideration included lace ruffles on shirts, chain mail for the knight, breeches, and Elizabethan collars. Colors were also integral to class distinction through the use of texture and vibrant hues to show upper class.
5

Screening for carbapenemase-associated biomarkers in Klebsiella oxytoca using matrixassisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrom

Uppström, Hannah January 2022 (has links)
Antibiotic resistant bacteria are threatening human health, and the resistance is progressingfaster than the development of new antimicrobial compounds. Antibiotic resistant infections cost enormous sums of money and resources, but most importantly human lives. Therefore, early prediction and detection of antibiotic resistance in bacteria are research areas of high priority. The use of analytical instruments such as matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) is a powerful tool for research in antibiotic resistant bacteria, both as quick microbe identification and for other areas in the field.Due to its relatively easy interpretable spectra provided by the soft ionization technique, and ability to ionize macromolecules without compromising sample integrity, it has also been used for biomarker screening for detection of antimicrobial resistance. Although these studies have shown promising results, the area is still progressing and needs further method development and standardized protocols. This study aimed to use MALDI-TOF MS for carbapenemaseassociated screening in Klebsiella oxytoca. The presumed key spectral peaks would derive from presence of the enzyme Verona integron-encoded metallo-β-lactamase, type 1 (VIM-1), and would not be found if VIM-1 were absent. The isolates, carrying the enzyme, used in the study were isolated from wastewater and river water in Örebro, Sweden. Bacteria genus and species was determined by MALDI-TOF identification, whereupon the microbes were tested for antibiotic susceptibility using the disk diffusion method. Carbapenem hydrolysis assay was used to confirm the presence/absence of functional carbapenemase. A genotypic confirmation was performed by polymerase chain reaction and gel electrophoresis. Mass spectra from MALDI-TOF were compared for identification of possible biomarker peaks that could indicate carbapenem resistance. Nine key mass spectral peaks were found that could potentially be used as biomarkers in future studies. The peaks differentiated two groups of Klebsiella oxytocaisolates, one group producing functional carbapenemase and one group that did not, consistent with the aim of this study.
6

Shakespeare's early comedies: studies in The comedy of errors, The taming of the shrew and The two gentlemen of Verona

Bryant, Peter January 1970 (has links)
This dissertation offers fairly full readings of three early Shakespearean comedies. Because these works are still partly misunderstood, it has seemed reasonable to lay the critical emphasis on explication, though a certain amount of judging has been inevitable. The aim has been to induce recognition of aspects of these plays to which much modern criticism has seemed opaque.
7

An Analysis of Grain Corn Nutritional Supplements and Relative Maturity in Mississippi

Whittenton, Joseph Bryan 04 May 2018 (has links)
A review of available corn relative maturity groups in Mississippi shows a limited range of maturity groups in use. Research focusing on expanding the range of maturity groups was conducted in MS in 2015 and 2016. Along with expanded maturity groups, treatments of fertilizer (10-34-0), foliar zinc, and a plant hormone blend were studied to shorten the growing season. Four site years in MS were studied to determine optimal plant maturity group and treatment for length of season. The results showed decreased yield of 0.09-0.15 Mg ha-1 (1.5-2.3 bu ac-1) for each day of decreasing relative maturity in three of four site years. The addition of starter fertilizer increased vegetative growth stage, plant height V5 and V7, SPAD values at V5, and significantly decreases days to tassel and silking reproductive growth stages but did not affect yield.

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