CHG Library Book List
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
121022 Descendants of Konrad John Lautermilch
Konrad John Lautermilch and His American Descendants by Alice Marie Zoll and Maintained by Christopher Kerr (Last Revision: 22 October 2012) LAUTERMILCH means Whole-milk or All-milk Then God Said to Noah "Go forth from the Ark, you and your wife, and your sons and their wives....and be fruitful and multiply....". Genesis 8:17 Early Ancestors in Germany: Melchoir Lautermilch 1697-1775 His brothers and sisters: Magdalena Anna Lautermilch 1703 Came to U.S. 1731 Wendel George Lautermilch 1705 Came to U.S. 1731 Gottried Lautermilch 1708 Came to U.S. 1736 Anton (twin) Lautermilch 1708 Came to U.S. 1736 Jacob Lautermilch 1716 Melchoir's Son: Adam Hans Lautermilch 1754-1781 His brothers and sisters George John 1738-1833 Maria Anna 1736- Nicholas 1733- d. in Germany Adam Hans Lautermilch's Son: Konrad John Lautermilch 1776-1834 d. in Germany His Children: Johann Martin Germany Johanna Germany Conrad Jr U.S.A. Katherine Germany Dietrich Germany Welhelm U.S.A. Charles U.S.A. Carl Ernest Germany Margaret U.S.A. George Adam U.S.A. Alexander Euglina U.S.A. Daughter Germany Abbreviations used: A. Adopted b. born child. children bu. buried d. died co. county dau. daughter div. divorced M. Married occ. occupation Preface It was during the reign of Louis IX, the period when the Germanic Coumentites produced only poverty and death and the spirits of its people were at their lowest, that we find Konrad John Lautermilch married to Johanna Katherine Kopf. They were from Sinnsheim and Karchard. Kirchard and Sinnsheim are towns about 40 kilometers northeast of Kurhsruhe and 20 kilometers southeast of Heidelberg, Baden, Germany. -
Işgal Döneminde Izmir Metropoliti Hrisostomos (1919–1922)
Trakya Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi 31 Haziran 2009 Cilt 11 Sayı 1 (31-50) İŞGAL DÖNEMİNDE İZMİR METROPOLİTİ HRİSOSTOMOS (1919–1922) Yrd. Doç. Dr. Bülent ATALAY* ÖZET Yunanistan, Mondros Mütarekesi’ne rağmen İzmir’i işgal etti. İşgalin gerçekleşmesinde İzmir Metropoliti Hrisostomos’un faaliyetleri çok etkili oldu. Hrisostomos, Türklerin, Hıristiyanları katlettiklerine dair iddialar ileri sürdü. Bunu ispat etmek için de "Türklerin Hıristiyanlara Tecavüzleri" adında bir kitap hazırlayarak işgalci devletlerin temsilciliklerine dağıttı. Metropolit Hirsostomos faaliyetlerini İzmir metropolithanesi merkezli yürütmekteydi. İşgalinin ilk gününde Yunan askerlerini karşılayan Hrisostomos, aynı zamanda onları kutsayarak, Türkleri öldürmenin görev olduğunu belirti. Ermenilerin de desteğini alan Metropolit Hrisostomos, İzmir’deki Türklere işgal süresince zor anlar yaşattı. Asıl amaç İzmir’in Yunanistan’a bağlanmasını sağlamaktı. İzmir Valisi İzzet’in de yardımı ile Hrisostomos Türkleri baskı altında tutmaya çalıştı. Fakat Yunan kuvvetlerinin, Türk ordusu karşısında almaya başladığı mağlubiyet, Hrisostomos’un ümitlerini kırmaya başladı. Türk kuvvetleri 9 Eylül 1922’de İzmir’e girdiler. Nihayet 10 Eylül 1922 tarihiyle birlikte Hrisostomos için yolun sonu da gelmişti. İzmir’de yaşayan Türkler tarafından linç edildi. Anahtar Kelime: Metropolit, Hrisostomos, İzmir, Millî Mücadele IZMIR ARCHBISHOP HRISOSTOMOS DURING THE INVASION (1919-1922) ABSTRACT Greece occupied lamis despite the Mondros Agreement. The activities of Izmir Archbishop Hrisostomos became effective on the invasion. Hrisostomos clamied that Turks murdered Christians. In order to prove this claim, he wrote o book named “Turks’ Attacks against Christions” and distributed it to the representations of the allied powers. Hrisostomos who welcomed the Grek troops and blessed them commanded the troops to kill Turks. Hrisostomos who was supported by the Armanions caused to hard times for Turks during the invasion. -
The Rock As a Topos of Faith. the Interactive Zone of the Rock-Cut Monuments
Geoarchaeology and Archaeomineralogy (Eds. R. I. Kostov, B. Gaydarska, M. Gurova). 2008. Proceedings of the International Conference, 29-30 October 2008 Sofia, Publishing House “St. Ivan Rilski”, Sofia, 153-162. THE ROCK AS A TOPOS * OF FAITH THE INTERACTIVE ZONE OF THE ROCK-CUT MONUMENTS – FROM URARTU TO THRACE Valeria Fol Centre of Thracology “Prof. Alexander Fol”, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 1000 Sofia; [email protected] ABSTRACT. The article discusses the rock topoi of faith as places for profession of a mysterial faith and ritualism, which should not be ethnically defined, because in its core lies the honoring of the stone/rock as a location for divine advent. Initial observations of natural and rock-cut topoi of faith in a like constructions in greater detail, as well as archaeological mountain environment have been done in the Eastern sites (mainly fortresses) and finds related to them in Strandzha Mediterranean as early as the second half of the XIX c., Mountain, Sakar Mountain, the Rhodopes and Eastern Stara however it is only recently that their cultural-historical role and Planina (Haemus). The interpretation of the megaliths is being their regional interactions began to be researched without the inserted in the widely accepted thesis for their functions as ritual faith and the cults professed in them to be charged with tombs of the population of the coastal hinterland. Some of the ethnic definitions. There are a series of examples from the dolmens had been used a lot from the middle of the II until the Southeastern Mediterranean and Asia Minor where the middle of the I mill. -
Charles Alexander Robinson, Jr. Memorial Lecture
DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS 48 College Street, Box 1856 Macfarlane House Providence, RI 02912 Phone: 401.863.1267 Fax: 401.863.7484 CHARLES ALEXANDER ROBINSON, JR. MEMORIAL LECTURE 1. October 14, 1965 “Vitruvius and the Greek House” • Richard Stillwell, Princeton University 2. November 15, 1966 “Second Thoughts in Greek Tragedy” • Bernard M. W. Knox 3. March 23, 1967 “Fiction and Fraud in the Late Roman Empire” • Sir Ronald Syme 4. November 29, 1967 “The Espionage-Commando Operation in Homer” • Sterling Dow, Harvard University 5. November 21, 1968 “Uses of the Past” • Gerald F. Else, University of Michigan 6. November 5, 1969 “Marcus Aurelius and Athens” • James H. Oliver, Johns Hopkins University 7. March 1, 1971 “Between Literacy and Illiteracy: An Aspect of Greek Culture in Egypt” • Herbert C. Youtie, University of Michigan 8. October 27, 1971 “Psychoanalysis and the Classics” • J. P. Sullivan, SUNY Buffalo 9. November 14, 1972 “The Principles of Aeschylean Drama” • C. J. Herington, Yale University 10. October 30, 1973 “Alexander and the Historians” • Peter Green, University of Texas, Austin 11. November 6, 1974 “The Emotional Power of Greek Tragedy” • W. Bedell Stanford, Trinity College, Dublin 12. March 10, 1976 “Personality in Classical Greek Sculpture” • George M.A. Hanfmann, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University 13. March 28, 1977 “The Odyssey” • John M. Finley, Harvard University 14. November 21, 1978 “Community of Men and Gods in Ancient Athens” • Homer A. Thompson, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton 15. April 23, 1979 “Oedipus’ Mother” • Anne Pippin Burnett, University of Chicago 16. March 17, 1980 “Rustic Urbanity: Roman Satirists in and outside Rome” • William S. -
Thracians and Phrygians
TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents i List of Figures List of Tables m Editor's Note vi vii Introduction on behalf of Centre for Research and Assessment of the Historic Environment (TAÇDAM) at Middle East Technical University Ankara, TURKEY AssocProf.Dr. Numan TUNA, the Director Introduction on behalf of the Institute of Thracology Sofia, BULGARIA Assoc.Prof.Dr. Kiril YORDANOV, the Director and Dr. Maya VASSILEVA Opening Speech on behalf of Scientific Institutions Prof .Dr. Machteld J. MELLINK Thracian-Phrygian Cultural Zone 13 Maya VASSILEVA Sofia, BULGARIA Megaliths in Thrace and Phrygia 19 Valeria FOL Sofia, BULGARIA Early Iron Age in Eastern Thrace and the Megalithic Monuments 29 Mehmet ÔZDOÔAN Istanbul, TURKEY Some Connections Between the Northern Thrace and Asia Minor During the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age 41 Attila LASZLO Ia§i, ROMANIA Bryges and Phrygians: Parallelism Between the Balkans and Asia Minor Through Archaeological, Linguistic and Historical Evidence 45 Eleonora PETROVA Skopije, MACEDONIA Sabas/Sabazios/Sabo 55 Alexander FOL Sofia, BULGARIA Burial Rites in Thrace and Phrygia 61 Roumyana GEORGIEVA Sofia, BULGARIA Die Ausgrabung der Megalithischen Dolmenanlage in Lalapasa 65 MuratAKMAN Istanbul. TURKEY The Early Iron Age Settlement on Biiyukkaya, Bogazkoy: First Impressions 71 Jurgen SEEHER German Institute of Archaeology, Istanbul The Early Iron Age at Gordion: The Evidence from the Yassihoyiik Stratigraphie Sequence 79 Robert C. HENRICKSON and Mary M. VOIGT Philadelphia, USA Roman Phrygia 107 D.H. FRENCH Waterford, UK Phrygia: Linguistics and Epigraphies HI Petar DIMITROV Sofia, BULGARIA Phrygian and the Southeast European Namebund 115 Adrian PORUCIUC lasi, ROMANIA Une Inscription en Langue Inconnue 119 Catherine BRIXHE et Thomas DREW-BEAR Lyon, FRANCE Conservation and Reconstruction of Phrygian Chariot Wheels from Mysia 131 Hande KÔKTEN Istanbul, TURKEY Microstructural Studies on Some Phrygian Metallic Objects 147 Macit ÔZENBAS and Lèvent ERCANLI Ankara, TURKEY Panel Discussions 157. -
Antioch Mosaics and Their Mythological and Artistic Relations with Spanish Mosaics
JMR 5, 2012 43-57 Antioch Mosaics and their Mythological and Artistic Relations with Spanish Mosaics José Maria BLÁZQUEZ* – Javier CABRERO** The twenty-two myths represented in Antioch mosaics repeat themselves in those in Hispania. Six of the most fa- mous are selected: Judgment of Paris, Dionysus and Ariadne, Pegasus and the Nymphs, Aphrodite and Adonis, Meleager and Atalanta and Iphigenia in Aulis. Key words: Antioch myths, Hispania, Judgment of Paris, Dionysus and Ariadne, Pegasus and the Nymphs, Aphrodite and Adonis, Meleager and Atalanta, Iphigenia in Aulis During the Roman Empire, Hispania maintained good cultural and economic relationships with Syria, a Roman province that enjoyed high prosperity. Some data should be enough. An inscription from Málaga, lost today and therefore from an uncertain date, seems to mention two businessmen, collegia, from Syria, both from Asia, who might form an single college, probably dedicated to sea commerce. Through Cornelius Silvanus, a curator, they dedicated a gravestone to patron Tiberius Iulianus (D’Ors 1953: 395). They possibly exported salted fish to Syria, because Málaca had very big salting factories (Strabo III.4.2), which have been discovered. In Córdoba, possibly during the time of Emperor Elagabalus, there was a Syrian colony that offered a gravestone to several Syrian gods: Allath, Elagabab, Phren, Cypris, Athena, Nazaria, Yaris, Tyche of Antioch, Zeus, Kasios, Aphrodite Sozausa, Adonis, Iupiter Dolichenus. They were possible traders who did business in the capital of Bética (García y Bellido 1967: 96-105). Libanius the rhetorical (Declamatio, 32.28) praises the rubbles from Cádiz, which he often bought, as being good and cheap. -
Narcissus the Hunter in the Mosaics of Antioch
Narcissus the Hunter in the Mosaics of Antioch Elizabeth M. Molacek Among the hundreds of mosaic pavements discovered at as the capital of the Hellenistic Seleucid kingdom in 300 BCE Antioch-on-the-Orontes, a total of five represent Narcissus, and remained a thriving city until the Romans took power in the beautiful youth doomed to fall in love with his own 64 BCE. Antioch became the capital of the Roman province reflection. The predominance of this subject is not entirely of Syria; however, it was captured by the Arabs in 637 CE, surprising since it is one of the most popular subjects in bringing an end to almost a thousand years of occupation.2 Roman visual culture. In his catalogue of the mosaics of While its political history is simple to trace from the Hellenis- ancient Antioch, Doro Levi suggests that Narcissus’ frequent tic founding to the Arab sacking, Antioch’s cultural identity appearance should be attributed to his watery reflection due is less transparent. The city was part of the Roman Empire to the fact that Antioch was a “town so proud of its wealth for over five hundred years, but the inhabitants of Antioch of waters, springs, and baths.”1 The youth’s association with did not immediately consider themselves Roman, identifying water may account for his repeated appearance, but the instead with their Hellenistic heritage. As was standard in the present assessment recognizes a Narcissus that is unique to Greek East, the spoken language remained Greek even after Antioch. In art of the Latin West from the first century BCE Rome established control, and many traditions and social onwards, Narcissus has a highly standardized iconography norms were deeply rooted in the Hellenistic culture.3 Antioch that emphasizes his youthful appearance, the act of seeing was a hybrid of both eastern and western influences due to his reflection, and his fate for eternity. -
Goodwill Between Neighbors
Chapter 2 Goodwill between Neighbors In 1975, negotiations were underway between experts from Bulgaria and Yugoslavia regarding an exhibition, Prehistoric Art in the Bulgarian Lands , soon to open at the Belgrade History Museum. The museum director expressed concern about the title because “there is a dif- ference between the Bulgarian and Serbo-Croatian meaning of [the word] ‘lands’” and required clarification about “which lands you refer to—the pres- ent or the past.” He worried—not without reason—that in Bulgarian schol- arship, the term was used to refer to all the historical kingdoms that extended beyond the current Bulgarian borders. The Bulgarian representative, trying to defuse tensions, “answered jokingly that most probably there would be no artifacts from Macedonia,” pinpointing the exact reason for the misgiv- ings of his Yugoslav colleague. 1 In a compromise, the exhibition premiered in Belgrade under a new title, Prehistoric Art in Bulgaria . 2 The contested place of Macedonia in the historical repertoires of Bul- garia and Yugoslavia caused much controversy once Bulgaria launched its international cultural offensive because it triggered rival interpretations of the past in the two countries. In October 1977, the Croatian journal Oko published a dispatch from New York City reporting on Bulgaria’s Thracian Treasures exhibition that had just opened at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The article lambasted the exhibition catalog, which featured a map that 62 GOODWILL BETWEEN NEIGHBORS 63 incorrectly showed the Balkan borders. -
Men's All-Time World Performers-Performances Rankings
Men’s All-Time World Performers-Performances Rankings Page 1 of 127 50 METER BACKSTROKE Top 2660 Performances 24.04** Liam Tancock, GBR 13th World Championships Rome 08-02-09 (Reaction Time: +0.60. (Note: Great Britain’s first male backstroke gold-medalist [50, 100, 200]. Tancock’s first international gold/second world- record. (Note: bronze medalist [2005, Montreal; ’07, Melbourne]) 24.07*# Camille Lacourt, FRA XXX European Championships Budapest 08-12-10 (Reaction Time: +0.74. (Nore: also clocked European-record/history’second-fastest 100 back en route to gold several days earlieir [52.11]) 24.08sf1 Tancock 13th World Championships Rome 08-01-09 (Reaction Time: +0.57) 24.23 Lacourt 16th World Championships Kazan 08-09-15 (Reaction Time: +0.68, gold medalist) 24.24a Junya Koga, JPN 13th World Championships Rome 08-02-09 (Reaction Time: +0.50. (Note: won 100 back gold in an Asian-record 52.26 clocking several days earlier.) 24.27sf2 Lacourt 16th World Championships Kazan 08-08-15 (Reaction Time: +0.69) 24.28 Koga 17th Asian Games Incheon 09-21-14 (Reaction Time: +0.52 [fastest of race]. (Note: Games record, Koga’s third-consecutive gold/record. Won @ Doha in 2K6 [25.40]; Guangzhou, 2K10 [25.08]) 24.29sf2 Koga 13th World Championships Rome 08-01-09 (Reaction Time: +0.48) 24.30sf1 Lacourt XXX European Championships Budapest 08-11-10 (Reaction Time: +0.71) 24.33* Randall Bal, USA/Stanford Eindhoven Swim Cup Eindhoven 12-05-08 (Reaction Time: +0.66) 24.34* Gerhard Zandberg, RSA/Arizona 13th World Championshps Rome 08-02-09 (Note: African record.) 24.36 Lacourt FRA Nationals/WCTs Strasbouug 03-27-11 (Note: French Open-“All Comers” record.) 24.37 Lacourt FRA Nats./Euro. -
Bulletin of the College of William and Mary in Virginia
BULLETIN April, 1943 of The College of William and Mary in Virginia CATALOGUE of W)z College of ^tiltam anb Jllarp in ^trgtma Two Hundred and Fiftieth Year 1942-1943 Announcements, Session 1943-1944 WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA 1943 post office at Williamsburg, Virginia, July 3, 1926, under act of August 24, 1912, as second-class matter Issued January, February, April, June TPCV * "iu « >:«*:• a _ ran * iffil ill IIII llll <" ii in i> I till mi IIII Sir Christopher Wren Building, 1695 P W IORITIES THE Cm i rJl n LLGE0|r '-.^;;° WILLIAM AND H lckto enriro(iGitilcr the Collet autece " t mli & *?Z£*?&?£, 52'J? barter Hhst College to have the ^ Elective System of study, First College to have the Honor System.lTCd. First College to become a University ITaS. First College to have a school of Modern LanstaJM- es,i7'2Q. 2> FIRST College to have a school of Municipal and Constitutional Law, 1218. First College to teach Political Economy, 1184. FIRST College to have a school of Modern History, 1803. Presented by the Colonial Capital Branch of The Association for the Preservation of Virginia J7nti</uiti>s. 19*4. Tablet in the Arcade of the Wren Building Vol. 37, No. 3 BULLETIN April, 1943 of The College of William and Mary in Virginia CATALOGUE of Wfyt College of William anb Jfflarp in Utrgima Two Hundred and Fiftieth Year 1942-1943 Announcements, Session 1943-1944 WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA 1943 Entered at the post office at Williamsburg, Virginia, July 3, 1926, under act of August 24, 1912, as second-class matter Issued January, February, April, June CONTENTS -
AYDINOĞLU ĠBRAHĠM BEY VE BODAMYA MESELESĠ AYDINOGLU IBRAHIM BEY and BODAMIA ISSUE Funda ADITATAR
TAD, C.39/S.68, 2020, s.175-205 AYDINOĞLU ĠBRAHĠM BEY VE BODAMYA MESELESĠ AYDINOGLU IBRAHIM BEY AND BODAMIA ISSUE Funda ADITATAR Makale Bilgisi Article Info Başvuru: 10.06.2020 Received: June 10, 2020 Kabul: 10.09.2020 Accepted: September 10, 2020 Özet Aydınoğlu Beyliği, on dördüncü yüzyıl başlarında Batı Anadolu’da kurulmuş Türk beyliklerinden biridir. Kurucusu Aydınoğlu Mehmet Bey, Birgi, Tire, Efes/Ayasuluk, Yukarı İzmir Kalesini topraklarına kattı. Merkezi Birgi olan beylik hakkında bilgi edinilen başlıca kaynak, on beşinci yüzyılda yazılmış olan Düstürnâme-i Enverî adlı eserdir. Buna göre Mehmet Bey hâkimiyeti altındaki yerleri, beş oğlu arasında paylaştırarak her birini idareci olarak kendi bölgesine tayin etmiştir. Ayasuluğ ve Sultanhisarı'nı büyük oğlu Hızır Bey'e, İzmir'i Umur Bey'e, Bodamya'yı üçüncü oğlu İbrahim Bahadır Bey'e, Tire'yi dördüncü oğlu Süleyman Bey'e vermiştir. En küçük oğlu İsa Bey'i de yanında alıkoymuştur. İbrahim Bahadır Bey’e verilen Bodamya’nın, günümüzde İzmir Ödemiş’te Bademli olduğu genel kabul görmüştür. Ancak bu iddia, Mehmet Bey’in ikametgahı Birgi ile Süleyman’ın bölgesi Tire’ye yakınlığından dolayı sorunludur. Urla’nın sosyal ve iktisadi tarihine ilişkin yapılan çalışmada bölgenin, Aydınoğlu Beyliği hakimiyetine girişiyle uzun soluklu bir dönüşüm geçirdiği anlaşılmıştır. Bu dönüşümü anlama gayreti, Bodamya’nın yeri ile ilgili yeni bir tespitin de mümkün olabileceğini ortaya çıkarmıştır. Bu tespite; dönemin iktisadi ve siyasi olaylarıyla İbrahim Bey’in fetih ve idari faaliyetlerinin yeniden değerlendirilmesiyle ulaşılmıştır. Dolayısıyla bu makale, Urla Yarımadası’nın tarihi gelişimi yanında Aydınoğlu Beyliği’nin idari yapısına, tarihi bir figür olarak İbrahim Bey’in tanınmasına katkı sağlamayı amaçlamaktadır. Anahtar Kelimeler: Aydınoğlu Beyliği, İbrahim Bey, Bodamya, Urla, Tarihi Coğrafya Abstract Aydinoglu emirate is founded in Western Anatolia in the beginning of the fourteenth century. -
Tc. Süleyman Demirel Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilmler Enstitüsü Tarih Anabilim Dali
TC. SÜLEYMAN DEMİREL ÜNİVERSİTESİ SOSYAL BİLMLER ENSTİTÜSÜ TARİH ANABİLİM DALI ORTAÇAĞ ANADOLU’SUNDA İSTANBUL İLE AFYONKARAHİSAR ARASINDAKİ ASKERİ YOL GÜZERGÂHLARI Seda EDİZ 1130204513 YÜKSEK LİSANS TEZİ DANIŞMAN Doç. Dr. Abdullah BAKIR ISPARTA-2019 (Ediz, Seda, Ortaçağ Anadolu’sunda İstanbul ile Afyonkarahisar Arasındaki Askeri Yol Güzergâhları, Yüksek Lisans Tezi, Isparta, 2018) ÖZET Yapılan bu tez çalışmasında İstanbul-Afyonkarahisar arasındaki askeri yol güzergahları ve bu iki şehir arasında kalan bölgenin tarihi coğrafyası hakkında bilgiler verilmektedir. Bu bağlamda öncelikle Eski Çağda bölgenin tarihi coğrafyası ve bu dönemde gerçekleşmiş, söz konusu saha üzerinden yapılan veya bu yollardan geçen savaşlar ele alınmıştır. Ardından Orta Çağda gerçekleşen Bizans Selçuklu mücadeleleri sırasında kullanılan yol güzergahları değerlendirilmiş sonrasında ise I., II., ve III. Haçlı Seferleri esnasında kullanılan yol güzergahları ana kaynaklar ve topografik eserler yardımı ile incelenmeye alınmıştır. Çalışmada konunun aydınlatılmasına yardımcı olması açısından söz konusu sahanın tarihi coğrafyası, Bithynia, Mysia, Troas, Aiolis, Lydia, Ionia ve Phrygia olacak şekilde sırasıyla ele alınmıştır. Tarihi coğrafya incelendikten sonra Eski Çağda bölgeden geçen askeri yol güzergahını kullanmış orduların savaşlarına kronolojik olarak yer verilmiştir. Öncelikle Pers kral yolu değerlendirilmiş ardından, Pers Kralı Kserkses’in Yunanistan Seferi (MÖ. 481-480) sırasında Anadolu’da izlediği yol güzergahı ve savaş esnasında yaşanan olaylara yer verilmiştir.