Historia Moderna 43 2 Reino De Granada (1511-1514)
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Persistent Potato
The Persistent Potato We did not know about this tasty potato until we moved to the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State. Now it is established in our garden where the plants produce small, slender, and somewhat gnarled, pale, yellow potatoes. They are especially delicious when roasted and keep well throughout the winter in our cool garage. Flavorful Ozette fingerling potato INTRODUCTION In recent years, eighteenth century Spanish sailing incursions into the inland seas of the Pacific Northwest have been the subject of increased scholarly research, but in the past little if anything was taught in schools about the presence of Spanish ships north of the 45th parallel. Even fewer in-depth studies were made of the cultures of the people who had for thousands of years made the rim of the north Pacific their home. In hindsight, the impact of the European newcomers, initially few in number, was far-ranging, not only for its political intrigues and influence on the lives of the local indigenous people, but in a very practical way. The Spanish came not so much for conquest (except for that which involved competition for land with their European and American counterparts) but rather for trade. However, this primary objective implied a secondary one — permanence. Land-based occupation, whether with permission or not, was part of the Spanish intent, as they sought to extend their nation’s presence north of their California base. For both the purpose of trade, as well as the option of establishing enduring settlements as directed by their King, the Spanish brought provisions that could support more than a season or two in the northern latitudes. -
Saber, Sen I Trobar: Ramon De Cornet and the Consistory of the Gay Science1 Marina Navàs Farré École Nationales Des Chartes E-Mail: Marina [email protected]
No. 3 (Spring 2014), 176-194 ISSN 2014-7023 SABER, SEN I TROBAR: RAMON DE CORNET AND THE CONSISTORY OF THE GAY SCIENCE1 Marina Navàs Farré École Nationales des Chartes e-mail: [email protected] Received: 31 Oct. 2013 | Revised: 10 Feb. 2014 | Accepted: 10 March 2014 | Available online: 20 June 2014 | doi: 10.1344/Svmma2014.3.15 Resum Sovint l’estudi de la lírica occitanocatalana del segle XIV ha estat supeditat a la poètica de certamen que gravita a l’entorn del Consistori del Gai Saber de Tolosa de Llenguadoc. A aquest fet, cal sumar-hi el judici pejoratiu que gran part de la crítica ha formulat sobre el Consistori, atribuint- li la voluntat d’imposar una forma artificiosa acompanyada d’un contingut moral o devot que s’avingués amb l’ortodòxia cristiana. Els pocs autors conservats de l’època que no es podien encabir del tot en aquest marc, com ara Ramon de Cornet –paradoxalment l’autor amb més obra conservada de la primera meitat del Tres-cents i amb una difusió més àmplia–, són considerats una excepció i fins i tot, en el cas de Cornet, d’estrafolari. Però si estudiem la seva obra en el marc de la tradició literària més immediata, la dels darrers trobadors, veurem com la poètica del XIV és una evolució natural d’aquest llegat, que respon a unes exigències de gust literari que va molt més enllà de les suposades coaccions consistorials. Una mostra d’això és la peça «Al noble cavalier» de Cornet. Paraules clau: Ramon de Cornet, lírica occitanocatalana, trobadors, Consistori de la Gaia Ciència, Escola de Tolosa Abstract The study of 14th-century Occitan poetry has been overshadowed by its alleged subjection to the poetics of the contests organized by the Toulousain Consistory of the Gay Science. -
Preliminary Draft
PRELIMINARY DRAFT Pacific Northwest Quarterly Index Volumes 1–98 NR Compiled by Janette Rawlings A few notes on the use of this index The index was alphabetized using the wordbyword system. In this system, alphabetizing continues until the end of the first word. Subsequent words are considered only when other entries begin with the same word. The locators consist of the volume number, issue number, and page numbers. So, in the entry “Gamblepudding and Sons, 36(3):261–62,” 36 refers to the volume number, 3 to the issue number, and 26162 to the page numbers. ii “‘Names Joined Together as Our Hearts Are’: The N Friendship of Samuel Hill and Reginald H. NAACP. See National Association for the Thomson,” by William H. Wilson, 94(4):183 Advancement of Colored People 96 Naches and Columbia River Irrigation Canal, "The Naming of Seward in Alaska," 1(3):159–161 10(1):23–24 "The Naming of Elliott Bay: Shall We Honor the Naches Pass, Wash., 14(1):78–79 Chaplain or the Midshipman?," by Howard cattle trade, 38(3):194–195, 202, 207, 213 A. Hanson, 45(1):28–32 The Naches Pass Highway, To Be Built Over the "Naming Stampede Pass," by W. P. Bonney, Ancient Klickitat Trail the Naches Pass 12(4):272–278 Military Road of 1852, review, 36(4):363 Nammack, Georgiana C., Fraud, Politics, and the Nackman, Mark E., A Nation within a Nation: Dispossession of the Indians: The Iroquois The Rise of Texas Nationalism, review, Land Frontier in the Colonial Period, 69(2):88; rev. -
La Dansa En Llengua D'oc: Un Gènere D'èxit Entre Occitània I Catalunya*
LA DANSA EN LLENGUA D’OC DOSSIER La dansa en llengua d’oc: un gènere d’èxit entre Occitània i Catalunya* Anna Radaelli Al bifoli final del cançoner trobadoresc E s’hi conser- corts occitanes des del primer decenni del segle XIII con- va un petit corpus de dotze peces de ball anònimes.1 tribuís a la dispersió dels reculls escrits que se n’hagues- Encara que el contingut amorós i l’ambientació corte- sin pogut fer. És una hipòtesi molt plausible, perquè sa no les diferencien gaire de la canso, mètricament són tenim testimonis indirectes que, entre els distraccions un cas molt particular dins del panorama líric troba- cortesanes del segle XIII, les danses tenien un gran èxit. doresc.Tot i l’heterogeneïtat,la forma mètrica les carac- Per exemple, apareixen integrades al repertori dels teritza genèricament com a danses, un gènere amb joglars conjuntament amb els descortz i els lais, segons poquíssima presència als cançoners. D’algunes referèn- la descripció que en fa el Jaufre: «E·l joglar que son el cies internes, sobretot les dedicatòries a Beatriu de palais / violon descortz e sons e lais / e dansas e can- Provença («Na Berengueira»), filla de Ramon Beren- sons de jesta», vv. 9827-29 [‘I els joglars que són al palau guer V, se’n pot deduir que aquesta petita col·lecció, la interpreten descorts i sons i lais i danses i cançons de més representativa dels gèneres de ball a Occitània, es gesta’]. I sembla que també devien ser presents a la part va confegir en els anys 1250-1260, quan Beatriu era la no conservada de l’obra de trobadors de fama, com muller de Carles I d’Anjou. -
The Reach of the Republic of Letters Volume 1
The Reach of the Republic of Letters Volume 1 Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History General Editor A.J. Vanderjagt, University of Groningen Editorial Board C.S. Celenza, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore M. Colish, Oberlin College J.I. Israel, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton J.D. North, University of Groningen W. Otten, University of Chicago VOLUME 168 The Reach of the Republic of Letters Literary and Learned Societies in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe Volume 1 Edited by Arjan van Dixhoorn Susie Speakman Sutch LEIDEN • BOSTON 2008 On the cover: BnF. Manuscrits occidentaux—FR. 19184, f. 295. According to D. Hüe, La poésie palinodique, 299–302, the illustration shows the prince of the Puy of Rouen on a seat at the centre of the stage during a contest. This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data The reach of the republic of letters : literary and learned societies in late medieval and early modern Europe / edited by Arjan van Dixhoorn, Susie Speakman Sutch. p. cm. — (Brill’s studies in intellectual history ; v. 168) Papers presented at two workshops held in Rome in 2003 and 2006. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-90-04-16955-5 (hardback : alk. paper : set) 1. Literature—Europe— Societies—History—Congresses. I. Dixhoorn, Arjan van. II. Sutch, Susie Speakman. III. Title. IV. Series. PN21.R43 2008 809’.894—dc22 2008035722 ISSN 0920-8607 ISBN 978 90 04 17260 9 (volume 1) ISBN 978 90 04 17261 6 (volume 2) ISBN 978 90 04 16955 5 (set) Copyright 2008 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. -
Nootka Sound Convention
Nootka sound convention Continue 1790-1794 Spanish-British settlement agreements for overlapping claims in Northwest America for other purposes, see Nootka (disguambiation). Nootka Sound ConventionsDateNootka Sound Convention: October 28, 1790 Nootka Claims Convention: February 12, 1793, Convention on Mutual Rejection of Nootka: 11 January 1794LocationMadrid, SpainAlso known asNootka Sound Convention, Nootka Claims Convention, Convention on Mutual Rejection of NootkaPartpantsSpain, UKOutcometainBritain and Spain were guaranteed the freedoms of the seas Nootka Convention Sound were a series of three agreements between the Kingdom of Spain and the Kingdom of Great Britain, signed in the 1790s that prevented a war between the two countries because of overlapping claims on parts of the Pacific northwest coast of North America. Spain's claims Spain's claims date back nearly 300 years to the papal bull of 1493, which, along with the following Treaty of Tordesillas, defined and defined the zone of Spanish rights exclusively to Portugal. In relation to other states, the agreement was legally ineffective (res inter alios acta). Spain interpreted it in the broadest sense of the word, revealing that it had granted them full sovereignty. Other European powers did not recognize Inter caetera, and even Spain and Portugal adhered to it only when it was useful and convenient. Britain's claims to the region were dated to sir Francis Drake's journey in 1579, as well as the right of pre-opening by Captain James Cook in 1778, although the Spaniards explored and claimed the region in 1774, under Juan Perez, and in 1775, under Bruno de Hecet and Bodege and Kvadra. -
Cat. Henri Martin-English.Qxd:Layout 2
COLLECTION PAUL RIFF DIMANCHE 1er AVRIL 2012 SUNDAY 1st APRIL 2012 at 3pm COLLECTION PAUL RIFF Michel MAKET Expert Membre du Syndicat Français des Experts Professionnels en Œuvres d’Art et Objets de Collection 17, avenue de Messine - 75008 Paris - France Tél. : +33 (0)1 42 25 89 33 - Fax : +33 (0)1 43 59 02 67 [email protected] - www.maket-expert.com Public exhibition: 17, avenue de Messine - 75008 Paris From Monday, March 12 to Saturday, March 24, from 10 am to 12 .30 pm and from 2 pm to 5.30 pm. Closed on sunday march 18. 32, Place des Lices - 35000 Rennes On Thursday, March 29, from 10am to 1pm and from 3pm to 5pm. On Friday, March 30 and on Saturday, March 31, from 10am to 1pm and from 3pm to 6pm. The sunday 1st April from 10am to 12pm. The english translation, dimensions in inches and prices in U.S. dollars are not contractual and for information only www.rennesencheres.com 32, place des Lices - 35000 Rennes - France - Tél. : +33 (0)2 99 31 58 00 - Fax : +33 (0)2 99 65 52 64 - [email protected] S.V.V. 2010 745 PAUL RIFF 2 Michel MAKET, my staff and I have the honour and great pleasure of helping knowledgeable collectors, enlightened art lovers or one-day visitors discover this collection of paintings by Henri Martin which has remained unknown until now, simply gathering dust for over 30 years in an uninhabited flat in Rennes. The paintings were collected more than a century ago by a passionate patron of the arts who brought together more than forty of them: Paul Riff. -
Le Poesie Del Trovatore Peire Bremon Ricas Novas
Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II Dottorato di ricerca in Filologia moderna Coordinatore: Prof. Costanzo Di Girolamo Tesi di dottorato Ciclo XX Le poesie del trovatore Peire Bremon Ricas Novas Edizione critica Candidato: Dott. Paolo Di Luca Tutore: Prof. Costanzo Di Girolamo Napoli 2007 Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II Dipartimento di Filologia moderna Dottorato di ricerca in Filologia moderna Ciclo XX (2004-2007) TITOLO DELLA TESI : Le poesie del trovatore Peire Bremon Ricas Novas. Edizione critica CANDIDATO: Dott. Paolo Di Luca ________________________________ COORDINATORE : Prof. Costanzo Di Girolamo ____________________________ - 2 - INDICE INTRODUZIONE 5 I LA VITA E IL CANONE 1.1 La biografia 7 1.2 Un cavalier-joglar ? 14 1.3 Il canone 20 II LE FORME DEL TROBAR 2.1 Versificazione 30 2.2 Lingua e stile 37 III LA TRADIZIONE MANOSCRITTA 3.1 Le fonti 44 3.2 Strategie di trasmissione del corpus 54 3.3 Componimenti apocrifi e di dubbia attribuzione 63 IV CRITERI DI EDIZIONE 67 TAVOLA DI CONCORDANZE 71 POESIE 73 I Ben dey chantar alegramen 74 II Ben deu istar ses gran joi toztemps mais 82 III Ben farai canson plasen 90 IV Be volgra de totz chantadors 98 V Iratz chant e chantan m’irais 107 VI Ja lausengier, si tot si fan gignos 116 VII Pos que tug volon saber 119 VIII Si·m ten Amors 124 IX So don me cudava bordir 133 X Tut van canson demandan 140 XI Un sonet novel fatz 151 XII Us covinenz gentils cors plazentiers 162 - 3 - XIII Pois lo bels temps renovella 169 XIV Rics pres, ferms e sobeirans 178 XV Un vers voill comenzar en lo so de ser Gui 190 XVI …auc sai qez aprenda 201 XVII Pus partit an lo cor En Sordels e ’N Bertrans 203 XVIII Be·m meraveil d’En Sordel e de vos 215 XIX Lo bels terminis m’agenssa 222 XX Tan fort m’agrat del termini novel 233 XXI En la mar major sui d’estiu e d’ivern 243 XXII Ab marrimen angoissos et ab plor 258 BIBLIOGRAFIA 267 - 4 - INTRODUZIONE - 5 - - 6 - I LA VITA 1.1 La biografia Il destino critico di Peire Bremon Ricas Novas è legato a un’omonimia e a un antagonismo. -
Geopolitics and Environment in the Sea Otter Trade
UC Merced UC Merced Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Soft gold and the Pacific frontier: geopolitics and environment in the sea otter trade Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/03g4f31t Author Ravalli, Richard John Publication Date 2009 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California 1 Introduction Covering over one-third of the earth‘s surface, the Pacific Basin is one of the richest natural settings known to man. As the globe‘s largest and deepest body of water, it stretches roughly ten thousand miles north to south from the Bering Straight to the Antarctic Circle. Much of its continental rim from Asia to the Americas is marked by coastal mountains and active volcanoes. The Pacific Basin is home to over twenty-five thousand islands, various oceanic temperatures, and a rich assortment of plants and animals. Its human environment over time has produced an influential civilizations stretching from Southeast Asia to the Pre-Columbian Americas.1 An international agreement currently divides the Pacific at the Diomede Islands in the Bering Strait between Russia to the west and the United States to the east. This territorial demarcation symbolizes a broad array of contests and resolutions that have marked the region‘s modern history. Scholars of Pacific history often emphasize the lure of natural bounty for many of the first non-natives who ventured to Pacific waters. In particular, hunting and trading for fur bearing mammals receives a significant amount of attention, perhaps no species receiving more than the sea otter—originally distributed along the coast from northern Japan, the Kuril Islands and the Kamchatka peninsula, east toward the Aleutian Islands and the Alaskan coastline, and south to Baja California. -
Si Bé, Fortuna, Has Dat Lo Torn
Foundations and Foundation Myths of the Troubadours Wendy Pfeffer University of Louisville / University of Pennsylvania [email protected] https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9902-4031 Received 22/04/2019; accepted 02/07/2019 DOI: https://doi.org/10.7203/MCLM.6.14815 Abstract A review of several origin myths relating to the creation of medieval Occitan lyric poetry. We see a preference for a “great man theory” of origins, though the “great man” may be a fictional woman. Medieval and Renaissance Occitan authors, including Uc de Saint Circ, Guilhem Molinier, and Jean de Nostredame, used differing origin myths to validate literature in a language that was perceived not to carry the prestige of twelfth- and thirteenth-century Latin or fifteenth- and sixteenth-century French. Keywords troubadours; Occitan literature; charter myths; foundation myths; Guilhem IX de Peitieus; Uc de Saint Circ; Jean de Nostredame; Guilhem Molinier; Consistori de gaia sciensa; Eble II de Ventadorn; Clémence Isaure resum Revisió d’alguns mites d’origen referits a la creació de la poesia lírica occitana medieval. Hi veiem una preferència per una “teoria del gran home” d’origen, tot i que el “gran home” també podria ser una dona de ficció. Autors medievals i renaixentistes, incloent-hi Uc de Sant Circ, Guilhme Molinier i Jean de Nostredame, van emprar mites d’origen divergents per a validar la literatura en una llengua que es percebia que no comportava el prestigi del llatí dels segles xii i xiii, o el del francès dels segles xiv i xv. paraules clau trobadors; literatura Occitana; mites justificadors; mites fundacionals; Guilhem IX de Peitieu; Uc de Sant Circ; Jean de Nostredame; Guilhem Molinier; Consistori de la Gaia Ciència; Eble II de Ventadorn; Clémence Isaure Magnificat Cultura i Literatura Medievals 6, 2019, 185-205. -
History of Oregon
HISTORY OF OREGON THE GROWTH OF AN AMERICAN STATE BY HORACE S. LYMAN ASSOCIATE BOARD OF EDITORS HARVEY W. SCOTT CHARLES B. BELLINGERL AND FREDERIC G. YOUNG VOLUME THREE THE. NORTH PACIFIC PUBLISHING SOCIETY NEw YoRx mcmIII I I - I - - I I.- I ... -.- . k.-T lt- -- I - I - I 3= HISTORY OF OREGON _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ X Z ~ r ~ f l SYNOPSIS 0 CHAPTER I TiaE Ammuc.A PEoPLE. Days of Adventure- ish Monopoly Intrei American People-Tri - Character of Amer Irving's Observations - of the Wilderness "Y- larged by the Movem( COPYRIGHT 1903 Mountains-" Rendez-v Lzwis A. WILLIAMS -Fur Companies-E souri Fur Company ALL RIGHTS RESEURVID RockyMountain Fur Cc ley in Utali-Tarasco -Sublette- Smith-Ja Jedediah Smith-Atta( the Mouth of the IUmpc McLoughlin- Compan3 ger, Milton Sublette, F Jervais-" Pegleg"118 -J. L. Meek-Dr. iRc to the Rocky Mountaiin CHAPTER IT PERIOD or AGITATioN AND Continued Interest at of Colonization SchemE Publication Office, the Type of Jonathan, Agitator - Prolific 1 136 Liberty Street Congress-Visits Wast Now York, N. Y., U. S. A. ony-Makes the- Tour t Ewing Young-Partyfi SYNOPSIS OF CHAPTERS CHAPTER I THE AmEuCAN PEOPLE ....................... 41-68 Days of Adventure-A New Center-Brit- ish Monopoly Intrenched-Encounter the American People-Trappers from St. Louis -Character of American Mountain Men- Irving's Observations-The " Stark Tramper of the Wilderness "-American Ideas En- larged by the Movement Toward the Rocky T 1903 Mountains-" Rendezvous " and " Holes " VILLTM9 -Fur Companies-Ezekiel Williams-Mis- souri Fur Company - Samuel Ruddock- RESERVED RockyMountain Fur Company-Ashley-Ash- ley in Utah-Tarascon's Idea-Beckwourth -Sublette-Smith-Jackson-Adventures of Jedediah Smith-Attacked by the Indians at the Mouth of the Umpqua-Account Given by McLoughlin-Company Reorganized-Brid- ger, Milton Sublette, Frapp, Fitzpatrick, and Jervais-" Pegleg " Smith-G. -
Psychoanalysis As Gai Saber Towards a New Episteme of Laughter Dany Nobus
Comp. by: Krishnan Stage: Proof Chapter No.: 2 Title Name: GheroviciandSteinkoler Date:9/4/16 Time:12:14:43 Page Number: 36 chapter 2 Psychoanalysis as gai saber Towards a new episteme of laughter Dany Nobus Encounter with a fantasist Sometime during the mid-1950s, Madeleine Chapsal, a thirty-something journalist writing for L’express – the recently launched weekly supplement to the French financial daily Les Échos – attended a fancy dress party organized by the editorial board of Jean-Paul Sartre’s journal Les Temps Modernes, where she was introduced to a certain Dr. Lacan. Many years later, Chapsal recalled the event as follows: “The first time I saw Jacques Lacan he was wearing a bushy ginger-coloured wig, and he invited me to dance ... That night the famous psychoanalyst’s head presented me with 1 an image of him that I never forgot: he was a fantasist!” In her seminal historical study of Lacan, Élisabeth Roudinesco drew on a personal conversation with Chapsal to elaborate on the story. According to Roudinesco, the young female journalist had adored Lacan’s “penchant for disguise [le côté travesti du personnage], his auburn wigs, his love of 2 social life and gossip, [and] the way he enjoyed theatrical situations.” After their first encounter, Lacan and Chapsal immediately struck up an intimate friendship, leading to Chapsal being regularly invited to Lacan’s country house at Guitrancourt, and her receiving a long series of amorous letters and notes, in which the psychoanalyst would sometimes ask his confidante for specific sartorial advice when he was preparing for another 3 bal masqué.