Itants of Montmirail Try to Keep Missionaries There, II
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La qualité est dans notre nature ECHOSAgricoles Avril Le journal de la Chambre d'agriculture 2019 PRÉPARER L’AVENIR Au lendemain de nos élections professionnelles nous avons été élus. Celui d’une Chambre d’agriculture garante aux Chambres d’agriculture, je voudrais remercier de l’intérêt général, au service de tous les agriculteurs, des fi- l’ensemble des électrices et électeurs landais qui ont lières et des territoires, et qui accompagne les projets de tous voté dans les différents collèges. ses ressortissants. Même si ce scrutin a souffert d’une relative baisse de partici- Nous voulons une agriculture Landaise crédible et les pieds pation, subissant de plein fouet tant la crise démocratique ac- sur terre, garante du renouvellement des générations, créa- tuelle qu’un sentiment d’abandon des territoires ruraux, il n’en trice de revenus, de valeur ajoutée et d’emplois, en phase avec demeure pas moins que la participation dans les Landes a été les attentes de la société, relevant les défis du changement importante, 8 points de plus que la moyenne nationale, et que climatique, de l’innovation, et communiquant sur la réalité de nous demeurons le corps intermédiaire le plus représentatif. notre métier. Les résultats ont très clairement renforcé une majorité Ce projet que nous portons, nous le construirons en renforçant FDSEA-JA pour gérer la Chambre d’agriculture pour les nos liens et partenariats avec les collectivités notamment le 6 ans à venir. Conseil départemental, et au plus près des enjeux de chaque A la tête d’une nouvelle équipe, 11 nouveaux membres sur territoire avec les intercommunalités. -
Liste Des Communes De Charente- Maritime THD Fourniture D’Informations Relatives Aux Déploiements FTTH De Charente-Maritime THD
Annexe 1 – Liste des communes de Charente- Maritime THD Fourniture d’informations relatives aux déploiements FTTH de Charente-Maritime THD Les communes de Charente-Maritime THD sont les suivantes (le nom de chaque commune est précédée de son code INSEE) : Code INSEE Communes couvertes par le CM THD commune 17002 AGUDELLE 17003 AIGREFEUILLE D'AUNIS 17005 ALLAS BOCAGE 17006 ALLAS CHAMPAGNE 17007 ANAIS 17008 ANDILLY 17009 ANGLIERS 17011 ANNEPONT 17012 ANNEZAY 17013 ANTEZANT LA CHAPELLE 17015 ARCES SUR GIRONDE 17016 ARCHIAC 17017 ARCHINGEAY 17018 ARDILLIERES 17019 ARS EN RE 17020 ARTHENAC 17021 ARVERT 17022 ASNIERES LA GIRAUD 17023 AUJAC 17024 AULNAY 17025 AUMAGNE 17026 AUTHON EBEON 17027 AVY 17029 BAGNIZEAU 17030 BALANZAC 17031 BALLANS 17032 BALLON 17033 LA BARDE 17034 BARZAN 17035 BAZAUGES 17036 BEAUGEAY 17037 BEAUVAIS SUR MATHA 17038 BEDENAC 17039 BELLUIRE 17040 LA BENATE 17041 BENON Fourniture d’informations relatives aux déploiements FTTH de CM THD annexe 1 – liste des communes - janvier 2018 2/12 17042 BERCLOUX 17043 BERNAY SAINT MARTIN 17044 BERNEUIL 17045 BEURLAY 17046 BIGNAY 17047 BIRON 17048 BLANZAC LES MATHA 17049 BLANZAY SUR BOUTONNE 17050 BOIS 17051 LE BOIS PLAGE EN RE 17052 BOISREDON 17053 BORDS 17054 BORESSE ET MARTRON 17055 BOSCAMNANT 17056 BOUGNEAU 17057 BOUHET 17058 BOURCEFRANC LE CHAPUS 17060 BOUTENAC TOUVENT 17061 BRAN 17062 BRESDON 17063 BREUIL LA REORTE 17064 BREUILLET 17066 BRIE SOUS ARCHIAC 17067 BRIE SOUS MATHA 17068 BRIE SOUS MORTAGNE 17069 BRIVES SUR CHARENTE 17070 BRIZAMBOURG 17071 LA BROUSSE 17072 BURIE 17074 -
A Stimulating Heritage
DISTILLER OF SENSATIONS AMUS-EUM YOURSELVES! You’ve not seen cultural sites like these before! Keep tapping your foot... Blues, classical, rock, electro… festivals to A stimulating be consumed without moderation heritage Top 10 family activities An explosive mixture! TÉLÉCHARGEZ L’APPLICATION 04 06 CONT Frieze Amus-eum ENTS chronological YOURSELVES ! 12 15 In the Enjoy life in a château ! blessèd times of the abbeys 16 18 Map of our region A stimulating Destination Cognac heritage 20 On Cognac 23 24 Creativity Walks and recreation in the course of villages 26 30 Cultural Top 10 diversity family activities VISITS AND HERITAGE GUIDE VISITS AND HERITAGE 03 Frieze chronological MIDDLE AGES 1th century ANTIQUITY • Construction of the Château de First vines planted and creation of Bouteville around the year 1000 the first great highways • 1st mention of the town of Cognac (Via Agrippa, Chemin Boisné …) (Conniacum) in 1030 • Development of the salt trade LOWER CRETACEOUS along the Charente PERIOD 11th to 13th centuries -130 million years ago • Romanesque churches are built all • Dinosaurs at Angeac-Charente over the region 14th and 15th centuries • The Hundred Years War (1337-1453) – a disastrous period for the region, successively English and French NEOLITHIC PERIOD RENAISSANCE • Construction of several dolmens End of the 15th century in our region • Birth of François 1st in the Château de Cognac in 1494 King of France from 1515 to 1547 16th century • “Coup de Jarnac” - In 1547, during a duel, Guy de Chabot (Baron de Jarnac) slashed the calf of his adversary, the lord of La Châtaigneraie with a blow of his sword. -
Journal Officiel De La République Française
o Quarante-deuxième année. – N 124 A ISSN 0298-296X Lundi 14 et mardi 15 juillet 2008 BODACCBULLETIN OFFICIEL DES ANNONCES CIVILES ET COMMERCIALES ANNEXÉ AU JOURNAL OFFICIEL DE LA RÉPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE Standard......................................... 01-40-58-75-00 DIRECTION DES JOURNAUX OFFICIELS Annonces....................................... 01-40-58-77-56 Renseignements documentaires 01-40-58-79-79 26, rue Desaix, 75727 PARIS CEDEX 15 Abonnements................................. 01-40-58-79-20 www.journal-officiel.gouv.fr (8h30à 12h30) Télécopie........................................ 01-40-58-77-57 BODACC “A” Ventes et cessions - Créations d’établissements Procédures collectives Procédures de rétablissement personnel Avis relatifs aux successions Avis aux lecteurs Les autres catégories d’insertions sont publiées dans deux autres éditions séparées selon la répartition suivante Modifications diverses..................................... $ BODACC “B” Radiations ......................................................... # Avis de dépôt des comptes des sociétés .... BODACC “C” Avis aux annonceurs Toute insertion incomplète, non conforme aux textes en vigueur ou bien illisible sera rejetée Banque de données BODACC servie par les sociétés : Altares-D&B, EDD, Experian, Optima on Line, Groupe Sévigné-Payelle, Questel, Tessi Informatique, Jurismedia, Pouey International, Scores et Décisions, Les Echos, Creditsafe, Coface services et Cartegie. Conformément à l’article 4 de l’arrêté du 17 mai 1984 relatif à la constitution et à la commercialisation d’une banque de données télématique des informations contenues dans le BODACC, le droit d’accès prévu par la loi no 78-17 du 6 janvier 1978 s’exerce auprès de la Direction des Journaux officiels. Le numéro : 2,20 € Abonnement. − Un an (arrêté du 28 décembre 2007 publié au Journal officiel le 30 décembre 2007) : France : 351 €. -
Introduction: the Queen Versus the People 1
N OTES Introduction: The Queen versus the People 1 . J e a n n e L o u i s e C a m p a n , Memoirs of the Court of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France , ed. M de Lamartine (Philadelphia, PA: Parry and McMillan, 1854), pp. 158–159. 2 . Nancy Nichols Barker, “Revolution and the Royal Consort,” in Proceedings of the Consortium on Revolutionary Europe (1989): 136–143. 3 . Barker, “Revolution and the Royal Consort,” p. 136. 4 . Clarissa Campbell Orr notes in the introduction to a 2004 collection of essays concerning the role of the European queen consort in the Baroque era that “there is little comparative work in English on any facet of European Court life in the period from 1660 to 1800.” See Clarissa Campbell Orr, “Introduction” in Clarissa Campbell Orr (ed.), Queenship in Europe: 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), p. 2. There are strong exceptions to Orr’s conclusion, including the works of Jeroen Duidam and T.C.W. Blanning, which compare the culture, structure, and politics of Early Modern courts revealing both change and continuity but these stud- ies devote little space to the specific role of the queen consort within her family and court. See Jeroen Duindam, Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe’s Dynastic Rivals 1550–1780 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), and T.C.W. Blanning, The Culture of Power and the Power of Culture: Old Regime Europe 1660–1789 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002). 5 . See Kevin Sharpe, The Personal Rule of Charles I (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996); Bernard Bourdin, The Theological-Political Origins of the Modern State: Controversy between James I of England and Cardinal Bellamine (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2010), pp. -
16, We Begin the Publication of His Diary, So As to Possess in One Single Collection All His Writings Relative to the Congregation and His Ascetic and Mystical Life
St. EUGENE de MAZENOD DIARY (1791 - 1821) Translated by Michael Hughes, O.M.I. Oblate General Archives Via Aurelia, 290 Rome, 1999 Printed by MARIAN PRESS LTD. BATTLEFORD, SASKATCHEWAN, CANADA Table of Contents pp. Introduction ...................................................................................... 7 A Diary of the Exile in Italy (1721-1802).............................. 11 Introduction.................................................................................. 11 T e x t................................................................................................ 19 B Diary of a Stay in Paris (1805) ............................................ 103 Introduction.................................................................................. 103 T e x t................................................................................................ 109 C Diary of the Aix Christian Youth Congregation (1813-1821) ............................................................................... 121 Introduction.................................................................................. 121 T e x t................................................................................................ 233 D Diary of the Mission of Marignane (November 17 - December 1 5 ,1 8 1 6 )................................... 209 Introduction.................................................................................. 209 T ex t................................................................................................ 213 Illustrations -
Pagan Survivals, Superstitions and Popular Cultures in Early Medieval Pastoral Literature
Bernadette Filotas PAGAN SURVIVALS, SUPERSTITIONS AND POPULAR CULTURES IN EARLY MEDIEVAL PASTORAL LITERATURE Is medieval pastoral literature an accurate reflection of actual beliefs and practices in the early medieval West or simply of literary conventions in- herited by clerical writers? How and to what extent did Christianity and traditional pre-Christian beliefs and practices come into conflict, influence each other, and merge in popular culture? This comprehensive study examines early medieval popular culture as it appears in ecclesiastical and secular law, sermons, penitentials and other pastoral works – a selective, skewed, but still illuminating record of the be- liefs and practices of ordinary Christians. Concentrating on the five cen- turies from c. 500 to c. 1000, Pagan Survivals, Superstitions and Popular Cultures in Early Medieval Pastoral Literature presents the evidence for folk religious beliefs and piety, attitudes to nature and death, festivals, magic, drinking and alimentary customs. As such it provides a precious glimpse of the mu- tual adaptation of Christianity and traditional cultures at an important period of cultural and religious transition. Studies and Texts 151 Pagan Survivals, Superstitions and Popular Cultures in Early Medieval Pastoral Literature by Bernadette Filotas Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences, through the Aid to Scholarly Publications Programme, using funds provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION Filotas, Bernadette, 1941- Pagan survivals, superstitions and popular cultures in early medieval pastoral literature / by Bernadette Filotas. -
The General Stud Book : Containing Pedigrees of Race Horses, &C
^--v ''*4# ^^^j^ r- "^. Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2009 witii funding from Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/generalstudbookc02fair THE GENERAL STUD BOOK VOL. II. : THE deiterol STUD BOOK, CONTAINING PEDIGREES OF RACE HORSES, &C. &-C. From the earliest Accounts to the Year 1831. inclusice. ITS FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. II. Brussels PRINTED FOR MELINE, CANS A.ND C"., EOILEVARD DE WATERLOO, Zi. M DCCC XXXIX. MR V. un:ve PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. To assist in the detection of spurious and the correction of inaccu- rate pedigrees, is one of the purposes of the present publication, in which respect the first Volume has been of acknowledged utility. The two together, it is hoped, will form a comprehensive and tole- rably correct Register of Pedigrees. It will be observed that some of the Mares which appeared in the last Supplement (whereof this is a republication and continua- tion) stand as they did there, i. e. without any additions to their produce since 1813 or 1814. — It has been ascertained that several of them were about that time sold by public auction, and as all attempts to trace them have failed, the probability is that they have either been converted to some other use, or been sent abroad. If any proof were wanting of the superiority of the English breed of horses over that of every other country, it might be found in the avidity with which they are sought by Foreigners. The exportation of them to Russia, France, Germany, etc. for the last five years has been so considerable, as to render it an object of some importance in a commercial point of view. -
Why We Play: an Anthropological Study (Enlarged Edition)
ROBERTE HAMAYON WHY WE PLAY An Anthropological Study translated by damien simon foreword by michael puett ON KINGS DAVID GRAEBER & MARSHALL SAHLINS WHY WE PLAY Hau BOOKS Executive Editor Giovanni da Col Managing Editor Sean M. Dowdy Editorial Board Anne-Christine Taylor Carlos Fausto Danilyn Rutherford Ilana Gershon Jason Troop Joel Robbins Jonathan Parry Michael Lempert Stephan Palmié www.haubooks.com WHY WE PLAY AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL STUDY Roberte Hamayon Enlarged Edition Translated by Damien Simon Foreword by Michael Puett Hau Books Chicago English Translation © 2016 Hau Books and Roberte Hamayon Original French Edition, Jouer: Une Étude Anthropologique, © 2012 Éditions La Découverte Cover Image: Detail of M. C. Escher’s (1898–1972), “Te Encounter,” © May 1944, 13 7/16 x 18 5/16 in. (34.1 x 46.5 cm) sheet: 16 x 21 7/8 in. (40.6 x 55.6 cm), Lithograph. Cover and layout design: Sheehan Moore Typesetting: Prepress Plus (www.prepressplus.in) ISBN: 978-0-9861325-6-8 LCCN: 2016902726 Hau Books Chicago Distribution Center 11030 S. Langley Chicago, IL 60628 www.haubooks.com Hau Books is marketed and distributed by Te University of Chicago Press. www.press.uchicago.edu Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper. Table of Contents Acknowledgments xiii Foreword: “In praise of play” by Michael Puett xv Introduction: “Playing”: A bundle of paradoxes 1 Chronicle of evidence 2 Outline of my approach 6 PART I: FROM GAMES TO PLAY 1. Can play be an object of research? 13 Contemporary anthropology’s curious lack of interest 15 Upstream and downstream 18 Transversal notions 18 First axis: Sport as a regulated activity 18 Second axis: Ritual as an interactional structure 20 Toward cognitive studies 23 From child psychology as a cognitive structure 24 . -
2 Gestion Des Cours D'eau 2.1 Police De L'eau 2.2 Gestion De La Pêche
Diagnostic préalable au Contrat Global de Charly sur Marne 2 Gestion des cours d’eau 2.1 Police de l’eau Dans le cas des cours d’eau domaniaux (Domaine Public Fluvial ou DPF), l'Etat est tenu d'en assurer l'entretien ainsi que celui des ouvrages (écluses, barrages,...) pour permettre la navigation. Pour la Marne, les missions de police de l’eau et de la pêche sont assurées par le Service de la Navigation de la Seine. Les cours d'eau non domaniaux sont les cours d'eau qui ne sont pas classés comme appartenant au domaine public. Les propriétaires riverains, propriétaires de la moitié du lit, doivent en assurer l'entretien régulier. Ces cours d’eau relèvent du domaine privé et sont administrés par la Direction Départementale de l’Agriculture et de la Foret (DDAF) de l’Aisne , future DDT (Direction départementale des territoires). 2.2 Gestion de la pêche La Fédération pour la Pêche et la Protection du Milieu Aquatique de l’Aisne a pour objet la protection, la mise en valeur et la surveillance du domaine piscicole départemental , la définition et la coordination des actions des associations adhérentes , le développement de la pêche amateur ainsi que la collecte de la taxe piscicole . La Fédération regroupe 83 AAPPMA (Associations Agréées pour la Pêche et la Protection du Milieu Aquatique) dont 3 sur le territoire du Contrat : « le Brochet Carlésien » à Charly sur Marne, « Les Fervents du Bouchon » à Nogent l’Artaud et « Les protecteurs du Poisson » à Chézy sur Marne (Cf. Tableau 6 : Gestion de la pêche sur les cours d’eau du territoire ). -
Studies in Classical Antiquity NS Vol. 20 / 2011 New Zealand / South Africa
ISSN 1018-9017 SCHOLIA Studies in Classical Antiquity NS Vol. 20 / 2011 New Zealand / South Africa ISSN 1018-9017 SCHOLIA Studies in Classical Antiquity Editor: W. J. Dominik NS Vol. 20 / 2011 New Zealand / South Africa SCHOLIA Studies in Classical Antiquity ISSN 1018-9017 Scholia features critical and pedagogical articles and reviews on a diverse range of subjects dealing with classical antiquity, including late antique, medieval, Renaissance and early modern studies related to the classical tradition; in addition, there are articles on classical artefacts in museums in New Zealand and the J. A. Barsby Essay. Manuscripts: Potential contributors should read the ‘Notes for Contributors’ located at the back of this volume and follow the suggested guidelines for the submission of manuscripts. Articles on the classical tradition are particularly welcome. Submissions are usually reviewed by two referees. Time before publication decision: 2-3 months. Subscriptions (2011): Individuals: USD35/NZD50. Libraries and institutions: USD60/ NZD80. Credit card payments are preferred; please see the subscription form and credit card authorisation at the back of this volume. Foreign subscriptions cover air mail postage. After initial payment, a subscription to the journal will be entered. All back numbers are available at a reduced price and may be ordered from the Business Manager. Editing and Managing Address: Articles and subscriptions: W. J. Dominik, Editor and Manager, Scholia, Department of Classics, University of Otago, P. O. Box 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand. Telephone: +64 (0)3 479 8710; facsimile: +64 (0)3 479 9029; e-mail: [email protected]. Reviews Address: Reviews articles and reviews: J. -
The Unigenitus of Clement XI
Theological Studies 49 (1988) THE UNIGÉNITOS OF CLEMENT XI: A FRESH LOOK AT THE ISSUES JACQUES M. GRES-GAYER The Catholic University of America HERE is an enigma about Unigenitus, the ill-fated bull issued by Pope TClement XI (1713) against the resurgence of Jansenism. If the Jansenist movement in general has continued to attract scholars, whose recent contributions are changing perspectives,1 the constitution that condemned 101 "Jansenist propositions" extracted from the Réflexions morales was until recently left scrupulously untouched. It seemed taken for granted as an inevitable pivot—either a terminus ad quern, the logical conclusion of a century of theological and political disputes, or a terminus a quo, the origin of a movement of rebellion that eventually developed into a revolution.2 In other words, it was considered more a catalyst or an excuse for a latent social and political conflict than its real cause; hence the interest manifested in its prolegomena or later development rather than in the document itself. It was the document itself, however, the solemn exercise of the papal magisterium, that stimulated what was then perceived as the major crisis in Catholic history. The animosities, the political schemes, and the negotiations which accompanied its preparation, the uproar, the renewed negotiations, and the conflicts which followed its publication, suggest that there was more to this document than a collection of 101 condemned extracts from a spiritual book. But what was Unigenitus all about? In what appears to be a healthy reaction to a quasi-exclusive emphasis on the social and political elements of the conflicts surrounding the bull, major scholars of Jansenism have lately advocated an approach that 1 See the review article by William H.