Auswahl der wissenschaftlichen Literatur zum Thema „Diocese of Tivoli (Italy)“

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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Diocese of Tivoli (Italy)"

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Mancini, Alessandro, Enrico Capezzuoli, Andrea Brogi, Rudy Swennen, Lisa Ricci und Francesco Frondini. „Geogenic CO2 flux calculations from the Late Pleistocene Tivoli travertines (Acque Albule Basin, Tivoli, Central Italy)“. Italian Journal of Geosciences 139, Nr. 3 (Oktober 2020): 374–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3301/ijg.2020.10.

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Manni, Riccardo, und Rolando Di Nardo. „A possible crawling paracomatulid crinoid from the Lower Jurassic of central Italy“. Carnets de géologie (Notebooks on geology) 21, Nr. 19 (25.12.2021): 523–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.2110/carnets.2021.2119.

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A new paracomatulid crinoid, Tiburtocrinus toarcensis gen. et sp. nov., is described from the Lower Jurassic of Tivoli (central Apennines, Italy). This type of stemless crinoids has never previously been recorded in Italy, and this report bridges a significant gap. Morphofunctional analysis of the radial facets suggests that Tiburtocrinus toarcensis gen. et sp. nov. may have been a crawling paracomatulid, very different from other paracomatulids that probably swam.
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Anzalone, Erlisiana, Bruno D’Argenio und Vittoria Ferreri. „Depositional trends of travertines in the type area of Tivoli (Italy)“. Rendiconti Lincei 28, Nr. 2 (10.02.2017): 341–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12210-017-0595-1.

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Columbu, Stefano, Fabrizio Antonelli, Marco Lezzerini, Domenico Miriello, Benedetta Adembri und Alessandro Blanco. „Provenance of marbles used in the Heliocaminus Baths of Hadrian's Villa (Tivoli, Italy)“. Journal of Archaeological Science 49 (September 2014): 332–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2014.05.026.

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Columbu, Stefano, Fabio Sitzia und Guido Ennas. „The ancient pozzolanic mortars and concretes of Heliocaminus baths in Hadrian’s Villa (Tivoli, Italy)“. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 9, Nr. 4 (27.09.2016): 523–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12520-016-0385-1.

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Di Pietro, Romeo, Marco Giardini, Duilio Iamonico, Giancarlo Tondi, Daniele Angeloni, Emanuela Carli, Michele Aleffi et al. „Floristic and coenological data from the travertine substrates of the SAC “Travertini Acque Albule (Bagni di Tivoli)” (Lazio Region – Central Italy)“. Plant Sociology 59, Nr. 2 (30.12.2022): 51–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/pls2022592/05.

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During a phytosociological field-work campaign on the vegetation of the travertine outcrops, included in the Special Area of Conservation (SAC) “Travertini Acque Albule (Bagni di Tivoli)” (Central Italy), several taxa of particular interest were identified. Carex vulpina, Lolium apenninum, Onosma echioides subsp. angustifolia, Typha domingensis, T. laxmannii and Vicia pannonica subsp. pannonica are new for the Lazio administrative Region, while Ophrys illyrica and Zannichellia peltata are confirmed for the flora of this Region. For each of these taxa phytosociological samples describing the plant communities in which they were found are provided. New records for rare species were also reported for cryptogams such as Algae, Lichens and Mosses.
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Erthal, Marcelle Marques, Enrico Capezzuoli, Alessandro Mancini, Hannes Claes, Jeroen Soete und Rudy Swennen. „Shrub morpho-types as indicator for the water flow energy - Tivoli travertine case (Central Italy)“. Sedimentary Geology 347 (Januar 2017): 79–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sedgeo.2016.11.008.

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Tarasova, Natalia A. „The Italian Events of 1867 in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Calligraphic Sketches: Based on Newspaper Chronicles“. Dostoevsky and World Culture. Philological journal, Nr. 3 (2023): 81–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.22455/2619-0311-2023-3-81-113.

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The paper examines the calligraphic sketches contained in Dostoevsky’s workbooks with entries for 1867: mentions in calligraphy of the name Garibaldi, as well as Italian toponyms (Acquapendente, Viterbo, Monterotondo, Roma, Tivoli, Frosinone). The analysis of the semantic context formed by these and other calligraphies (inscriptions with the names of Roman Caesars, King of Italy Victor Emmanuel II, Pope Pius IX, etc.) reveals the influence on these records of newspaper periodicals, which widely covered the events of the Risorgimento at that time and attracted the attention of Dostoevsky, as follows from documentary evidence. The context revealed by these calligraphic notes indicates thematic connections between Dostoevsky’s notes of the 1860s, his novels and the future Diary of a Writer.
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Drenik, Simona. „Restitution of Istria's Treasures from Italy to Slovenia: The State of International Law and Practice“. Res novae: revija za celovito znanost 2, Nr. 2 (2017): 135–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.62983/rn2865.172.5.

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The aim of this paper is to address international law aspects of the issue of restitution of around 100 cultural treasures from Italy to Slovenia, taking into account contemporary international law and recent developments of state practice. The artworks were evacuated by Italy from Koper (Capodistria), Izola (Isola) and Piran (Pirano) in 1940 to be protected before the war, however, after the Second World War Italy refused to returned them to the places of their origin. Many of these artifacts were taken from Catholic Church parishes, monasteries or belonged to the Diocese of Koper. The purpose of this study is to identify applicable standards and procedures which could serve to encourage all actors involved, mainly Slovenian and Italian authorities, but also private owners, to move this outstanding issue from the standstill. A main conclusion of this study is that both States should search for a compromise, mutually acceptable solution by applying international treaties, including the principle of territorial provenance, but also several practical techniques and various contemporary state practice. One possible solution would be to reach an agreement that UNESCO Intergovernmental Committee for Promoting the Return of Cultural Property to Its Countries of Origin or Its Restitution in Case of Illicit Appropriation would facilitate negotiations or mediate the case. Another option might be that other actors, i.e. Diocese of Koper, Franciscans or Minorites, would undertake negotiations regarding the restitution of particular, most important artworks.
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MAFFI, LUCIANO, und MARCO ROCHINI. „Poor relief systems in rural Italy: the territory of the diocese of Tortona in the eighteenth century“. Continuity and Change 31, Nr. 2 (12.07.2016): 211–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268416016000242.

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AbstractThis article studies the development of poor relief in the rural areas of the diocese of Tortona in the eighteenth century, through the analysis of the parish reports written for the pastoral visits of bishops Giulio Resta and Giuseppe Lodovico Andujar in 1741 and 1743. The reports record the most important assistance activities organised by different social actors: dowries for poor girls; bread, money and clothing to distribute to the poor; but also formal support in the form of hospitals providing shelter and care for pilgrims and the sick; the monti di pietà, which loaned money and the grain stores, which provided essential loans of grain. The diocese of Tortona in the eighteenth century represents a privileged point of view for understanding how the development of poor relief in the ancien régime was influenced by the political and institutional, geographical, landowning and socio-ecomomic context. Here, a complex institutional situation, combined with a diverse geographical and socio-economic context, gave rise to a variety of poor relief systems.
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Dissertationen zum Thema "Diocese of Tivoli (Italy)"

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Ketcham, Barbara. „The use of water in the gardens of the Villa d'Este at Tivoli, Italy“. Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/22726.

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GRANIERI, FRANCESCA. „Scavi al Pantanello: proposta per una ricontestualizzazione delle antichità negli ambienti di Villa Adriana“. Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Roma "Tor Vergata", 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2108/668.

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La Villa di Adriano a Tivoli, patrimonio Unesco dal 2000, è stata fin dal XV secolo oggetto di scavi volti al recupero di antichità che, non solo furono reimpiegate nelle principali chiese e palazzi di Tivoli, ma arricchirono anche le più importanti collezioni di antichità tra cui quella del cardinale Ippolito d’Este per il quale scavò a Villa Adriana Pirro Ligorio. Di particolare rilevanza sono gli scavi condotti nel XVIII secolo nell’area del Pantanello situato a nord della Villa nei pressi del Teatro Greco e della cd. Palestra. Compreso nei possedimenti di proprietà della famiglia Lolli e di Domenico De Angelis, il Pantanello venne scavato nel 1724 da Francesco Antonio Lolli e nel 1769 da Gavin Hamilton. Durante queste due distinte campagne di scavo riaffiorò un gran numero di antichità tra loro distinte per tipologia (teste, busti, statue, elementi architettonici…) e materiale utilizzato. Il Pantanello, dunque, deve essere considerato un deposito nel quale vennero raccolte tutte quelle antichità da trasportare nelle vicine calcare. Le antichità rinvenute dal Lolli e da Hamilton vennero immesse sul mercato antiquario e acquistate dai principali collezionisti del secolo: Melchior de Polignac, C. Townley, W. Fitzmaurice, T. Mansel Talbot, T. Jenkins, G. Piranesi, A. Albani, I. Šuvalov e Monsieur de Cock. Un nucleo consistente, invece, venne acquistato per il Museo Pio Clementino allora in fase di allestimento. Le antichità del Pantanello si dispersero, così, nelle varie collezioni europee, soprattutto inglesi, e devono oggi essere rintracciate, non solo nei principali musei come i Musei Vaticani, il British Museum a Londra e l’Hermitage a San Pietroburgo, ma anche in collezioni private dove giunsero in seguito a successive dispersioni. Rintracciare le antichità rinvenute nel Pantanello significa, anche, tentare di ricontestualizzarle nei vari ambienti della Villa (soprattutto nell’area della cd. Palestra e del Teatro Greco). Per altre, come le teste dei compagni di Ulisse facenti parte del Gruppo di Polifemo, è necessario uno studio più specifico che ha come punto di partenza la loro sistemazione presso il Serapeo del Canopo già proposta da alcuni studiosi
Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli, Unesco’ s heritage since 2000, was excavated from XV century. The antiquities, which were found, were utilized to decorate the most important Tivoli’s Churches and Palaces and were bought by collectors as Ippolito d’Este; for him Pirro Ligorio excavated at Hadrian’s Villa. The excavations realized in the Pantanello during the XVIII century, were very important. The Pantanello, situated in the north part of Hadrian’s Villa near Greek Theatre and so called Palestra, was part of Lolli family and Domenico De Angelis’ s properties. It was excavated by Francesco Antonio Lolli (1724) and Gavin Hamilton (1769). During these excavations, a great number of antiquities, different for typology (heads, busts, statues, architectonical elements …) and materials, was come to the surface. So the Pantanello must be considered as a space in which the antiquities were left before to be carried in the near calcare. The antiquities were bought by the most important collectors of the XVIII century: Melchior de Polignac, W. Fitzmaurice, T. Mansel Talbot, T. Jenkins, G. Piranesi, A. Albani, I. Šuvalov and Monsieur de Cock. A significant group, instead, was bought for the Pio Clementino Museum created in that moment . The sculptures from Pantanello were dispersed in the European collections, especially English, and now must be traced not only in the most important museums like the Musei Vaticani, the British Museum at London and the Hermitage at San Pietroburgo, but in the private collections were arrived after following dispersions too. It is important to give back these materials to the different spaces of Hadrian’s Villa like, for example, the Greek Theatre or the so called Palestra. For the heads of Ulisse’ s companions, instead, it’s necessary a more exhaustive study starting their collocation in the Serapeo of Canopo already proposed by some scholars.
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Croci, A. „CARBONATE DEPOSITION IN CONTINENTAL SETTINGS: SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION AND PETROGRAPHY OF LATE MESSINIAN TRAVERTINES IN ALBEGNA BASIN (SOUTHERN TUSCANY) AND LATE PLEISTOCENE TRAVERTINES IN AQUE ALBULE BASIN (TIVOLI, CENTRAL ITALY)“. Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/362798.

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The hydrocarbon reservoir discoveries in continental Lower Cretaceous carbonates in the South Atlantic Pre-Salt (offshore Brazil and Angola) have renewed the scientific interest in recent and ancient carbonates developed in lacustrine, hydrothermal and fluvial environments. Outcrop analogues provide key information to improve the understanding of the stratigraphic, sedimentological, diagenetic and petrophysical subsurface reservoir properties and lithofacies spatial distribution. To improve the knowledge about continental carbonates lithofacies types, stratigraphic architecture and diagenesis, this project focuses on two case studies: the Messinian mixed terrigenous-travertine succession of the Albegna Basin (Southern Tuscany, Central Italy) and the Pleistocene Acque Albule Lapis Tiburtinus (Tivoli, Central Italy). In the both studied areas, travertines include facies types precipitated from thermal water through abiotic and biologically influenced processes, ranging from clotted peloidal micrite boundstone, to crystalline dendrites and coated reeds. The 70 m thick Messinian mixed terrigenous-travertine system, accumulated in the extensional continental Neogene Albegna Basin, was investigated in terms of lithofacies types, depositional environment and their spatial distribution, petrographic analysis, carbon and oxygen stable isotope geochemistry, diagenesis and porosity. The succession recorded three phases of evolution of the depositional system. 1) At the base, a 20 m thick northward prograding hydrothermal travertine terraced slope interfingered in the eastern part with an alluvial plain system prograding northward and westward (Phase I). 2) The continuous travertine succession was interrupted by the deposition of several metres thick alluvial fan breccias intercalated with 2-3 m thick travertine lenses (Phase II). 3) During Phase III, the basin evolved into an alluvial plain with ponds rich in coated reed travertines. Travertine stable isotope signatures during phase I and II confirm the geothermal origin of the precipitating water with 13C value averaging 1.46 ‰ V-PDB, while 18O is -7.50 ‰. Phase III travertines, enriched in coated plants, show lighter 13C values (mean 13C -0.36 ‰; 18O -7.22 ‰) indicative of influence of meteoric water with soil-derived CO2. The paragenetic history of the studied succession shows that it was affected by hydrothermal, meteoric and burial diagenesis. The studied succession was firstly affected by a burial phase, afterwards followed by uplift and exhumation to meteoric diagenesis. The 20 km2 and 50 m thick Pleistocene travertine succession accumulated in the Acque Albule Basin close to Tivoli village was investigated in terms of lithofacies types, its geometry and architecture, through the analyses and the correlation of six drilled borehole cores. The travertine unit consists of a wedge shape geometry thinning southwards and it is subdivided in a proximal, intermediate and distal part from North to South. The succession recorded four principal units separated by four main unconformities that consist of centimetre to few metres thick intraclastic/extraclastic wackestone to floatstone/rudstone, indicative of periods of non deposition and erosion, due to the temporary interruption of the thermal water out of the springs. The southern part of the wedge is intercalated with conglomerate and sandstone representing palaeo-river channels. This study shows the stratigraphic architecture and sedimentary evolution of these two decametre scale continental sedimentary successions in which hydrothermal activity and travertine precipitation were driven by the extensional and transtensive tectonic regimes, with faults acting as fluid paths for thermal water and creation of accommodation space for terrigenous and travertine deposition. Humid climate might have been instrumental for the aquifer recharge that fed the hydrothermal vents. This study proposes two different geological models useful for further comparison with other continental basin successions and hydrothermal travertine systems in outcrops and subsurface. It provides useful information for the petrographic, spatial and reservoir characterization of subsurface travertine analogues.
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Buchet, Elisabeth. „Tibur et Rome : étude des processus d'intégration d'une cité latine“. Thesis, Paris 4, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA040106.

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La cité latine de Tibur occupe une position singulière dans le Latium antique. En effet, situé sur les premiers contreforts des Apennins, au confluent des cultures latine et sabellique, elle joue le rôle de verrou du Latium. Lieu de passage obligé des transhumances entre la plaine latiale et les hauts plateaux des Apennins, elle est également au confluent des diverses cultures de l'Italie centrale. Cette position amène la cité à jouer un rôle de première importance dans la région, et ce dès l'époque archaïque : son territoire est alors le plus étendu du Latium après Rome.Définitivement vaincue par Rome en 338 av. J.-C., la cité ne recevra pourtant la citoyenneté romaine qu'en 90 av. J.-C.On s'intéresse donc ici aux relations entre Tibur et Rome et à la façon dont la cité latine est devenue romaine. Pour cela, on étudie d'abord les origines de Tibur, en s'intéressant à ce que nous en dit l'archéologie et aux légendes de fondation et à ce qu'elles reflètent de l'évolution des relations entre les deux cités. On examine ensuite les événements qui ont mené à la défaite de Tibur face à Rome, puis la progressive intégration des Tiburtins dans la citoyenneté romaine, en mettant l'accent sur la question de l'identité tiburtine. Cette question est au cœur du chapitre suivant,consacré aux cultes tiburtins. On s'intéresse enfin à la villégiature à Tibur, et en particulier à l’œuvre des poètes qui y ont séjourné : on propose de voir dans la transformation de Tibur en objet littéraire à partir de l'époque augustéenne l'ultime étape de l'intégration de la cité
The Latin city of Tibur holds a very singular position in ancient Latium. Indeed, positionned as it is on the first slopesof the Apennines and at a crossroads of the Latin and Sabellic cultures, it acts de facto as a gateway to Latium. Itsposition as a mandatory stop for transhuming flocks puts the city in contact with every culture in central Italy. It isbecause of this position that the city plays a major role in the area, ever since its beginnings: during the Archaic period,it holds the widest territory in Latium after Rome. The city is finally vanquished by Rome in 338 B.C., but will notreceive Roman citizenship before 90 B. C. We aim here to study the relationship between Tibur and Rome and theprocess that turned a Latin city into a Roman one. To this end, we begin with a study of Tibur's origins: we examinethe archaeological evidence as well as the foundation myths and what the latter may teach us about the evolutions ofTibur's relationship with Rome. We look at the events which led to Tibur's defeat to Rome, and at the integration of theTiburtines into Roman citizenship: we emphasize the notion of Tiburtine identity. This notion is a the heart of thefollowing chapter, which regards the cults of Tibur. We finally study Tibur's evolution into a favoured summer resortfor the Roman political and literary élite, with a special emphasis on the poets' view of Tibur : we put forward thatTibur's transformation into a literary topos from the augustean age onwards is the final step of its integration
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Caponi, Matteo. „Una chiesa in guerra. La diocesi di Firenze (1911-26)“. Doctoral thesis, Scuola Normale Superiore, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/11384/86026.

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Basera, Michael. „The mission of the church as family: implementing the ecclesiology of the African Synod (1994) in the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo“. Thesis, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27721.

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Bibliography: leaves 221-244
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the mission of the ‘Church as family’ and to explore its implications in terms of levels of inclusion and participation of church members in the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo. The background of the study is the 1994 African Synod that suggests the ecclesiology of the mission of the ‘Church as family.’ The study helps the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo to evaluate the implementation of the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family’ and draw implications for nuclear, single parent, child-headed, reconstituted and extended families within the church. The study explores Shorter’s culture model to examine how cultural practices, symbols, values and belief systems can be used as an analytic framework for the human dimension of the church. A qualitative research methodology that involves 36 participants in semi-structured interviews, three focus group discussions in urban, semi-urban and rural parishes and participant observation was used to collect data from parishioners, priests and religious of the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo. The study reveals that each family type contributes to Evangelisation as proclamation of the Good News and inculturation differently thereby enriching the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family.’ Furthermore, the study shows that guilds, associations and commissions help to strengthen families through spiritual, psychological, social and economic support. Findings also indicate that the Trinity is the theological foundation of the family and it finds acceptance in African communal setup. Family types in Masvingo Diocese are analysed using the notion of the Trinity to show that dignity, equality and respect among family types can be used to strengthen the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family.’ At pastoral level, economic, social and cultural obstacles to family ministry stand as a challenge to the full implementation and realisation of the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family’. In the light of the research, recommendations for mission strategies were suggested at different levels that involve Diocesan administration, priests, religious, catechists and parish leaders. Recommendations for further researches were also suggested for areas that seem to be important yet outside the scope of this study. The theological, pastoral, and cultural issues raised in this study combine to help the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo to become an authentic expression of the mission of the ‘Church as family’ of God.
Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology
D. Th. (Missiology)
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Bücher zum Thema "Diocese of Tivoli (Italy)"

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Caprino, Catia. Rinvenimenti a Villa Adriana (Tivoli). Roma: G. Bretschneider, 1999.

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Giuliani, Cairoli Fulvio. Tivoli: Il Santuario di Ercole Vincitore. Tivoli (Roma): Tiburis artistica, 2004.

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Maria, Reggiani Anna, und Italy. Soprintendenza archeologica per il Lazio., Hrsg. Tivoli: Il santuario di Ercole vincitore. Milano: Electa, 1998.

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1941-, Fagiolo Marcello, und Madonna Maria Luisa, Hrsg. Villa d'Este. Roma: De Luca editori d'arte, 2003.

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1959-, Veneziano Giuseppe, Hrsg. Villa Adriana: Architettura celeste : i segreti dei solstizi. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider, 2011.

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Barisi, Isabella. Rose a Villa d'Este. Roma: De Luca, 2007.

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Le salone de la Villa d'Este à Tivoli: Un théâtre des jardins et du territoire. Paris: Somogy éditions d'art, 2005.

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Marguerite, Yourcenar. Hadrian's villa: Between heaven and earth : a tour with Marguerite Yourcenar. Sant'Oreste (Roma): Apeiron, 2005.

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Marguerite, Yourcenar. Hadrian's villa: Between heaven and earth : a tour with Marguerite Yourcenar. Sant'Oreste (Roma): Apeiron, 2005.

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Joseph Brodsky Collection (Columbia University), Hrsg. T︠S︡veta Rima: Vatikan, Sikstinskai︠a︡ kapella, Tivoli, Villa d'Ėste, Villa Adriana. Roma: Editrice Lozzi, 1990.

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Buchteile zum Thema "Diocese of Tivoli (Italy)"

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Manarini, Edoardo. „«Per Padum fluvium termino currente usque [...] Civitatem Novam atque Mutinam». Consolidation and affirmation of the Church of Modena and Its bishops in 9th-entury Carolingian Italy“. In Reti Medievali E-Book, 131–55. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-623-0.08.

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This paper seeks to trace the developments which led the Church of Modena and its bishops to acquire a pre-eminent position in its diocese in the second half of the ninth century and for much of the following one. The analysis sets out from the highly fragmented post-Roman territorial context and from the efforts made by Lombard kings, which were mostly directed towards the fiscal estate of Cittanova, rather than the ancient Roman civitas of Mutina. Particular attention is paid to the figure of Bishop Leodoin and to the manuscripts attributed to him in the Chapter Library, especially the famous Codex legum (O.I.2), for which a different production context is suggested, prior to its acquisition by the Church of Modena.
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Tosini, Patrizia. „From Venice to Tivoli:“. In Green Worlds in Early Modern Italy, 175–96. Amsterdam University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh4zj34.13.

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Campbell, Gordon. „4. Italy“. In Garden History: A Very Short Introduction, 50–62. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780199689873.003.0004.

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‘Italy’ discusses the essential features of the 16th-century Italian Renaissance garden—terraces, symmetry, statues, water, and a balance between constructed and natural materials—that were to influence gardens all over the world both in layout and in content. The two best-known surviving gardens of 16th-century Italy are Villa d’Este in Tivoli and the Boboli Gardens in Florence. The design of Italian gardens through the 17th and 18th centuries is also considered, when there was a greater French influence. Many gardens became derelict during the political and economic difficulties of a fragmented Italy in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, but the past forty years have witnessed the restoration of many Renaissance gardens.
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„9. Proprietary Religious Houses in the Diocese of Salerno (1047–92) translated from Latin by Valerie Ramseyer“. In Medieval Italy, 37–41. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812206067.37.

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„8. From Venice to Tivoli: Girolamo Muziano and the ‘Invention’ of the Tiburtine Landscape“. In Green Worlds in Early Modern Italy, 175–96. Amsterdam University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789048535866-010.

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„2. Land, Money, and Grain: Two Customary Leases in the Diocese of Florence (1073, 1115) translated from Latin by George Dameron“. In Medieval Italy, 7–9. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812206067.7.

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7

BELTRAMINI, GUIDO. „Spaces for Music in Sixteenth-Century Paduan Courts“. In The Music Room in Early Modern France and Italy. British Academy, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265055.003.0012.

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This chapter is dedicated to a particular culture relating to the way one might ideally lead one's life in line with ancient practices and views. The trend in question, which developed in Padua in the first half of the Cinquecento, was promoted by such humanists as Pietro Bembo, Alvise Cornaro and Marco Mantova Benavides. Exceptional connoisseurs of the mores and values of antiquity, these intellectuals personally supervised and directed the building of their homes. Following the model of Hadrian's villa at Tivoli, the complexes of these Paduan residences comprised dwelling areas, pavilions, large gardens and the installation of fountains, statues and rare plants. Inspired by literary sources, the ideal of recreating the ‘ancient’ way of life, in which music played a crucial role, was revived.
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Manarini, Edoardo. „Ruling on the Border : Landed Possessions from the Po Valley to the Apennines in Bononia’s Diocese“. In Struggles for Power in the Kingdom of Italy. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463725828_ch06.

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The sixth chapter deals with the Bolognese territory, an area located at the edges of the Emilia region between the Italian kingdom and the exarchate of Ravenna. After having acquired fiscal lands and thanks to the emphyteutic bond with the Ravenna archbishops, the group established there a broad seigneurial rule between the plain and the Apennines. Although it never touched the city of Bologna, their hegemony extended over the plain to the north towards the course of the Po and the Apennine valleys to the south. Fundamental elements of their power were the many castles and the foundation of the private monastery of S. Bartolomeo di Musiano.
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„6. Ruling on the Border : Landed Possessions from the Po Valley to the Apennines in Bononia’s Diocese“. In Struggles for Power in the Kingdom of Italy, 217–62. Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789048550586-012.

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Blanchard, Shaun. „Radical Reform in Tuscany“. In The Synod of Pistoia and Vatican II, 83–109. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190947798.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the early life, education, and theological foundations of Scipione de’ Ricci (1741–1810) up to the eve of the Synod of Pistoia, in 1786. It explains the reformist milieu Ricci experienced as a young student in Rome and in his early career in Florence. The importance of the late eighteenth-century convergence of Habsburg Erastian reform, international Jansenism with its focal point in Utrecht, philo-Jansenism and anti-Jesuitism in Italy, and the legacy of Muratori is profiled. Then, the reform agenda Ricci sought to implement as the bishop of Pistoia-Prato (1780–91) is described: an anti-ultramontane and synodal ecclesiology (buttressed by Erastianism and, particularly, Grand Duke Peter Leopold’s fifty-seven Punti ecclesiastici), the importance of Ricci’s international (especially Francophone) Jansenist contacts, his propaganda campaign, and the Riccian drive to reform the liturgy and devotional life in his diocese, including an encouragement of vernacular Bible reading.
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Konferenzberichte zum Thema "Diocese of Tivoli (Italy)"

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Pirjevec, Jože. „“The sole catholic church allied with nazism”: the Ljubljana diocese during World War II“. In International conference Religious Conversions and Atheization in 20th Century Central and Eastern Europe. Znanstveno-raziskovalno središče Koper, Annales ZRS, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.35469/978-961-7195-39-2_02.

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With the words quoted in the title of the presentation, Friedrich Rainer, the Carinthian Gauleiter, characterized the conduct of Bishop Gregorij Rožman and his Catholic clergy during the Second World War in the Province of Ljubljana. This paper endeavours to fathom the underlying motivations behind this political alignment, which triggered a violent civil war in occupied Slovenia in 1941 that tragically tore the Slovenian nation apart – a legacy that can still be felt today. To comprehend the mindset of the Slovenian clergy, it is essential to look at the historical role of the Catholic Church in shaping Slovenian national and cultural identity throughout the 19th and first half of the 20th century. In a predominantly agrarian society, the Catholic clergy assumed multifaceted roles, encompassing spiritual, educational, political and economic functions, underpinned by the conviction that they were the sole interpreters of the nation. To be a true Slovenian was equated with being Catholic. With the beginning of the occupation and the partitioning of Slovenia among the aggressors – Germany, Italy and Hungary – in 1941, the emergence of a Liberation Front, led by the Communists was perceived by the Church in the Province of Ljubljana as a direct challenge to the established social order. Deeming this emerging movement as the paramount adversary of both God and the nation, Bishop Rožman opted to fight it, even if it entailed forging an alliance with fascist Italy and later the Third Reich. This paper will delve into the intricacies of this dynamic process, including the role of the Vatican in its evolution.
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