Academic literature on the topic '1405-1475'
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Journal articles on the topic "1405-1475"
Xiong, Xian. "Light hadron spectroscopy at BESIII." EPJ Web of Conferences 199 (2019): 02021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201919902021.
Full textBugg, D. V. "A feature of BESIII data for J/Ψ→γ(η′ππ) and comments on η(1405) and η(1475)." Physics Letters B 697, no. 4 (March 2011): 364–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physletb.2011.02.027.
Full textRajman, Jerzy. "Wkład klasztorów w rozwój kultury organowej średniowiecznej i wczesnonowożytnej małopolski (XIV–koniec XVI w.)." Muzyka 63, no. 3 (October 2, 2018): 43–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.36744/m.511.
Full textWu, Jia-Jun, Xiao-Hai Liu, Qiang Zhao, and Bing-Song Zou. "Puzzle of Anomalously Large Isospin Violations inη(1405/1475)→3π." Physical Review Letters 108, no. 8 (February 22, 2012). http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.108.081803.
Full textWu, Xiao-Gang, Jia-Jun Wu, Qiang Zhao, and Bing-Song Zou. "Understanding the property ofη(1405/1475)in theJ/ψradiative decay." Physical Review D 87, no. 1 (January 28, 2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.87.014023.
Full textDu, Meng-Chuan, and Qiang Zhao. "Internal particle width effects on the triangle singularity mechanism in the study of the η(1405) and η(1475) puzzle." Physical Review D 100, no. 3 (August 13, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.100.036005.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "1405-1475"
Doudet, Estelle. "Un cristal mucié en un coffre : poétique de George Chastelain (1415-1475)." Paris 4, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA040095.
Full textOfficial poet of the Burgundy under Philip the Good and Charles the Bold, master of the Grands Rhétoriqueurs, George Chastelain today holds an ambiguous position within literary criticism. Instigator of this group which he apparently shares only a few elements of style, he remains the reference quoted but poorly known of the transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. His writing is a space within which fertile tensions typical of his epoch crystallize. Historian to the princes, he claims the original status of orator, guardian of the truth and glory to come. Mastering the ornatus left by the Medieval tradition, both in prose and verse, allowed him to subsume the contradictions of his status, through the construction of a coherent poetic. Thus the text offers itself as a space for rendering complete the three senses: literary, political and religious. His polygraphic works celebrate the richness of the Grande Rhétorique, for an alternative route to the French Renaissance
TAYLOR, Matthew. "Matteo Palmieri (1406-1475) : Florentine humanist and politician." Doctoral thesis, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5993.
Full textBook chapters on the topic "1405-1475"
"PRICES AND WAGES IN ENGLAND servants at 6d. In periods of high prices 1s. 2d. or 1s. 4d. a week might be allowed for fellows. The allowances covered expenditure on food, drink and fuel for cooking, baking bread and brewing beer and for heating the Hall on feast days in winter, the only times when fires were per-mitted there. Two meals, dinner and supper, were served daily, with breakfast for those under sixteen years of age. If the total expense of food, drink and fuel in any year was less than the total allocations a surplus was accounted at the end of the year known as Excrescentia commonarum ; if the expense exceeded the allocations a deficit appeared in the Bursars’ Accounts. During the fifteenth century the total yearly allocations for commons were usually between £220 and £230, with variations due to the varying number of persons and to different rates, and there was nearly always a surplus, sometimes as great as £57 8s. (1456) ; between 1405 and 1475 a deficit occurred only in four years (1405, 1437, 1438 and 1446). Later the surplus disappeared and early in the sixteenth century there were usually deficits caused by the permanent rise in prices. Between 1534 and 1541 there was a deficit every year. A new method of accounting for commons was therefore adopted in 1542, in order to ensure a more comprehensive statement of the current expenses for food, drink and fuel. From 1542 onwards, the Bursars entered the total sums spent weekly on provisions and supplementary purchases by the Manciple in the Rolls or Books in place of the former Commons Account, which now disappeared. After the expenses of the departments, liveries, stipends and all other expenditure, a new section was henceforward added: the Staurum or Stock Account. This covered costs of food, drink and fuel used during the year and gave com-monly only a single total quantity for each commodity with the cost of the same. The accounts were not kept uniformly ; some bursars unfortunately omitted quantities entirely from their Staurum Accounts. Since a store was kept of most kinds of provisions, the consumption in any year consisted partly of the remainder unused purchased in the year preceding, partly of fresh purchases in the current year. In a few years entries were divided into “ left in store and used during the year ” and “ bought and used during the year,” and in these cases the average." In Prices and Wages in England, 70. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315031385-44.
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