Academic literature on the topic 'Edward III'

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Journal articles on the topic "Edward III"

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Merriam, T. "Edward III." Literary and Linguistic Computing 15, no. 2 (June 1, 2000): 157–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/15.2.157.

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Ormrod, W. M. "Edward III and His Family." Journal of British Studies 26, no. 4 (October 1987): 398–422. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/385897.

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The chroniclers and poets of the later Middle Ages credited Edward III with many successes, among which the production of a large family rated highly. The king had a total of twelve children, of whom no fewer than nine—five sons and four daughters—survived to maturity (fig. 1). Historians have not always been enthusiastic about the generous provisions made for this large family. Edward's very fecundity, viewed by fourteenth-century writers as a sure sign of God's grace, has been seen as a political liability because it exhausted resources, created a political imbalance between the crown and the younger branches of the royal family, and led ultimately to the deposition of Richard II and the Wars of the Roses.It is possible, however, to view Edward III's family arrangements in a different and rather more favorable light. Since the loss of many of their overseas territories in the thirteenth century, the Plantagenet kings had come to regard their remaining possessions as an inalienable patrimony to be handed on intact from father to eldest son. Unless younger children were able to create titles for themselves in foreign lands, kings had no option but to reward their sons with English earldoms. This was not a policy guaranteed to benefit the crown: the bitter quarrels between Edward II and his cousin Thomas of Lancaster showed very clearly the dangers that might arise when cadet branches of the Plantagenet dynasty became bound up with the English aristocracy.
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Linton, David, and Eric Sams. "Shakespeare's Edward III." Sixteenth Century Journal 29, no. 1 (1998): 321. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2544516.

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Jackson, MacD P., and Eric Sams. "Shakespeare's Edward III." Shakespeare Quarterly 49, no. 1 (1998): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2902212.

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Vickers, Brian, Giorgio Melchiori, Kathleen O. Irace, Doreen Del Vecchio, and Antony Hammond. "King Edward III." Yearbook of English Studies 30 (2000): 300. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3509285.

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Warren, R. ""Shakespeare's" Edward III." Cambridge Quarterly XXVII, no. 4 (April 1, 1998): 342–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/camqtly/xxvii.4.342.

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Godshalk, W. L. "Dating Edward III." Notes and Queries 42, no. 3 (September 1, 1995): 299–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/42.3.299.

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Setyawan, Dody, Agus Priantono, and Firman Firdausi. "GEORGE EDWARD III MODEL." Publicio: Jurnal Ilmiah Politik, Kebijakan dan Sosial 3, no. 2 (July 1, 2021): 9–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.51747/publicio.v3i2.774.

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Indonesia is a country with highest number of smokers in the world with high mortality. The dangers of smoking not only threaten active smokers but also passive smokers. Policies are necessary to protect and reduce its adverse effects of smoking. At the regional level in 2018, the Malang City Government passed a Regional Regulation that regulates Non-Smoking Areas (KTR). The realization and efforts to implement this regional regulation are the objectives of the research. Qualitative method is used, the focus of research is to determine the four indicators popularized by George Edward III. Determination of informants determined by purposive sampling. Primary data was obtained through in-depth interviews, observations, and related document studies. The data analysis technique uses an interactive model according to Miles, Huberman & Saldana. Regional Regulation Number 2 of 2018 in Malang City in its implementation has not run effectively, yet the harmonization of this Regional Regulation with the Mayor's Regulation is the main obstacle. The development of smoking area facilities has not been maximized and the socialization of this regional regulation is still limited to policy implementers.
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Furrow, Melissa. "Edward III as Poet." Notes and Queries 65, no. 3 (July 19, 2018): 295–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjy102.

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Hamilton, J. S., and J. S. Bothwell. "The Age of Edward III." Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 34, no. 4 (2002): 630. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4054676.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Edward III"

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Kaner, Ralph Anthony. "The management of the mobilization of English armies : Edward I to Edward III." Thesis, University of York, 2000. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/2494/.

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Ayton, Andrew. "The warhorse and military service under Edward III." Thesis, University of Hull, 1990. http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:3748.

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[From the introduction]: There are few aspects of medieval English history as important, yet as neglected, as military service. This is not to suggest that the study of war has been eschewed by scholars of the Middle Ages, for this is very far from being the case. A great deal of attention has been devoted to the vexed questions of military obligation and the mentalite of the chivalric class; to the size, structure and financing of armies and the mechanisms of their recruitment; and to the martial aspects of knightly culture, such as the tournament and crusading. On a more general level, there has been much discussion of the impact of war on society and the economy, and on the influence of wartime conditions on the development of parliament. It is not so much war that has been neglected, as the 'military community': the many thousands of men who served in English royal armies and garrisons during the Middle Ages. These men - their careers in arms, their backgrounds, their peacetime lives - remain, if not wholly in shadow, then very much in the penumbra of history. So far, indeed, are we from a comprehensive study of those who engaged in military activity in later medieval England that we lack a full prosopographical study for even a single major royal army. The contrast with, for example, the history of parliamentary representation is indeed striking, yet we surely need to understand the social composition of the king's armies quite as much as the origins and affiliations of the membership of the king's parliaments. At the moment a good deal is known about the men who 'were prepared to be at the pains of repeatedly riding across England to serve as representatives in parliament' and comparatively little about those who took up arms to ride across France and Scotland. The neglect of the men who engaged in military service, and in particular the ordinary men-at-arms and archers who formed the backbone of Edwardian armies, has significantly impaired our understanding of the workings of the English war machine; but the implications of this neglect extend far beyond the province of military history, into the study of many aspects of late medieval English society. How, for example, are we to assess the likely extent and distribution of campaigning profits (and, indeed, costs) in society - or the impact of military service on the workings of shire administration, or the influence of war on the retaining practices of the nobility and gentry - without first establishing the identities of those who served in the king's armies during this period? There can be few major research undertakings in the field of late medieval English history that would offer such wide-ranging benefits as a full-scale reconstruction of the military community.
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Candy, Christopher A. "The Scottish wars of Edward III, 1327-1338." Thesis, Durham University, 2004. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/1781/.

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Mathur, Amy Elizabeth. "Edward III: A Study of Canonicity, Sources, and Influence." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/193983.

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Since the first attribution of Shakespeare as the author of the anonymous Edward III (1596) in 1656, the play has occupied a shifting status in the canon. Over the past twenty years renewed critical interest in questions of the canonicity of Edward III has led to a wider acceptance of Shakespeare's involvement with the play.This study reviews the canonical problems raised by Edward III and reappraises the play as a dramatic text. Chapter One concentrates on issues of the play's publication, dating, and authorship. Chapter Two examines how the playwright uses literary and chronicle sources to present celebratory images of Edward III and of his son the Black Prince. Chapter Three analyzes the "ancestral influence" of the figures of Edward III and the Black Prince on the titular hero of Shakespeare's Henry V. The Chapter directs attention to Edward III as a pre-text for Henry V. The Conclusion summarizes the study and indicates future lines of inquiry.
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Shenton, Caroline. "The English Court and the restoration of Royal prestige 1327-1345." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.308898.

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Rogers, Clifford Jeffrey. ""Werre cruelle and sharpe": English strategy under Edward III 1327-1347 /." The Ohio State University, 1994. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487858106115839.

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Rechenbach, Mary Calerdine. "The Gascon money of Edward III : a study in monetary history /." Ann Arbor : Xerox university microfilms, 1990. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb35078857m.

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Rogers, Clifford J. "War cruel and sharp : English strategy under Edward III, 1327-1360 /." Woodbridge : the Boydell press, 2000. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb38851617h.

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Bothwell, Botton James S. "Royal endowment of peerage creations in the reign of Edward III." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/14570.

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This thesis is an examination of the use Edward III made of various resources at his disposal in order to patronize a number of individuals destined for the parliamentary peerage or beyond. Primarily through a judicious use of escheats, forfeitures and expectancies, though also through his control over the marriages of his tenants-in-chief, Edward managed to endow a considerable number of new men with properties both suitable to their existing estates and commensurate with their new ranks. Edward's use of these sources, along with temporary forms of patronage such as wardships, annuities, offices and smaller token forms of favour, unsurprisingly sparked a considerable amount of contemporary reaction. However, unlike previous favourites, though Edward's new men did have to contend with a substantial amount of opposition at an individual level - especially in the law courts - popular reaction in general was surprisingly mute. Though there were instances when these men were singled out for criticism, for the most part landed society as a whole, and the established nobility in particular, received them with a degree of toleration rarely exhibited to parvenus. In part due to Edward's use of propaganda, but also to the terms on which he granted out a large portion of the patronage, Edward's new creations were seen as complementing rather than threatening the existing order. Indeed, it was Edward himself who may be said to have limited the powers of his 'new nobility' not only by making them dependent on his goodwill, but also by not allowing for much of the patronage granted out to remain out indefinitely. In the end, then, this thesis is about the first coherent realization by an English monarch of the importance of controlling the composition of the parliamentary peerage at a time when its membership was becoming increasingly predetermined.
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Choate, Evan Wallace. ""Unborn and unbegot" : Richard III, Edward II, Richard II, and queer history." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44878.

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In my thesis, I treat Shakespeare’s Richard III, Marlowe’s Edward II, and Shakespeare’s Richard II as a queer sequence of history plays, or a kind of co-authored triptych, by reading their influences on each other and focusing on the iterative elements of their writing of history. I describe in my thesis how the queer affects, desires, and pleasures in these plays are integral to a History – the shared knowledge and impressions of a British national past – from which they are and have been systematically excluded.
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Books on the topic "Edward III"

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Edward III. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2012.

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B, Seaman L. C., ed. King Edward III. London: ARK Paperbacks, 1985.

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Eric, Sams, and Shakespeare William 1564-1616, eds. Shakespeare's Edward III. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996.

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Giorgio, Melchiori, and Shakespeare William 1564-1616, eds. King Edward III. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.

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Edward III: Monarch of chivalry. London: Rubicon Press, 1992.

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James, Bothwell, ed. The age of Edward III. Rochester, NY: York Medieval Press, 2001.

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Iwai, Sawako. A study of The reign of King Edward III (1596). Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1993.

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Ashley, W. J. Sir, 1860-1927, ed. Edward III and his wars, 1327-1360. [Tonbridge, England]: Pallas Armata, 1992.

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Waugh, Scott L. England in the reign of Edward III. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.

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J, Rogers Clifford, ed. The wars of Edward III: Sources and interpretations. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Edward III"

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Bate, Jonathan, Eric Rasmussen, Jan Sewell, Will Sharpe, Peter Kirwan, and Sarah Stewart. "Edward III." In William Shakespeare and Others, 133–206. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-27145-7_3.

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Goodland, Katharine, and John O’Connor. "Edward III." In A Directory of Shakespeare in Performance Since 1991, 656–58. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-58788-9_43.

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Goodland, Katharine, and John O’Connor. "Edward III." In A Directory of Shakespeare in Performance, 1970–1990, 582. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-60041-0_42.

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Bradbeer, Mark. "Locrine and Edward III." In Aemilia Lanyer as Shakespeare's Co-Author, 72–77. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003221203-11.

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Caldwell, Ellen C. "War in Shakespeare’s Edward III." In Shakespeare and War, 30–42. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230228276_3.

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Carey, Hilary M. "The Court of Edward III: Astrology Ignored." In Courting Disaster, 79–91. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-21800-4_5.

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"EDWARD III." In English Hammered Coinage. Volume 2, 42–59. Spink Books, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvm20203.13.

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"17. The Throne of Peace, 1360–1369." In Edward III, 472–97. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/9780300178159-021.

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"16. The House of Magnificence, 1358–1369." In Edward III, 446–71. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/9780300178159-020.

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"PREFACE & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS." In Edward III, xi—xiv. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/9780300178159-002.

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Conference papers on the topic "Edward III"

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Beggs, Robert. "Preserve, Educate and Inspire - Founding the American Helicopter Museum and Education Center." In Vertical Flight Society 77th Annual Forum & Technology Display. The Vertical Flight Society, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4050/f-0077-2021-16813.

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The American Helicopter Museum and Education Center opened to the public at the Brandywine Airport on October 18, 1996. This milestone was the realization of a vision adopted at a luncheon meeting hosted by the Philadelphia Chapter of the American Helicopter Society on July 30, 1993. Chapter leaders had previously brainstormed potential ideas for commemorating the upcoming 50th Anniversary of the American Helicopter Society in 1994, but recognized the need to engage a broader constituency to do something significant. With the goal of establishing a 50th Anniversary Committee, a luncheon was scheduled at Boeing Helicopters in Ridley Park, PA. Participants included the author, several Chapter officers and an invitation list that included Philadelphia area rotary-wing business leaders, industry pioneers and influencers. Attendees at that first meeting included Lee Douglas, Frank Duke, Vincent Genovese, Euan Hooper, Warren Jacobs, Wes Moore, Ren Pierpoint, John Schneider, George Townson, Edward B. Wilford III and Peter Wright, Sr. After debating multiple options for the commemoration, the idea of a museum was embraced when Peter Wright, then President of Keystone Helicopters, offered to donate several vintage helicopters if a museum was established. Two weeks later, the nascent 50th Anniversary Committee met again with a mission to: “Lay the foundation for a permanent rotary-wing restoration, conservation and exhibition facility in the Delaware Valley.” Referencing the documented minutes of the aforementioned meeting and that of subsequent meetings of the 50th Anniversary Committee, other documents and the recollections of the author, this paper will trace the formative years of the museum from July 1993 to October 1996. It will address the many challenges of founding an aviation museum including incorporation, location identification, building the collection and creating the exhibits and programs. It will recall the people involved and their significant contributions. This paper is particularly compelling to publish this year, recognizing the 25th anniversary of the American Helicopter Museum and Education Center on 18 October 2021.
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Kusumawati, Yeny, and Fresty Africia. "Implementation of No Smoking Area Policy in High School 2, Nganjuk, East Java, Indonesia." In The 7th International Conference on Public Health 2020. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.04.01.

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ABSTRACT Background: In school environments, the No Smoking Area Policy is based on protecting young people who are currently studying at school from exposure to harmful cigarette smoke. It is expected to indirectly reduce student smoking rates. This study aimed to describe the implementation of the No Smoking Area policy at High School 2 Nganjuk, East Java and to identify the factors influencing the policy implementation. Subjects and Methods: This was a qualitative study carried out at High School 2 Nganjuk, East Java. The study subjects were included the principal, student deputy principals, counseling guidance teachers, homeroom teachers, employees, and students of High School 2 Nganjuk. Data were collected using observation, interviews, and documentation. The source triangulation technique used the technique of checking the validity of the data. This study used an interactive model of data analysis technique, which is based on the theory of George C. Edward III, consisted of communication, resources, dispositions, and bureaucratic structures. Results: In High School 2 Nganjuk, the No Smoking Area Policy has not been implemented optimally, particularly on the resource factor. For example, some teachers and staff still smoking in schools. This was not in accordance with the provisions in the No Smoking Area Policy. As the budget for funds from School Operational Assistance (BOS) was integrated with the School Environment Introduction Period (MPLS/MOS as well as the Adiwiyata program, there was no special budget for the implementation of the No Smoking Area policy. There was still not enough amount of billboards about no smoking area. The communication factor was the supporting factor. The policy for the No Smoking Area is always communicated to school residents. The disposition factors was the policy implementers’ engagement. The bureaucratic factor were structure and the presence of SOP in policy implementation. Conclusion: The enforcement of the policy of the No Smoking Area in High School 2 Nganjuk has not been maximized, so all factors, both contact factors, resource factors, disposal factors, and bureaucratic factors, need to be assisted. Keywords: smoking area, high school, policy Correspondence: Yeny Kusumawati. School of Health Sciences, Satria Bhakti Nganjuk, East Java, Indonesia. Email: yenykusumawati.sbn.ngk@gmail.com. Mobile: 082244297997 DOI: https://doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.04.01
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Ferreira, Marlon Gomes Modesto, and JANAÍNA OLIVEIRA DOS SANTOS. "LEVANTAMENTO DA CARCINOFAUNA (CRUSTÁCEA, DECAPODA) DA LAGUNA DE ITAIPU-NITERÓI, RJ." In II Congresso Brasileiro de Biodiversidade Virtual. Revista Multidisciplinar de Educação e meio ambiente, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.51189/ii-conbiv/6311.

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Introdução: Crustáceos podem ser encontrados em ecossistemas terrestres, de água doce, salobras e marinhas, desde zonas abissais até zona nerítica, desenvolvendo assim, adaptações que possibilitaram uma vasta distribuição geográfica. A laguna de Itaipu faz parte do bioma Mata Atlântica e contempla uma ampla diversidade de ecossistemas, como restinga e manguezal. A laguna tem capacidade de promover diferentes atividades econômicas para as comunidades locais, mas vem sofrendo historicamente com a urbanização, acarretando modificações ecológicas do ambiente e prejudicando a economia local. Objetivo: O objetivo do estudo foi entender a distribuição e a variedade de espécies de crustáceos decápodes residentes na laguna de Itaipu-RJ. As coletas foram realizadas mensalmente no período de outubro/2019 a março/2020 na laguna de Itaipu, localizada na região oceânica do município de Niterói-RJ. Metodologia: As formas de captura dos decápodes foram classificadas em ativa e passiva, sendo as ativas, coleta manual, puçá e rede de arrastos arrasto (25 mm entre nós oposto), e as passivas, armadilhas (redinha e cova). Os animais coletados foram acondicionados em um caixa térmica com gelo e identificadas em laboratório, de acordo com a literatura especializada. Resultados: Foram encontradas 18 espécies representadas pelas Subordens Dendrobrachiata e Pleocyemata. Dentro delas 10 aquáticas (Callinectes danae Smith, 1869; Callinectes exasperatus Gerstaecker, 1856; Callinectes sapidus Ranthbun, 1896; Charybdis helleri A. Milne-Edwards, 1867; Libinia sp Leach, 1815; Menippe nodifrons Stimpson, 1859; Pagurus brevidactylus Stimpson, 1859; Palaemon sp Weber, 1795; Penaeus brasiliensis Latreille, 1817; Petrolisthes armatus Gibbes, 1850) e 8 espécies semiterrestres (Aratus pisonii H. Milne Edwards, 1837; Cardisoma guanhumi Serville e Guérin, 1828; Goniopsis cruentata Latreille, 1803; Neohelice granulata Dana, 1851; Ocypode quadrata Fabricius, 1787; Pachygrapsus transversus Gibbes, 1850; Minuca rapax Smith, 1870; Ucides cordatus Linnaeus, 1763. Foram identificadas cinco espécies com interesse econômico: U. cordatus, C. guanhumi, C. danae, C. exasperatus, C. sapidus e P. brasiliensis. Conclusão: Houve a ocorrência da espécie exótica Charybdis helleri nativa do Oceano Indico-Pacifico. A quantidade de representantes de decápodes encontrada neste estudo está semelhante ao apontado para outras lagoas/lagunas do litoral brasileiro.
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Rodríguez Arias, Ángel Manuel, and Ji Yeon Kim. "Translations, un poema audiovisual." In II Congreso Internacional Estéticas Híbridas de la Imagen en Movimiento: Identidad y Patrimonio. Valencia: Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/eshid2021.2021.13225.

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Translation, en inglés, es un término que define, por una parte, el acto de traducir de un idioma a otro, y por otra, el de trasladar de un lugar a otro. Urdiendo un juego con el doble sentido de esta expresión, la síntesis de este ensayo audiovisual se basa dentro de una dinámica introspectiva, en definir el vínculo entre dos culturas, y dos lugares; Galicia y Corea, a través de una mirada íntima en la que se resarza al sujeto subalterno.Partiendo del constructo Oriente-Occidente, como explica Edward Saíd, el primero es visto como un amalgama en el que lo místico y lo exótico se observan con deseo, siempre desde una posición superior. El término se trata en sí mismo de una forma de reafirmarse a sí mismo; al hombre, blanco, europeo, cristiano y endocéntrico, frente al resto.En consecuencia, tomando estos conceptos como una forma de comprender la propia identidad subjetiva de una mujer migrante, la estructura de esta experimentación se basa en una serie de intervenciones en el paisaje, en distintos territorios. De este modo, una estructura portátil y desmontable es colocada en un bosque, un arroyo o un lago. Estos espacios, esconden lugares en los que las personas se asentaron antaño, pero hoy permanecen olvidados. El color blanco y sus significaciones en el folclore de ambas culturas; pureza, vida, fragilidad o muerte, servirán, en definitiva, de elemento vertebrador que da sentido a la secuencia de imágenes y sonidos, las cuales se interrelacionan a través de este análisis comparativo.
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Foscarini, A. C., G. D. P. Sartori, J. F. O. Gonzáles, E. R. Krieger, D. Denardin, and R. F. M. Rosa. "Experiência De Um Serviço De Medicina Fetal De Referência Do Sul Do Brasil Com Fetos Diagnosticados Com Trissomia Do Cromossomo 18 (Síndrome De Edwards)." In II Congresso Brasileiro de Medicina Hospitalar. São Paulo: Editora Edgard Blücher, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5151/medpro-ii-cbmh-057.

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Parrinello, Valeria, Marco Lanfredini, Alessandro Petruzzi, and Marco Cherubini. "Investigations on RELAP5-3D to RELAP5-3D Coupling Methodology by PVMEXEC." In 2016 24th International Conference on Nuclear Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/icone24-60748.

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In the framework of a BEPU (Best Estimate Plus Uncertainty) approach within the licensing process of a nuclear power plant, the need to extend the resources of nuclear system thermal-hydraulics codes, such as RELAP5-3D, arises to allow more detailed simulations of the complex 3D reality of Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs), either under normal steady-state or during various accident scenarios. Currently, it is not possible to achieve the same degree of detail for a whole nuclear system when it is simulated with RELAP5-3D and this is due to the inherent limitations in the number of components and volumes to be used for the analysis. For this reason, it is of extreme interest the use of tools for codes coupling that enable the use of different codes for the simulation of different portions of a system in a unified analysis. In this paper the attention will be focused on the decomposition of the thermal-hydraulic domain of a system into subsystems to be simulated by different instances of the same code (e.g. RELAP5-3D) coupled together by means of PVMEXEC program and parallel virtual machine (PVM) technology. Explicit and semi-implicit solution algorithms were used for the analyses. Among the analyzed cases, the following will be discussed in detail with the aim to provide additional guidelines for the use of the PVMEXEC tool: (i) the Edward’s pipe blowdown test, (ii) a simplified countercurrent heat exchanger, (iii) different hydraulics and heat structure coupling schemes for a shell-tube heat exchanger and (iv) a three-task coupled model of a simplified BWR model.
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Reports on the topic "Edward III"

1

Clausen, Jay L., Anthony Bednar, Dennis Lambert, Ronald Bailey, Michael Kuhlbrush, Susan Taylor, and Sue Bigl. Phase II Tungsten Fate-and Transport Study for Camp Edwards. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, February 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada520193.

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