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1

Haukaas, Kaare. "Apekatta hans Alexander Kielland." Lov og Rett 30, no. 02 (February 1, 1991): 121–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn1504-3061-1991-02-07.

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Mitchell, Breon, Uli Eichhorn, and Ronald Salter. "Hans Alexander Muller: das buchkunstlerische Werk." German Quarterly 72, no. 2 (1999): 197. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/408383.

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3

Celenza, Anna Harwell. "The Poet, the Pianist, and the Patron: Hans Christian Andersen and Franz Liszt in Carl Alexander's Weimar." 19th-Century Music 26, no. 2 (2002): 130–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ncm.2002.26.2.130.

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The writings of Hans Christian Andersen shed important light on Liszt's years in Weimar and his relationship with the city's most powerful patron, Grand Duke Carl Alexander. Andersen shared a strong friendship with Carl Alexander, and from 1844 to 1857 he visited Weimar on numerous occasions. He also corresponded with Carl Alexander regularly, taking special care to preserve the Grand Duke's thoughts about the role of the artist in society, the incongruousness of art and politics, and Liszt's "Music of the Future." Two of Andersen's lesser-known tales, "The Bell" and "The Pepperman's Nightcap," were inspired by his interactions with Carl Alexander and Liszt. These tales, along with the many firsthand accounts of life in Weimar preserved in Andersen's letters, diaries, and memoirs, serve as testimonials to the city's changing artistic climate during the mid-nineteenth century and elucidate the complexity of Carl Alexander's role as patron and the indelible imprint Liszt's presence had on those around him.
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Silva, Lucas. "Bellmer, Hans. Textos de Hans Bellmer. Tradução de Alexandre Rodrigues da Costa." Revista Interdisciplinar Internacional de Artes Visuais 8, no. 2 (December 7, 2021): 285–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.33871/23580437.2021.8.2.285-289.

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Natvig, Richard Johan. "ZĀR IN UPPER EGYPT: HANS ALEXANDER WINKLER’S FIELD NOTES FROM 1932." Islamic Africa 1, no. 1 (June 3, 2010): 11–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/21540993-90000004.

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Freund, Hans-Joachim. "Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Awardees and Fellows of Hans-Joachim Freund." Journal of Physical Chemistry C 123, no. 13 (April 4, 2019): 7506–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.8b10880.

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Boddy, Janice. "Winkler, Hans Alexander: Ghost Riders of Upper Egypt. A Study of Spirit Possession." Anthropos 105, no. 2 (2010): 697–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0257-9774-2010-2-697.

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Natvig, Richard Johan. "Zār in Upper Egypt: Hans Alexander Winkler's Field Notes from 1932." Islamic Africa 1, no. 1 (March 1, 2010): 11–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.5192/215409910791297347.

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9

Ulrich, Patrick, and Lisa Zimmermann. "Alexander Koeberle-Schmid, Hans-Jürgen Fahrion und Peter Witt (Hrsg.):„Family Business Governance“." Zeitschrift für Betriebswirtschaft 81, no. 7-8 (May 24, 2011): 905–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11573-011-0478-3.

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Platschek, Johannes. "Militärdiplome. Die Forschungsbeiträge der Berner Gespräche von 2004, hg. von Michael Alexander Speidel/Hans Lieb." Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte: Romanistische Abteilung 129, no. 1 (August 1, 2012): 780–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.7767/zrgra.2012.129.1.780.

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11

Rohrer, Christian. "Entangled: World Chess Champion Alexander Alekhine, Governor General Hans Frank, and the National Socialist Regime." STADION 46, no. 1 (2022): 22–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0172-4029-2022-1-22.

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Whether or not world chess champion Alexander Alekhine was a “Nazi” is a question that the international chess community has been asking for decades. Beyond a series of anti-Semitic articles, however, little was known about his actions and behaviour during the Second World War, and the available information has been pieced together in a disjointed and incomprehensible way. The following article demonstrates that existing information and new sources combine to form a coherent narrative when Alekhine’s actions and behaviour are understood as a dual strategy by which he sought to regain his nearly ideal life before the outbreak of the Second World War. Indeed, his life in safety among the upper echelon of society as a recognised world chess champion was at stake. Alekhine saw an initial way out by pursuing a world championship match against José Raúl Capablanca and emigration to South America; he followed another avenue by approaching the National Socialist regime. Starting in March 1941, he chose to pursue both paths in parallel and in public view. Shortly after Capablanca’s death in March 1942, Alekhine entered into a contractual relationship with the Institute for German Eastern Work (Institut für Deutsche Ostarbeit, IDO) in Krakow, thanks to intervention on the part of Governor General (Generalgouverneur) Hans Frank himself. Until the fall of 1943, Alekhine essentially remained a playing chess master in the service of the Greater German Chess Federation (Großdeutscher Schachbund, GSB), which in turn was a compliant tool of the National Socialist regime. By promoting anti-Semitic propaganda in line with the regime’s position, Alekhine clearly crossed the line between chess and politics time and again.
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12

Dreyer, Matthias. "Tragödie und dramatisches Theater. By Hans-Thies Lehmann. Berlin: Alexander Verlag, 2013. Pp. 736. €68 Hb." Theatre Research International 40, no. 3 (September 9, 2015): 333–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307883315000425.

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13

Arndt, Martin. "Alexander Schmitz/Bernd Stiegler (Hg.): Hans Blumenberg, Schriften zur Technik, Berlin: Suhrkamp Verlag 2015, 301 S." Zeitschrift für Religions- und Geistesgeschichte 68, no. 3 (August 31, 2016): 301–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700739-90000242.

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14

Wiling, Michael. "Competition for the Chair for Pharmacology at the University of Dorpat in 1882 between Hans Horst Meyer and Gustav von Bunge." Acta medico-historica Rigensia 15 (2022): 7–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.25143/amhr.2022.xv.01.

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The study focuses on the first position held by pharmacologist Hans Horst Meyer (1853–1939) 1 as a professor of pharmacology, dietetics, and the history of medicine at the University of Dorpat (today, Tartu University, Estonia) from 1882 to 1884. Meyer is known as the founder of pharmacology as an independent academic discipline in Vienna (Austria). 2 He competed with the well-known physiologist Gustav Piers Alexander von Bunge (1844–1920) for the position of the chairman of the department in 1881. Meyer was given the position of a professor in Dorpat instead of Gustav von Bunge (1844–1929). The outcome of the competition raises several research questions: why Meyer was allocated the chair in 1881; which arguments spoke in favour of Meyer and what was against him, what spoke against von Bunge; which historical events influenced university life in Dorpat; under which political and ideological currents the decision for the new professor was made. Events such as the Russification of the university and the assassination of Alexander II (1818–1881) significantly impacted teaching at the University of Dorpat from 1875 to 1885. During that period, both professors formed the basis of their outstanding academic careers. The arti- cle provides biographical analysis of Hans Horst Meyer based on Meyer’s files from the University’s of Tartu archive. Since Meyer competed with Gustav von Bunge for his first position as a chairholder, the biography of Gustav von Bunge has also been studied, contextualising it with the significant changes in the organisation of the University of Dorpat. Individual academic achievements of both scholars have been identified and listed using such platforms as Web of Science, Neurotree, the pharmacological journal “Naunyn-Schmiedeberg’s Archives of Pharmacology”, The Online Books Page, and WorldCat. Afterward, the conclusions about the individual scientific portfolios of the two applicants for the chair- man of the department have been made. Finally, contributing factor to why Hans Horst Meyer was successful with his application has been identified.
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Jakobsen, Kjetil. "Tore Rem: Forfatterens strategier. Alexander Kielland og hans krets (320 s.). / Tore Rem (red.): Bokhistorie (249 s.)." Norsk litteratur­vitenskapelig tidsskrift 6, no. 02 (October 22, 2003): 164–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn1504-288x-2003-02-08.

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Meyer-Minnemann, Klaus. "Die (Un)Sagbarkeit des Schreckens : Alexander Kluge, Hans Erich Nossack und Ralph Giordano über Bombentod und Zerstörung." Études Germaniques 266, no. 2 (2012): 351. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eger.266.0351.

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17

Hahne, Karin. "Alexander Chasklowicz, Jörn Schroeder-Printzen, Gerald Spyra und Hans Jörg Weber, Ärztliche Schweigepflicht und Schutz der Patientendaten." Medizinrecht 35, no. 8 (August 2017): 675–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00350-017-4700-3.

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18

Flanigan, Abraham E., Kenneth A. Kiewra, and Linlin Luo. "Conversations with Four Highly Productive German Educational Psychologists: Frank Fischer, Hans Gruber, Heinz Mandl, and Alexander Renkl." Educational Psychology Review 30, no. 1 (November 17, 2016): 303–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10648-016-9392-0.

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19

Boyns, Trevor. "IN MEMORIAM: ALEXANDER HAMILTON CHURCH'S SYSTEM OF ‘SCIENTIFIC MACHINE RATES’ AT HANS RENOLD LTD., c.1901 - c.1920." Accounting Historians Journal 30, no. 1 (June 1, 2003): 1–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/0148-4184.30.1.3.

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In 1901, Alexander Hamilton Church wrote a path-breaking article in The Engineering Magazine, entitled ‘The proper distribution of establishment charges’. This article, published in six parts, is generally considered to have been one of the most important articles on the subject of overhead allocation and Church's system of scientific machine rates is often seen as a precursor of work which eventually resulted in the emergence of standard costing. Around the same time, Church introduced his system at Renold, a firm of British chain manufacturers, where it was used well into the First World War. Towards the end of the war, however, the system was gradually abandoned in favor of standard costing and budgetary control. Using archival and published sources, this paper examines the factors leading to the demise of Church's system at Renold and, in so doing, throws light on the between scientific management, organizational change and the development of successful costing systems.
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20

Kopp, Maria, and Arpad Skrabski. "What does the legacy of Hans Selye and Franz Alexander mean today? (the psychophysiological approach in medical practice)." International Journal of Psychophysiology 8, no. 2 (November 1989): 99–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0167-8760(89)90001-9.

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21

Calliess, Rolf-Dieter, and Heinz Müller-Dietz. "Strafvollzugsgesetz, 10. Auflage und Schwind, Hans-Dieter/Böhm, Alexander/Jehle, Jörg-Martin (Hrsg.), Strafvollzugsgesetz, 4. Auflage (Ulrich Eisenberg)." Monatsschrift für Kriminologie und Strafrechtsreform 88, no. 6 (December 1, 2005): 473–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/mks-2005-0063.

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22

Fábregas-Tejeda, Alejandro, Abigail Nieves Delgado, and Jan Baedke. "Revisiting Hans Böker’s "Species Transformation Through Reconstruction: Reconstruction Through Active Reaction of Organisms" (1935)." Biological Theory 16, no. 2 (March 24, 2021): 63–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13752-020-00370-7.

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AbstractAgainst the common historiographic narratives of evolutionary biology, the first decades of the 20th century were theoretically far richer than usually assumed. This especially refers to the hitherto neglected role that early theoretical biologists played in introducing visionary research perspectives and concepts before the institutionalization of the Modern Synthesis. Here, we present one of these scholars, the German theoretical biologist and ecomorphologist Hans Böker (1886–1939), by reviewing his 1935 paper “Artumwandlung durch Umkonstruktion, Umkonstruktion durch aktives Reagieren der Organismen” ("Species Transformation Through Reconstruction: Reconstruction Through Active Reaction of Organisms"), published in the inaugural volume of the journal Acta Biotheoretica. While largely forgotten today, this work represents a melting pot of ideas that adumbrate some of today’s most lively debated empirical and conceptual topics in evolutionary biology: the active role of organisms as actors of their own evolution, environmental induction and phenotypic plasticity, genetic assimilation, as well as developmental bias. We discuss Böker’s views on how species change through (what he calls) "Umkonstruktion," and how such reconstruction is exerted through active reactions of organisms to environmental perturbations. In addition, we outline the aims and wider context of his "biological comparative anatomy," including Boker’s reprehensible political affiliation with the Nazi Party. Finally, we highlight some of the historical reasons for why Böker’s views did not have a larger impact in evolutionary biology, but we also recount some of the direct and indirect legacies of his approach in research areas such as ecomorphology and (Eco)EvoDevo. Böker’s paper is available as supplementary material in the online version of this article, as part of the journal's "Classics in Biological Theory" collection; the first translation of the paper into English, by Alexander Böhm and Jan Baedke, is also being published in this volume.
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23

Rücker, Michaela, Peter Antes, Hans-Christof Kraus, Dirk Blasius, Ulrich van der Heyden, Martin Malek, Michael Peters, et al. "Biografien." Das Historisch-Politische Buch (HPB) 65, no. 4-6 (October 1, 2017): 386–407. http://dx.doi.org/10.3790/hpb.65.4-6.386.

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Hellmut Flashar: Hippokrates. Meister der Heilkunst (Michaela Rücker) Manfred Clauss: Athanasius der Große. Der unbeugsame Heilige (Peter Antes) Johannes Willms: Mirabeau oder die Morgenröte der Revolution. Eine Biografie (Hans-Christof Kraus) Stephanie Velten: Johann Julius Wilhelm Ritter von Planck. Leben und Werk (Dirk Blasius) Katharina Abermeth: Heinrich Schnee. Karriereweg und Erfahrungswelten eines deutschen Kolonialbeamten (Ulrich van der Heyden) Marianna Butenschön: Die Hessin auf dem Zarenthron. Maria. Kaiserin von Russland (Martin Malek) Henrik Meinander: Gustaf Mannerheim. Aristokrat i vadmal. [Gustaf Mannerheim. Aristokrat in Loden] (Michael Peters) Hubert Kiesewetter: Karl Marx und der Untergang des Kapitalismus (Ludger Heid) Jürgen Neffe: Marx. Der Unvollendete (Ludger Heid) Alexander Sperk, Daniel Bohse: Legende, Opportunist, Selbstdarsteller. Felix Graf Luckner und seine Zeit in Halle/Saale (1919-1945) (Wolfgang Kaufmann) Frederick Bacher: Friedrich Naumann und sein Kreis (Hans-Christof Kraus) Werner Plumpe: Carl Duisberg (1861-1935). Anatomie eines Industriellen (Werner Bührer) Olaf Jessen: Die Moltkes. Biografie einer Familie (Heinrich Walle) Wilhelm Hartmut Pantenius: Alfred Graf von Schlieffen. Stratege zwischen Befreiungskriegen und Stahlgewittern (Hans-Christof Kraus) Ingrid Wölk: Leo Baer. 100 Jahre deutsch jüdische Geschichte. Mit „Erinnerungssplittern eines deutschen Juden an zwei Weltkriege“ (Ludger Heid) Meike Hoffmann, Nicola Kühn: Hitlers Kunsthändler. Hildebrand Gurlitt (1895-1956). Die Biografie (Wolfgang Kaufmann) Victor Klemperer: Warum soll man nicht auf bessere Zeiten hoffen. Ein Leben in Briefen (Ludger Heid) Magnus Brechtken: Albert Speer. Eine deutsche Karriere (Ludger Tewes) Bernd Bonwetsch: Mit und ohne Russland. Eine familiengeschichtliche Spurensuche (Karl-Heinz Schlarp) Christoph Marx: Mugabe. Ein afrikanischer Tyrann (Ulrich van der Heyden)
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Heinrich, Anselm. "Hans-Thies Lehmann Tragödie und Dramatisches TheaterBerlin: Alexander Verlag, 2013. 734 p. €68. ISBN: 978-3-89581-308-5." New Theatre Quarterly 31, no. 3 (July 9, 2015): 295–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x15000597.

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25

Schubert, Werner. "Das selbstgeschaffene Recht der Wirtschaft. Zum Gedenken an Hans Großmann- Doerth (1894–1944), hg. v.Uwe Blaurock/Nils Goldschmidt/Alexander Hollerbach." Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte: Germanistische Abteilung 124, no. 1 (August 1, 2007): 784–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.7767/zrgga.2007.124.1.784.

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26

Epple, Moritz. "Knot Invariants in Vienna and Princeton during the 1920s: Epistemic Configurations of Mathematical Research." Science in Context 17, no. 1-2 (June 2004): 131–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0269889704000079.

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In 1926 and 1927, James W. Alexander and Kurt Reidemeister claimed to have made “the same” crucial breakthrough in a branch of modern topology which soon thereafter was called knot theory. A detailed comparison of the techniques and objects studied in these two roughly simultaneous episodes of mathematical research shows, however, that the two mathematicians worked in quite different mathematical traditions and that they drew on related, but distinctly different epistemic resources. These traditions and resources were local, not universal elements of mathematical culture. Even certain common features of the main publications such as their modernist, formal style of exposition can be explained by reference to particular constellations in the intellectual and professional environments of Alexander and Reidemeister. In order to analyze the role of such elements and constellations of mathematical research practice, a historiographical perspective is developed which emphasizes parallels with the recent historiography of experiment. In particular, a notion characterizing those “working units of scientific knowledge production” which Hans-Jörg Rheinberger has termed “experimental systems” in the case of empirical sciences proves helpful in understanding research episodes such as those bringing about modern knot theory.
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Arkæologisk Selskab, Jysk. "Anmeldelser 2017." Kuml 66, no. 66 (November 13, 2017): 185–240. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/kuml.v66i66.98357.

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Helle Askgaard og Dorte Smedegaard: Vildfuglene. En biografi om Emilie Demant og Gudmund Hatt.(Ole Høiris)Iris Aufderhaar: Sievern, Ldkr. Cuxhaven – Analyse einer Zentralregion von der ausgehenden Vorrömischen Eizenzeit bis in das 6. Jh. N. Chr.(Niels Algreen Møller)Hans Browall: Alvastra pålbyggnad, 1976-1980 års utgrävningar. Västra schaktet.(Rune Iversen)Ingrid Gustin, Martin Hansson, Mats Roslund & Jes Wienberg (red.): Mellan slott och slagg : Vänbok till Anders Ödman.(Rikke Agnete Olsen)Inger Marie Hyldgård: Tjærby ødekirke og kirkegård. (Lars Krants Larsen)Lisbeth M. Imer: Danmarks Runesten. En fortælling.(Jes Wienberg)Ole Thirup Kastholm, Naomi Pinholt, Laura Maria Schütze, Kristoffer Buck Pedersen og Inge Christiansen (red.): Gefjon – arkæologi og nyere tid.(Jens Jeppesen)Hans Krongaard Kristensen og Bjørn Poulsen: Danmarks byer i middelalderen.(Hans Andersson)Hans Krongaard Kristensen: Tvilum Kloster.(Lars Krants Larsen)Jette Linaa: Urban Consumtion – Tracing urbanity in the archaeological record of Aarhus c. AD 800-1800.(Stefan Larsson)Ulla Mannering: Iconic costumes – Scandinavian late Iron Age Costume Iconography, Ancient Textiles.(Marianne Vedeler)Jes Martens & Mads Ravn (red.): Pløyejord som kontekst. Nye utfordringer for forskning, forvaltning og formidling.(Jens Jeppesen)Vinnie Nørskov og Peter Pentz (red.): 50 fund. Højdepunkter i arkæologien.(Ole Høiris)Alexandra Pesch: Die Kraft der Tiere. Völkerwanderungszeitliche Goldhalskragen und die Grundsätze Germanischer Kunst.(Bálint László Tóth)Morten Ravn, Lone Gebauer Thomsen, Eva Andersson Strand & Henriette Lyngstrøm (red.): Vikingetidens sejl. Festskrift tilegnet Erik AndersenMorten Ravn: Viking-Age War Fleets – Shipbuilding, resource management and maritime warfare in 11th-century Denmark.(Jan Bill)P. Suchowska-Ducke, S. Scott Reiter & H. Vandkilde (eds.): Forging Identities. The Mobility of Culture in Bronze Age Europe.(Lise Frost)N.B. Thomsen, P. Hoffmann, B. Staal, J. Petersen, A. Tomlinson, I. Skibsted Klæsøe og F. Arntsen (red.): Fund & Fortid. Arkæologi for alle.(Mogens Bo Henriksen)Fritz Wolder: Vikingerne og Ruslands vugge.(Hans Skov)
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Filary-Szczepanik, Mateusz. "Principle of economy of language and the question of anthropomorphism of state." Horyzonty Polityki 11, no. 34 (August 9, 2020): 125–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.35765/hp.1885.

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RESEARCH OBJECTIVE: The aim of the paper is twofold: (1) polemics with Alexander Wendt’s thesis that state is a person and (2) innovative approach to the problem of anthropomorphism of state in general theories of International Relations. THE RESEARCH PROBLEM AND METHODS: How is anthropomor‑ phism of the state present in the language of grand theories of IR? How the language as a system shapes the phenomenon of anthropomorphism of the state in those?”. Research methods: qualitative content analysis and close reading research technique. THE PROCESS OF ARGUMENTATION: Using these research method and techniques, the author analyses theories of Hans Morgenthau, Raymond Aron, Headley Bull, Morton Kaplan, and Kenneth Waltz seeking the presence of anthropomorphism as a feature of their language. He summarises his find‑ ings that enable him to critically engage with Alexander Wendt’s thesis, hence fulfilling the scientific objective of the paper. RESEARCH RESULTS: On the basis of the conducted research, the anthro‑ pomorphism of state is a fact of language of the analysed theories. CONCLUSIONS, INNOVATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS: The author problematizes Alexander Wendt’s thesis that state is a person by pointing out that anthropomorphism of state is not predicated upon the ontological reality of state as person, but on the linguistic rule that language seeks the economy of utterances. Pointing out to this fact is novel, since the literature referred in the article largely omits it. It is an important contribution for all the scholars for whom the problem of the state is a major research interest.
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Demont, Vincent. "Hans-Jürgen Gerhard et Alexander Engel Preisgeschichte der vorindustriellen Zeit. Ein Kompendium auf Basis ausgewählter Hamburger Materialien, Stuttgart, Steiner, 2006, 358 p." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 66, no. 3 (September 2011): 851–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0395264900011185.

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30

Chryssides, George. "Ecumenical with the Truth?" International Journal for the Study of New Religions 3, no. 1 (August 3, 2012): 5–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1558/ijsnr.v3i1.5.

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The Jehovah’s Witnesses’ stance towards ecumenical and interfaith dialogue is an uncompromising one, regarding all manifestations of religion outside the Society as ‘false religion’ and part of Babylon the Great. The article discusses the history of Watch Tower Society’s stance towards Roman Catholicism, and to the formation of the Evangelical Alliance in 1846. Under Rutherford’s leadership a new understanding of Christian apostasy and other faiths emerged, based on the Protestant writer Alexander Hislop’s The Two Babylons. The second part of the article turns to the present-day dialogue movement, arguing that the key Christian ecumenical themes of baptism, eucharist and ministry, are of no concern to Jehovah’s Witnesses. Interfaith dialogue involves harmful associations, and ecumenical and interfaith worship run counter to the Witnesses’ ways of worshipping God. Finally, attention is given to Hans Küng’s global ethic, which the Watch Tower Society contrasts with its own ‘global solution’ to the world’s problems.
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KITLV, Redactie. "Book reviews." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 166, no. 4 (2010): 507–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-90003612.

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Birgit Bräuchler (ed.), Reconciling Indonesia; Grassroots agency for peace. (Renata M. Lesner-Szwarc) Elizabeth Fuller Collins, Indonesia betrayed; How development fails. (Ahmad Helmy Fuady) Grant Evans, The last century of Lao royalty; A documentary history. (Guido Sprenger) Tineke Hellwig and Eric Tagliacozzo (eds), The Indonesia reader; History, culture, politics. (Edwin Wieringa) Raymond Corbey, Snellen om namen; De Marind-Anim van Nieuw-Guinea door de ogen van de Missionarissen van het Heilig Hart, 1905-1925. (Anna-Karina Hermkens) Patrick Guinness, Kampung, Islam and state in urban Java. (Robert W. Hefner) R.E. Jordaan and B.E. Colless, The Māharājas of the isles; The Śailendras and the problem of Śrivijaya. (Hans Hägerdal) Henk Schulte Nordholt, Bali: an open fortress, 1995-2005; Regional autonomy, electoral democracy and entrenched identities. (Sita van Bemmelen) Sukardi Rinakit, The Indonesian military after the New Order. (Alexander Claver) Roxana Waterson, Paths and rivers; Sa’dan Toraja society in transformation. (Maria J.C. Schouten)
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Zeidman, Lawrence A. "Neuroscience in Nazi Europe Part II: Resistance against the Third Reich." Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques 38, no. 6 (November 2011): 826–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0317167100012397.

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Previously, I mentioned that not all neuroscientists collaborated with the Nazis, who from 1933 to 1945 tried to eliminate neurologic and psychiatric disease from the gene pool. Oskar and Cécile Vogt openly resisted and courageously protested against the Nazi regime and its policies, and have been discussed previously in the neurology literature. Here I discuss Alexander Mitscherlich, Haakon Saethre, Walther Spielmeyer, Jules Tinel, and Johannes Pompe. Other neuroscientists had ambivalent roles, including Hans Creutzfeldt, who has been discussed previously. Here, I discuss Max Nonne, Karl Bonhoeffer, and Oswald Bumke. The neuroscientists who resisted had different backgrounds and motivations that likely influenced their behavior, but this group undoubtedly saved lives of colleagues, friends, and patients, or at least prevented forced sterilizations. By recognizing and understanding the actions of these heroes of neuroscience, we pay homage and realize how ethics and morals do not need to be compromised even in dark times.
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Silveira, Fabricio Lopes da. ""Uma reserva de mundo"." Intexto, no. 54 (August 8, 2022): 120863. http://dx.doi.org/10.19132/1807-8583202254.120863.

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O texto problematiza o livro Semiótica Crítica e as materialidades da comunicação. Destaca, fundamentalmente, o modo como a perspectiva teórica de Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht é apropriada. Acima de tudo, trata-se de um balanço crítico, uma homenagem ao legado intelectual de Alexandre Rocha da Silva, que organizou o volume e liderou o processo de pesquisa no qual o livro culmina.
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Thierry, Christophe. "Callisthène, Aristote, Diogène: Alexandre le Grand face au sage dans trois pièces brèves de Hans Sachs." Troianalexandrina 17 (January 2017): 81–109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/j.troia.5.115128.

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Spadola, Emilio. "Review of Hans Alexander Winkler, Ghost Riders of Upper Egypt: A Study of Spirit Possession [Die reitenden Geister der Toten], trans. Nicholas S. Hopkins." Contemporary Islam 8, no. 3 (November 27, 2012): 337–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11562-012-0235-6.

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36

Solomon, Graham. "Leibniz and Topological Equivalence." Dialogue 32, no. 4 (1993): 721–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0012217300011355.

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Did Leibniz invent or, if you prefer, discover topology with his analysis situs? Yes, urge Nicholas Rescher (1978, p. 70), George MacDonald Ross (1984, p. 29) and Ian Hacking (1984, p. 213). No, urge Hans Freudenthal (1954/1972), Benson Mates (1986, p. 240) and Michael Otte (1989, p. 24). James Alexander (1932/1967, p. 249), drawing a distinction between point set and combinatorial methods, cautiously remarked that combinatorial topology “is more nearly a development of Leibniz's original idea.” Less cautiously, Morris Kline (1972, p. 1163) remarked that “to the extent that he was at all clear, Leibniz envisioned what we now call combinatorial topology.” Louis Couturat (1961, p. 429), Rudolf Carnap (1922, p. 81) and Ernst Cassirer (1950, p. 49) proposed projective geometry as the realization of Leibniz's project. Dennis Martin (1983, p. 5) sees topology as a development from analysis situs. Javier Echeverria (1988, p. 218), reporting on his archival research, argues that Leibniz “successfully introduced very general geometrical notions that boil down to what is known today as topology.” And a good many others, for and against, might be cited.
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Kon, Artur. "Antiteatrodocumentário: Verdade e ficção em Conversas com meu pai, de Janaína Leite e Alexandre Dal Farra." Viso: Cadernos de estética aplicada 11, no. 21 (November 10, 2016): 28–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.22409/1981-4062/v21i/227.

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O ensaio pretende investigar o modo pelo qual classificações como “teatro documentário” ou “teatros do real”, muito em voga nas recentes discussões teóricas sobre a cena contemporânea, são colocados em questão, desconstruídos e ampliados pelo espetáculo paulistano Conversas com meu pai, de 2014, parceria da atriz Janaína Leite com o dramaturgo Alexandre Dal Farra. Para tal, o autor se apoia em reflexões de Jacques Rancière, Georges Didi-Huberman e Hans-Thies Lehmann sobre os encontros e separações entre arte e realidade.
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Lajarrige, Jacques. "Olivier Margot, L’homme qui n’est jamais mort — Alexander Juraske, Agnes Meisinger et Peter Menasse, Hans Menasse. The Austrian Boy. Ein Leben zwischen Wien, London und Hollywood." Austriaca, no. 90 (June 1, 2020): 275–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/austriaca.1613.

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Kastiņš, Juris Andrejs. "Hanss Magnuss Encensbergers – literāro vinješu meistars." Aktuālās problēmas literatūras un kultūras pētniecībā: rakstu krājums, no. 26/1 (March 1, 2021): 261–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.37384/aplkp.2021.26-1.261.

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The article “Hans Magnus Enzensberger – Master of Literary Vignettes” is dedicated to the latest book of the outstanding German poet and publicist “Masters of Survival: 99 Literary Vignettes of the 20th Century”, published on the occasion of the author’s 90th anniversary. It presents 99 literary portraits in the characteristic style of Enzensberger – from critical attitude to admirable praise. The article first describes the vignette as a special genre of literature (miniature literature), its meaning, and history. Several examples from the history of German and Austrian literature are mentioned: Stefan Zweig, Robert Walser, Franz Kafka, Robert Musil. All objects in Enzensberger’s literary vignettes are “masters of survival” – they are writers and poets between the First and Second World Wars. The article qualifies the critical performance of Marko Martin, Helmut Böttiger, Christian Metz, and Alexander Cammann in evaluating Enzensberger’s work. The style of Enzensberger is also characterised. It surprises the reader by bringing the personal, subjective aspect closer to various intimate facts from the lives of writers and poets. The most significant attention is paid to the representatives of German literature – Gottfried Benn, Gerhart Hauptmann, Johannes R. Becher, and others.
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Małyszek, Tomasz. "„Pu der Bär“ und Harry Rowohlt." Germanica Wratislaviensia 147 (October 3, 2022): 61–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/0435-5865.147.5.

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Im Jahre 1987 übersetzte Harry Rowohlt Alan Alexander Milnes Kinderbuch Pu der Bär (1926). Der vorliegende Text zeigt die Geschichte seines Umgangs mit Milnes Buch, das zuerst eine Kindheitslektüre war, dann eine Aufgabe des Übersetzers und schließlich ein Beitrag zur Entstehung der Kolumne Pooh’s Corner in der Zeitung „Die Zeit“ und einiger Briefe wurde. Die Literarisierung und Projektion des Pu-Motivs auf Rowohlts Texte sind Hauptthemen des vorliegenden Artikels. Des Weiteren wird die Beschreibung der Vater-Sohn-Beziehung in den Familien Rowohlt und Milne, in Harry Rowohlts Feuilletons und in seinen Briefen analysiert. Bei den Letztgenannten handelt es sich vor allem um Rowohlts Text Pu im Hundertsechzig-Morgen-Wald (1996) aus der Zeitung „Die Zeit“, drei 1990 publizierte Briefe an Christopher Robin Milne und seinen Briefwechsel mit verschiedenen Pu-Liebhabern. Sieht man von Harry Rowohlts Bilderbüchern ab, die er zusammen mit Rudi Hurzlmeier, Hans Zippert, Peter Schössow oder Frank Schulz verfasst hat, geht es vorrangig um autobiographische Texte, die auf das schreibende Subjekt sehr tief eingehen. Das Pu-Motiv ist also eine Komponente der Rowohltschen Selbstdarstellung und wird in dem vorliegenden Beitrag vor allem als ein fester Bestandteil seiner literarischen und journalistischen Argumentationsästhetik betrachtet.
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Lüdecke, Cornelia. "Rezension: National Geographic Lexikon. Die 100 bedeutendsten Entdecker von Hans-Joachim Löwer, Gerald Sammet und Alexandra Schlüter." Berichte zur Wissenschafts-Geschichte 27, no. 2 (June 2004): 168–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bewi.200490022.

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Richmond, Marsha. "Studia Fribergensia: Vortrage des Alexander-von-Humboldt-Kolloquiums in Freiberg vom 8. bis 10. November 1991 ausAnlassdes 200. Jahrestages von A. V. Humboldts Studienbeginn an der Bergakademie Freiberg.Briefwechsel zwischen Alexander von Humboldt und Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel. Hans-Joachim Felber , Alexander von Humboldt , Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel." Isis 86, no. 4 (December 1995): 662–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/357366.

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Risi, Clemens. "Performing Wagner for the Twenty-First Century." New Theatre Quarterly 29, no. 4 (November 2013): 349–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x13000675.

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Richard Wagner's works have repeatedly been the focus of questions concerning the possibilities, limits, and nature of the director's role in opera productions, especially in Germany, and prominently at the Bayreuther Festspiele. In this article Clemens Risi discusses some recent developments in staging Wagner's operas at the Festspiele, including Katharina Wagner's production of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (2007), Hans Neuenfels's production of Lohengrin (2010), and Sebastian Baumgarten's production of Tannhäuser (2011). While all these productions could be categorized as ‘director's theatre’, they also marked new steps in the staging practice of Wagner's work, going beyond questions of the interpretation of a single piece and taking it as material for exposure in a setting of experimentation. Here Risi considers how a well-known work emerges under the conditions of a newly established situation, as in a laboratory. Currently acting as interim Chair for Theatre and Media Studies at the Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Clemens Risi was previously Assistant Professor of Opera and Music Theatre at the Freie Universität Berlin. He is the author of Auf dem Weg zu einem italienischen Musikdrama (Tutzing, 2004), and is currently completing a book on opera in performance and preparing another monograph for the 2005 Parma Verdi Prize on performance practice in mid-nineteenth-century Italian opera.
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Pohl, Kerstin, and Klaus-Peter Hufer. "An Interview with Oskar Negt (2004)." International Labor and Working-Class History 90 (2016): 203–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547916000120.

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Oskar Negt is an emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Hannover and a prolific writer, best known in the Anglophone world for two books written with the film maker and novelist Alexander Kluge: Public Sphere and Experience: Toward an Analysis of the Bourgeois and Proletarian Public Sphere, published in Germany in 1972 and in the United States in 1993 (then reissued by Verso Books in 2016), and History & Obstinacy, which appeared in Germany in 2008 and in an English translation from Zone Books in 2014. In addition to his sociological and theoretical reflections, however, Negt is also a well-known worker educator, whose first major publication in 1971 was Soziologische Phantasie und exemplarisches Lernen: Zur Theorie und Praxis der Arbeiterbildung [Sociological Imagination and Exemplary Learning: On the Theory and Practice of Workers’ Education], which has never been translated into English. Soziologische Phantasie und exemplarisches Lernen was an influential, widely read text that provoked considerable discussion in European workers’ education circles, some of which can be followed in the 1978 anthology edited by Adolf Brock, Hans Dieter Müller, and Oskar Negt entitled Arbeiterbildung: Soziolgische Phantasie und Exemplarisches Lernen in Theorie, Kritik und Praxis [Workers' Education: Sociological Imagination and Exemplary Learning in Theory, Critique and Practice].
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Janick, Jules. "Plant Exploration: From Queen Hatshepsut to Sir Joseph Banks." HortScience 42, no. 2 (April 2007): 191–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.42.2.191.

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The worldwide exchange of fruits has been facilitated by traders, travelers, sovereigns, conquerors, diplomats, missionaries, and botanists. The beginnings of organized plant exploration date to the Pharaohs of ancient Egypt, who, as early as 2000 bce, brought back exotic trees and plants in their foreign campaigns and illustrated them on their temple walls. Queen Hatshepsut (ca. 1500 bce) sent out ships to bring back trees from the land of Punt (northeast African coast). The exchange of plants throughout antiquity was a by-product of trade routes between East and West as well as though the campaigns of conquerors including Alexander, the warriors of Islam, Genghis Khan, and the crusades. The age of exploration starting at the end of the 15th century was inspired by the search for a sea route to the spice-rich East. The encounter of Columbus with the Americas brought about an explosive exchange of New World and Old World plants. The rise of science in the 17th and 18th centuries was associated with botanical exploration involving travels and expeditions, including Hans Sloan to the West Indies, James Cunningham to China, Georg Eberhard Rumpf (Rumphius) to the Moluccas, and Sir Joseph Banks to Newfoundland, Labrador, South America Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia, the Malay Archipelago, Hebrides, and Iceland.
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Fernandes, Thiago Spíndola Motta. "Homens de bem contra imagens do mal." POIESIS 20, no. 33 (June 8, 2019): 395. http://dx.doi.org/10.22409/poiesis.2033.395-412.

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A tentativa de interdição, por grupos cristãos, a uma intervenção urbana do artista Alexandre Vogler, bem como a perseguição pela polícia e por civis a trabalhos artísticos de Guga Ferraz, levanta discussões sobre a destruição de imagens e a potência a elas atribuída pelo olhar de quem as nega e as destrói. A partir de teóricos como Jacques Rancière, W. J. T. Michell, Marie-José Mondzain e Hans Belting, entende-se que o ato de negar uma imagem pode ser um ato de afirmação de seu poder, bem como uma tentativa de interromper a busca icônica do outro e tomar para si a exclusividade e benefícios da imagem.
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Fernandes, Thiago Spíndola Motta. "Homens de bem contra imagens do mal." POIESIS 20, no. 33 (June 8, 2019): 395. http://dx.doi.org/10.22409/poiesis.v20i33.29017.

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A tentativa de interdição, por grupos cristãos, a uma intervenção urbana do artista Alexandre Vogler, bem como a perseguição pela polícia e por civis a trabalhos artísticos de Guga Ferraz, levanta discussões sobre a destruição de imagens e a potência a elas atribuída pelo olhar de quem as nega e as destrói. A partir de teóricos como Jacques Rancière, W. J. T. Michell, Marie-José Mondzain e Hans Belting, entende-se que o ato de negar uma imagem pode ser um ato de afirmação de seu poder, bem como uma tentativa de interromper a busca icônica do outro e tomar para si a exclusividade e benefícios da imagem.
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Pening, L. "Reviewer’s comment to “Functional MRI of the spine: different patterns of positions of the forward flexed lumbar spine in healthy subjects” by Alexander König and Hans-Ekkehart Vitzthum." European Spine Journal 10, no. 5 (October 2001): 443. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s005860000242.

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Rustoiu, Aurel. "Commentaria archaeologica et historica (IV)." Ephemeris Napocensis 31 (February 10, 2022): 69–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.33993/ephnap.2021.31.69.

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1. Navigating on the Danube, from Ptolemy the son of Lagus to Neacșu of Câmpulung. The year 2021 marks the 500 anniversaries of the moment when Neacșu of Câmpulung wrote his letter, which many specialists considers to be the earliest attested document written in Romanian language. Since this is an important document for the history of Romanian literature, the following note will also be written in Romanian language. The sender of this letter, Neacșu of Câmpulung, was a merchant who was sending information to Hans Benkner, the mayor of Brașov, about the movements of Ottoman army along the Danube in the summer of 1521. Among the information are some regarding the way in which ships coming from the Bosphorus and the Black Sea navigated upstream on the Danube, through the Iron Gates, to Belgrade. This story echoes a quite similar one that happened eighteen centuries and a half earlier – the expedition of Alexander the Great to the Danube in 335 BC. The events were described by one witness who was part of the expedition: Ptolemy, the son of Lagus, a general of Alexander and future king of Egypt. The fragments describing the Danubian expedition are preserved in later works by Arrian and Strabo. According to them, while preparing the expedition to the east, Alexander the Great sought to first stabilize and pacify the northern territories of the kingdom. Therefore, in the spring of 335 BC, Alexander left Amphipolis to initiate a new expedition against the Triballi, who were chased up to the Danube. Led by king Syrmos, they took refuge on an island of the river, being also helped by the Getae living on the left bank of the Danube. Upon reaching the river, Alexander the Great met the “big ships” that came to help him from Byzantium, through the Black Sea and along the Danube (Arrian I, 3, 3). The alliance of the Getae and Triballi motivated Alexander to organize a one-day punishing raid to the north of the Danube. Several hypotheses have been proposed over time regarding the entire campaign and the location of the island on which the Triballi led by Syrmos took refuge, or the area where Alexander crossed the Danube (Fig. 1). F. Medeleţ had convincingly demonstrated that the army led by Alexander the Great reached the Danube near the Morava confluence. Al. Vulpe has objected to this hypothesis, mostly bringing into discussion the supposed difficulties encountered by the Macedonian fleet when attempting to navigate through the Iron Gates. However, the problem of passing through the Iron Gates cataracts was already solved in ancient time by towing the ships. The difficult conditions for the navigation through the cataracts were similar both before and after the Roman times, and until the modern age. Therefore, the information provided by Neacșu of Câmpulung about the Ottoman campaign along the Danube in 1521 is important. His description confirms that the Ottoman ships were towed, also indicating the way in which passage through the Danube’s Iron Gates was organized. Consequently, the idea suggesting that the “big ships” from Byzantium navigated upstream the Iron Gates while coming to support Alexander the Great in 335 BC is plausible. This hypothesis, proposed by Florin Medeleț, continues to be the most convincing one, ahead of all others proposed so far. 2. “Panoplies” of weapons and warrior identities from the “Celtic” to the “Dacian horizon” in Transylvania. The Late Iron Age in Transylvania was defined by two cultural and chronological horizons: the “Celtic horizon” (between ca. 350 and 190/175 BC) and the “Dacian horizon” (between ca. 190/175 BC and AD 106). One aspect that has seldom been discussed is the way these “panoplies” defined a particular social identity of these elites during each of the aforementioned cultural and chronological horizons which characterized the inner Carpathians region during the Late Iron Age. The comparison of the “standard” panoplies of weapons specific to the “Celtic” and the “Dacian horizon” indicates the existence of both similarities and differences. More precisely, these panoplies are quite similar in what concerns their functionality. In funerary contexts, these weapons are meant to define symbolically the warlike identity. However, the ways in which martial identity was constructed and expressed within the social environment differed from one horizon to another. The “Celtic” warrior was closely connected to the community within which he lived, being buried alongside other members of the community, in an area belonging to his group, clan or family, using all markers of his social status and identity. On the other hand, the “Dacian” warrior belonged to a hierarchic society that was defined by the emergence of hilltop fortresses surrounded by a dependent rural hinterland. Therefore, despite the apparent similarities in the functional structure of the panoplies of weapons, the warriors of these two horizons belonged to two very different models of social organization.
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Blinkhorn, Steve. "Little Hans, clever Hans and big Hans." Nature 344, no. 6269 (April 1990): 889. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/344889a0.

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