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1

Maiorov, Alexander V. "The Cult of St. Daniel the Stylite Among the Russian Princes of the Rurik Dynasty." Slavic and East European Journal 59, no. 3 (2015): 345–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.30851/59.3.001.

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The influence of Grand Princess Euphrosyne (second wife of Prince Roman Mstislavovitch) explains the appearance among the Galician-Volhynian princes of Christian names which were unusual and unique for the Rurikides. This is the name Daniel, which was later included into the name list of the Moscow princes. This name spread among the princes due to the expansion of the cult of St Daniel the Stylite and the rising interest in the attributes of Stylitism. This can be seen in sphragistics and in the numerous architectural monuments of Galician-Volhynian Rus' of the 13th–early 14th century. Thanks to the family links between the Galician-Volhynian and the Vladimir-Suzdal princes, this cult spread in the North-Eastern Rus' and later to Moscow. The fact that Euphrosyne of Galicia was the daughter of Basileus Isaak II explains the unexpected rise of interest in Stylitism among the princes of Rus' and their milieu. According to Niketas Choniates, Emperor Isaak II especially sympathized with the Stylites and the ascetics and patronized them. Thus he astonished his contemporaries, since the Stylites had lost the influence over the emperors that they had exerted at the time of iconoclasm. The Byzantine hagiography concerning Sts. Daniel the Stylite and Leo the Great Tsar explains the connection between the names of Daniel and Leo among the descendants of Roman Mstislavich. Daniel the Stylite was the spiritual father and the main adviser of Emperor Leo I. Apparently this relationship was reflected in the names of the father and the son, the Galician-Volhynian princes Daniel Romanovich and Lev Danilovich.
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2

LANGDON, ROBERT. "Lee Boo of Belau: A Prince in London. DANIEL J. PEACOCK." American Ethnologist 17, no. 2 (May 1990): 401–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ae.1990.17.2.02a00310.

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3

Young, Ian. "What is Old Greek Daniel chapter 8 about?" Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 44, no. 4 (May 11, 2020): 693–710. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0309089219864611.

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The Old Greek text of Daniel chapter 8 exhibits many important differences compared to the Masoretic Text more familiar to most readers. Instead of a little horn who successfully challenges heaven, with a striking absence of divine intervention, the Old Greek tells of a strong horn who is thrown down by the heavenly powers and of a prince of the host who rescues the captives. This article attempts to give a coherent reading of the chapter in the Old Greek to bring out the quite different storyline and message of the Old Greek compared to the Masoretic Text.
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WINKLER, AMANDA EUBANKS. "‘O ravishing delight’: the politics of pleasure in The Judgment of Paris." Cambridge Opera Journal 15, no. 1 (March 2003): 15–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954586703000156.

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London composers competed for a music prize in 1701, setting William Congreve's libretto on the judgment of Paris, a beauty contest among Juno, Pallas and Venus. Paris, contest judge, exiled prince and amorous shepherd, prefers Venus, placing love above Juno's promised empire and Pallas's martial success. This essay reveals the general political meanings of the judgment of Paris myth, shows how the tale had been used to critique Charles II and James II, examines the political beliefs of the sponsors and librettist, and demonstrates how music by John Eccles, Daniel Purcell and John Weldon supported the politics of Congreve's libretto.
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Seelbach, Ulrich. "Gottes Kalkül und (k)ein Ereignis." Daphnis 47, no. 1-2 (March 5, 2019): 285–312. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18796583-04701006.

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In 1633 the armies of Wallenstein and the united armies of Saxony, Brandenburg and Sweden met in front of the city of Schweidnitz. Instead of fighting a battle, a truce was agreed on August 22. On this day, one of the Protestants’ hopes, Prince Ulrich of Denmark, fell victim to an attack. And in the enclosed city hunger and plague raged for weeks. How these two events were treated or even ignored in contemporary newsletters, and how poets interpreted the events, is presented here. Analyzed texts stem from Daniel Czepko and the Lutheran preacher Friedrich Scholtz, who wrote an epic poem in honor of Schweidnitz.
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HELMREICH, STEFAN, and PETER McMURRAY. "Tape, Prince, and the Studio: Interview with Susan Rogers 23 May 2016, Cambridge, MA." Twentieth-Century Music 14, no. 1 (February 2017): 135–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478572217000111.

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Susan Rogers has lived many musical lives. As a faculty member at Berklee College of Music, she directs the Berklee Music Cognition and Cognition Laboratory, expanding her research in auditory memory, which she began during her doctoral studies with Daniel Levitin at McGill University. She also teaches analogue studio production, drawing on two decades of experience in recording studios. She is especially well known for her years working as Prince's staff engineer (1983–87), a period in which she not only encountered Prince's own unique uses of tape, but also created his now-infamous tape vault. In many ways, the immediate impetus for this interview was Prince's untimely passing on 21 April 2016. In previous interviews, Rogers had already emerged as a lucid commentator on Prince's work first-hand, but that context adds a certain emotional heft to this interview, conducted one month after the pop music star's death.
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Thomas, Charles. "Tintagel Castle." Antiquity 62, no. 236 (September 1988): 421–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00074536.

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Tintagel Castle (at NGR SS 0589) has been strangely absent from the pages of ANTIQUITY. O.G.S. Crawford missed seeing it during his Cornish trips in the 1920s. Glyn Daniel was there only in October 1986, his last visit to Cornwall, when the place was also inspected by HRH Prince Charles – apparently the first Duke or Earl of Cornwall to set foot on the Island since Richard (1209–72; the younger brother of Henry III), who built the Castle and was crowned King of the Romans at Aachen in 1257. If Tintagel shares with Maiden Castle the fate of being among the most frequently excavated of all the Duchy of Cornwall's monuments, it stands alone in being at once the most picturesque and the most enigmatic.
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Osipian, Alexandr. "The Lasting Echo of the Battle of Grunwald: the Uses of the Past in the Trials between the Armenian Community of Lemberg and the Catholic Patricians in 1578–1631." Russian History 38, no. 2 (2011): 243–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187633111x566057.

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AbstractThe article deals with the historical imagination in the burgher's milieu in the late Renaissance Polish kingdom. The main aim of the article is the investigation of the changes that occurred in the perception of the remote past. The article focuses on the mechanisms of a usable past construction. In 1578, in order to obtain equal economic rights with the dominant Catholic burghers – mostly of German origin – in Lemberg, local Armenians stated that their ancestors were invited by the Galician prince Daniel and were then settled by his son Lev/Leon (1264-1301) in Lviv at the time of the city's foundation. In 1597, in their complaint, Catholics allowed that the statement of the invitation of the Armenian ancestors was a real fact but accused "Armenian warriors" for participating in the hostile incursions led by Prince Daniel or Lev together with the Tatars in the 1250s-1280s against Poland. In this way, the magistrate won the trial in 1600. I argue that for their pseudo-historical argument Catholic patricians creatively reinterpreted some passages from Marcin Cromer's book "On the origins and deeds of the Poles" (1555, 1558, 1562, 1568, 1589). Then, Armenians changed their tactics and stated in 1631 that their noble ancestors took an active part in the wars between Poland and Teutonic Order in late fourteenth – early fifteenth centuries. Thus Armenians converted their ancestors into good patriots of Poland when the Germans were the main enemies. During the trials townspeople perceived changes in their past. It also reflects a level of historical reading in Polish history and the emergence of the Battle of Grunwald battle as part of a Polish national myth. Thus Renaissance book-printing and book-collecting directly influenced the burgher's historical imagination and their judicial argument. City elites "privatized" a book, which had been sacral property of Church, and made it their tool to use for their practical needs. They also privatized and instrumentalized the based-on-books past. The arguments used by both sides during their conflict correlated with the urban elites' aspirations to acquire noble status. It also reflects the process of transmission of high culture models – Sarmatian Renaissance – to the lower estates of the Kingdom.
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Voloshchuk, Myroslav. "The Court of Rostyslav Mykhailovych, Prince and Dominus of Machou, in Hungary (An Excerpt from a Family History between the Late 13th and Mid 14th Centuries)." Journal of Vasyl Stefanyk Precarpathian National University 7, no. 2 (November 18, 2020): 42–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.15330/jpnu.7.2.42-50.

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One of the least-explored aspects of the biography of the Ruthenian Prince Rostyslav Mykhailovych, a maternal nephew of King Daniel Romanovych of Rus’, is his court in a new homeland, the Kingdom of Hungary, between 1242/43 and 1262/64. It is known from various sources that he had numerous supporters among the secular and clerical nobility not only in Hungary but also in the lands of Galicia, Chernihiv, and Bolokhov. To date, however, too little information has been obtained from historical records containing clear mention of individuals who threw in their lot with the runaway prince in the lands of King Bela IV, especially after the defeat at Yaroslav on August 17, 1245. Having verified chronicles and Hungarian charters, the author concludes that the family of Rostyslav Mykhailovych and Princess Anna might well have been related to Lev and his sons, Fedir and Stephan, who were lords of Borod Land near Mukachevo in Bereg County. These people, who must have been descended from the nobility of Chernihiv or Galicia, succeeded one another in an effort to put Prince Rostyslav himself or his second cousin Iziaslav Volodymyrovych on the Galician throne throughout the 1240s and 1250s, all to no avail. What is important is that such attempts were always timed to coincide with the Mongol threat to the lands of the Romanids, which provided the claimants to the Galician throne with additional (albeit missed) chances of success. Their loyalty to the son-in-law of the Hungarian king was rewarded by the latter’s daughter Anna (terminus ante quem 1264); she granted them lands, which were afterwards in the successive possession of the last members of the Arpad dynasty on the Hungarian throne as well as the new kings from the Anjou dynasty. Borod Land remained in the family’s possession at least until the second half of the 14th century.
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Smith, Robert. "Reviewer Acknowledgements." Journal of Education and Training Studies 2, no. 4 (October 8, 2014): 159. http://dx.doi.org/10.11114/jets.v2i4.546.

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Journal of Education and Training Studies (JETS) would like to thank the following reviewers for reviewing manuscripts from April 1, 2014, to September 30, 2014. Their comments and suggestions were of great help to the authors in improving the quality of their papers. Many authors, regardless of whether JETS publishes their work, appreciate the helpful feedback provided by the reviewers. Redfame Publishing appreciates the following reviewers’ rigorous and conscientious efforts for this journal. Each of the reviewers listed below returned at least one review during this period. Ahmet KARA Ardi Marwan Barbara Hill Betsy L. Diegel Charlotte Alverson Chris Prince Udochukwu Njoku Clara Vasconcelos Dalya Abdulla Fátima Pereira Greg Rickwood Hassan Shaaban Ian Menter Intakhab A. Khan Jacqueline Onchwari Jayaluxmi Naidoo Jeyavel Sundaramoorthy Julie Ernst Kelly Amanda Train Leann M Stadtlander Marieke van der Schaaf Michael Baron Nemer Frayha Richard Beresford Richard Penny Ryan Daniel Semiyu Adejare Aderibigbe Ugo Pace
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11

Halperin, Charles J. "Simeon Bekbulatovich and Mongol Influence on Ivan IV’s Muscovy." Russian History 39, no. 3 (2012): 306–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18763316-03903003.

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Donald Ostrowski’s article “Simeon Bekbulatovich’s Remarkable Career as Tatar Khan, Grand Prince of Rus’, and Monastic Elder” is a masterful summary of the sources and scholarly works which discuss Simeon’s career. However, Ostrowski does not consistently apply the principles of source criticism to his sources, mention sources which we would expect to refer to Simeon but do not, discuss popular views of Simeon, or put scholarly theories of Ivan’s motives in abdicating and elevating Simeon to the throne into the context of their author’s views of Ivan or Mongol influence on Russia. Ostrowski’s theory that Ivan, according to Imperial envoy Daniel Printz’s assertion, was responding to a boyar plot to replace him with Devlet-Girei, Khan of the Crimea, fails to take into account such facts as that Devlet-Girei was a Muslim. Nor does Ostrowski integrate his theory of Simeon’s installation into his own theory of Mongol influence on Russia or his diverse observations on the conception of the Muscovite tsar’ as a khan, by Ivan and the Muscovite elite. In fact Ostrowski’s conclusions on Mongol institutional and social influence can be contested. It may be more likely that by his role-reversal with Simeon, Ivan was just satirizing his own autocratic pretensions, as epitomized in his famous “petition” to Simeon that he be granted the right to establish his own appanage.
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Cormier, Raymond J. "Thibaut de Champagne, Les Chansons— Texts and Melodies. Bilingual edition prepared by Christopher Callahan, Marie-Geneviève Grossel, and Daniel E. O'Sullivan. Paris: Champion, 2018, pp. 848." Mediaevistik 32, no. 1 (January 1, 2020): 441–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/med.2019.01.107.

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Counted among the most original and prolific medieval French poets, Thibaut IV, count of Champagne and Brie, King of Navarre, was also called Thibaut the poet entertainer (1201–1253). This great-grandson of Eleanor of Aquitaine and great-grandfather of Marie de Champagne, was celebrated by Dante for the purity of his lyrics and widely admired for his mastery of all genres of the time. Remarkable as well for his interpretations of antique mythology and bestiaries, this grand prince and Crusade hero forged poems devoted to the Virgin, transmuting the lyrical lady into a celestial figura. The generous and capacious volume to hand, prepared by young scholars, one French and two Americans, is completely devoted to the famous poet; it is, since the long-respected 1925 edition by Wallensköld (SATF; just a single scholar), the first really complete one. It offers not only all the poems (love songs, debate poems, pastourelles, Crusade, and religious poems) accompanied by their melody, but also robust notes, concordant variants, and isolated melodies. The modern French translations are complemented by additional comments in the glossary, thus offering the reader a very generous and useful reference tool, the fruit of years of accumulated philological and musicological research.
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Untoro, Danang Bagus, Trijoso Permono, and Subandrate Subandrate. "Hubungan Epidural Hematoma Dengan Fraktur Kranium Pada Pasien Cedera Kepala." SRIWIJAYA JOURNAL OF MEDICINE 2, no. 3 (June 22, 2019): 164–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.32539/sjm.v2i3.77.

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Penyebab cedera kepala terbanyak adalah jatuh (40,9%), kecelakaan sepeda motor (40,6%), terkena benda tumpul dan tajam (7,3%), kecelakaan alat transportasi darat lain (7,1%), dan kejatuhan benda (2,5%). Cedera kepala merupakan penyebab kematian dari hampir setengah kasus trauma. Fraktur kranium merupakan patahnya satu atau lebih tulang pada tulang tengkorak. Sekitar 1% sampai 5,5% dari total kasus cedera kepala terdapat epidural hematoma. Tingkat mortalitas pada kasus epidural hematoma mencapai 20%. Menurut Daniel P. Prince, epidural hematoma ditemukan dalam 1-2% dari seluruh kejadian trauma kepala. Dalam 90% kasus epidural hematoma berhubungan dengan fraktur kranium. Tujuan dari penelitian ini yaitu menganalisis hubungan antara epidural hematoma dan fraktur kranium pada pasien cedera kepala. Jenis penelitian ini adalah penelitian analitik observasional dengan desain penelitian cross sectional berdasarkan data sekunder, yaitu hasil pengamatan rekam medis pasien cedera kepala yang dirawat di RSUP Dr. Mohammad Hoesin Palembang. Terdapat hubungan yang signifikan (p=0,015) antara kejadian fraktur kranium dengan epidural hematoma pada pasien cedera kepala yang dirawat di RSUP Dr. Mohammad Hoesin, Palembang pada tahun 2017. Pasien cedera kepala dengan fraktur kranium lebih berisiko 4,250 kali lebih besar untuk mengalami epidural hematoma dibandingkan dengan pasien yang tidak memiliki fraktur kranium, dan pasien cedera kepala dengan fraktur kranium berisiko sekurang-kurangnya 1,256 kali mengalami epidural hematoma dan sebesar-besarnya 14,151 kali mengalami epidural hematoma. Kesimpulan penelitian ini yaitu terdapat hubungan yang signifikan antara fraktur kranium dengan epidural hematoma pada pasien cedera kepala.
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Tantlevskij, Igor. "Two Figures in the Dead Sea Scrolls — Melchizedek in 11QMelchizedek (11Q13) and “Son of God” in the “Apocryphon of Daniel” (4Q246) — as Two Eschatological Soteriological Concepts." ΣΧΟΛΗ. Ancient Philosophy and the Classical Tradition 15, no. 2 (2021): 625–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/1995-4328-2021-15-2-625-642.

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The article analyses and juxtaposes the images of the eschatological soteriological figures of Melchizedek in 11QMelchizedek (11Q13) and the “Son of God” in 4QApocryphon of Daniel (4Q246). Identifying the differences in the soteriological concepts reflected in 11Q13 and 4Q246, the author reaches the following main conclusions. God the Creator is transcendent to creation; Melchizedek is predominantly the spiritual head of the entire universe (cf. also 4Q521, frag. 2, 2:1 of the “Messiah” of the Lord), who during the Eschaton will put an end to all the dark forces of creation led by Belial, atone for the sins of the worthy and retaliate against the sinful. As for the “Son of God” in 4Q246, his mission is mainly directed to earthly affairs, albeit on a global scale; he appears as a lay and military leader who comes at a critical moment to the aid of God’s people and is called to establish a just and righteous world order and in fact to become the sovereign of the united earthly kingdom. To a certain extent the image of “Son of God” in 4Q246 may be compared with the personality of the eschatological “messenger who announces peace (שלום)” (Isa. 52:7), i.e. establishes socio-political welfare on earth (cf., e.g., 4Q246, frag. 2, 2:5–6), and who is identified in 11Q13 2:16, 18 with the figure of the “anointed”/”prince” mentioned in Dan. 9:25 (the lay Messiah). Melchizedek, on the other hand, appears in 11Q13 as a divine figure on a universal, not just global, scale— one could even say like a second “God” within the created universe. As for the “messenger of good who announces salvation, saying to Zion: your God reigns” (Isa. 52:7), referred to in 11Q13 2:18–24, this is probably the Teacher of Righteousness of the Qumran community (the priestly Messiah).
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Афиногенова, Ольга Николаевна. "“The Nattation of the Miracles of Archangel Michael” by Pantoleon Deacon as the cultural point of the shapoing of the cult of Archangel Michael in Byzantium." Вестник церковного искусства и археологии, no. 1(1) (June 15, 2019): 12–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.31802/2658-5111-2019-1-12-26.

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Основная цель статьи - проследить историю отождествления Ангела Господня с архангелом Михаилом и выявить основной этап формирования культа архистратига. Методом сопоставления текста Священного Писания, апокрифов и византийских агиографических текстов выявляется чёткая картина влияния апокрифической традиции на византийский культ архангела Михаила. В Ветхом Завете Михаил упомянут по имени всего три раза - в Книге пророка Даниила; в Новом Завете - только однажды в Откровении ап. Иоанна Богослова. Вместе с тем в Священном Писании есть многочисленные упоминания безымянного Ангела Господня. Ориген впервые отождествил князя Михаила из Книги пророка Даниила с архангелом Михаилом, что было воспринято поледующей традицией. В апокрифах, однако, почитание Михаила не всегда наделено теми аспектами, которые будут фигурировать в более позднее время. Возможно, то, что почитание Михаила вобрало в себя функции других архангелов, связано с популярной агиографической традицией, посвящённой архистратигу. Первый текст этой традиции, ставший широко распространённым в Византии, - «Чудо в Хонах» (VIII в.). Но наиболее исчерпывающе традиция почитания архангела отражена в «Повести» Пантолеона Диакона (IX в.). Текст демонстрирует окончательное закрепление отождествления безымянного Ангела Господня из Ветхого и Нового Заветов с Михаилом, а также приводит наиболее полное изложение аспектов почитания архангела в Византии. The main purpose of the paper is to trace the history of the identification of the Angel of the Lord with the Archangel Michael and to identify the main stage in the formation of the cult of the Archangel. By comparing the text of Holy Scripture, apocrypha and Byzantine hagiographic texts, a clear picture of the influence of the apocryphal tradition on the Byzantine cult of Michael the Archangel is revealed. In the Old Testament, Michael is mentioned by name only three times - in the book of Prophet Daniel; in the New Testament - only twice in the Revelation of John the Divine and in Epistle of Jude. However, in the Bible there are numerous references to the nameless Angel of the Lord. For the first time Origen identified Prince Michael from the book of the Prophet Daniel with the archangel Michael, which was accepted by the following tradition. In the apocrypha, however, the worship of Michael is not always endowed with those aspects that will appear later. Perhaps the fact that the worship of Michael has absorbed the functions of other archangels relates to the popular hagiographic tradition devoted to the archestrategos. The first text of this tradition, which became widespread in Byzantium, was the “Miracle in the Chonae” (8th century). But the most exhaustively tradition of worship the archangel is reflected in consolidation of the identification of the nameless Angel of the Lord from the Old and New Testaments with Michael and provides the most complete exposition of the aspects of veneration of the archangel in Byzantium.
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Dudkiewicz, Margot. "Application of PiCUS® Sonic Tomograph 3 in studies on the cultural heritage of the Lublin region – restoration of the Eastern Orthodox church of the Dormition of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Uhrusk." Annals of Warsaw University of Life Sciences - SGGW - Horticulture and Landscape Architecture, no. 40 (January 15, 2020): 3–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.22630/ahla.2019.40.1.

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Uhrusk is a small town located in eastern Poland, in the Lublin region, along the border river, the Bug. The temple is situated on the outskirts of the village, on a low hill, where there was a castle founded by Prince Daniel Halicki in the Middle Ages. The Orthodox church existed here before 1220, and for the first decades of its functioning it had the status of a council. Today, the existing church building was erected in 1849 as a Greek Catholic temple founded by the owner of local estate, Laura Kirsztejnowa. In 1915, the church was abandoned when the Orthodox residents of Uhrusk became refugees. In the years 1920-1927, it was renovated, due to significant losses suffered during the First World War and the Polish-Bolshevik war. The building was open again from 1920 to 1947, after which it was closed following the deportation of Orthodox Ukrainians as part of the “Wisła” Operation. At the end of the 1950s, the Orthodox church was restored for liturgical use as a branch of the parish in Włodawa. The style of the building is defined as classicist-Byzantine with neo-Romanesque and neo-Gothic elements. In 2017, on the initiative of the Dialog Foundation in Lublin, a general renovation of the temple building and its surroundings began. Studies conducted with the use of specialized diagnostic equipment in the form of a Picus 3 sonic tomograph were important for the dendrological inventory. Within the boundaries of the property, 11 trees are growing, at different ages and in a healthy state. On the basis of the material collected, possible directions for the restoration of the Orthodox church’s surroundings were presented.
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Brajović, Saša. "Anton Karinger, Pogrebna povorka crnogorskog knjaza Danila." Peristil 61 (2018): 161–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.17685/peristil.61.10.

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Price, Daniel M. "Remarks by Daniel M. Price." Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 91 (1997): 492–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0272503700066428.

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Price, Daniel M. "Remarks by Daniel M. Price." Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 87 (1993): 460–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0272503700080526.

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Krimsky, Sheldon. "Daniel Callahan And Health’s Price." Health Affairs 23, no. 4 (July 2004): 288. http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.23.4.288.

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Young, D., G. Scott, and J. Norris. "RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN NATIVE TITLE LAW AND CULTURAL HERITAGE AFFECTING THE PETROLEUM INDUSTRY—CERTAINTY, BUT AT A PRICE." APPEA Journal 44, no. 1 (2004): 741. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj03038.

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The mosaic of the common law relating to Native Title, which underpins the Native Title and other Acts, continues to be filled in by the courts increasing certainty for all parties. Last year saw the High Court’s Ward decision—the most significant decision for the petroleum industry since Mabo in 1992. Since then there have been three more important decisions, which while not making new law, have shown how the principles enunciated in Ward and Yorta Yorta are being applied. Some of the cases examined include the Daniel and De Rose Hill decisions, which have application to petroleum tenements.This paper will outline the recent developments, and demonstrate how the decisions have reduced uncertainty, thereby narrowing the areas about which negotiation must occur. The hurdle for proving the existence of Native Title remains high.It has not all been in favour of industry, however. Increasingly, Native Title cases, such as Daniels have resulted in unexpected findings that some conventional titles had been invalidly granted. Titles which seemingly ought to have extinguished Native Title have turned out to be invalid, and in many cases irretrievably so. The paper looks at the implications of this for industry as well.
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Wege, Carl A. "A HIGH PRICE: THE TRIUMPS AND FAILURES OF ISRAELI COUNTERTERRORISM." Levantine Review 2, no. 2 (December 15, 2013): 217. http://dx.doi.org/10.6017/lev.v2i2.5364.

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Franco, Eli. "Gregory Price Grieve & Daniel Veidlinger (eds.): Buddhism, the Internet and Digital Media. The Pixel and the Lotus." Entangled Religions 3 (February 3, 2016): XII—XVII. http://dx.doi.org/10.46586/er.v3.2016.xii-xvii.

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This contribution offers a review of:Gregory Price Grieve & Daniel Veidlinger (eds.): Buddhism, the Internet and Digital Media. The Pixel and the Lotus Routledge: New York/London, 2015. 232 pages, hardback: USD 125.00, ISBN: 978-0-415-72166-0.
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Tswei, Keshin, and Chen-Yin Kuo. "A Study of Stock Price Behavior in Taiwan via Residual Income Valuation Theory and Structural Identification." Review of Pacific Basin Financial Markets and Policies 15, no. 04 (December 2012): 1250016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0219091512500166.

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This study adopts the methodology introduced by Lee (2006) to analyze stock prices in response to information shocks in six of Taiwan's stock market sectors and present market anomalies utilizing behavioral finance theory. Using the Residual Income Model (RIM) of equity valuation, we specified our empirical model to identify structural fundamental and nonfundamental shocks from reduced-form tangible and intangible news, and we obtained three major results. First, fundamental shock is primarily induced by tangible news and nonfundamental shock by intangible news, suggesting that tangible-oriented RIM can capture the information content of stock prices. Second, impulse response analyses show that investors generally underreact to fundamental shocks and consistently overreact to nonfundamental shocks in the short-run. This finding is compatible with the overconfidence theory of Daniel et al. (1998) in behavioral finance literature. Third, information diffusion efficiency in a market appears to depend on the value relevance quality of its tangible information. This is based on our finding that when tangible information constitutes a higher share of a market's fundamental shock, its price converges faster to the long-run equilibrium associated with the shock.
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Duniya, Reuben E. "The Kings and Princes in the Combat of Daniel 10." Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament 34, no. 2 (July 2, 2020): 267–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09018328.2020.1807105.

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Bechmann, Ken L. "Price and Volume Effects Associated with Changes in the Danish Blue-Chip Index: The KFX Index." Multinational Finance Journal 8, no. 1/2 (June 1, 2004): 3–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.17578/8-1/2-1.

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27

Freeman, Michael. "Daniel Byman.A High Price: The Triumphs and Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism." Terrorism and Political Violence 27, no. 3 (May 27, 2015): 593–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09546553.2015.1055973.

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Nagirnyy, Vitaliy M., and Stsiapan N. Tsemushau. "To the question of the personality of Zhiroslav Nazhirovich who led the Kyiv troops to Mensk in 1159." Journal of the Belarusian State University. History, no. 2 (April 30, 2020): 5–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.33581/2520-6338-2020-2-5-10.

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The article deals with the biography of the Kyiv voivode Zhiroslav Nazhirovich. The boyar is mentioned in the Kyiv Chronicle only once, in 1159, when he leaded the military unit of Torks that had been by the Kyiv prince Rostislav Mstislavich to Mensk to help the Polotsk prince Rogvolod Borisovich. The author admits that Zhiroslav was born in the first third of the 12th century and could be the son of both Nazhir from the entourage of Vladimir Vsevolodovich Monomakh and Nazhir Pereyaslavich who served the Prince of Kyiv Izyaslav Davidovich. Based on the laconic data of the chronicles one can assume that Zhiroslav, although he yielded in status to other Kyiv voivodes, he had the considerable experience in military affairs. The further fate of Nazhirovich, after his returning from the Mensk campaign in 1159, is not analyzed in the sources. His possible descendants can be the Trepolsky sergeant Sdeslav Zhiroslavich and the Kyiv voivode Daniil Zhirovich (Nazhirovich).
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KITLV, Redactie. "Book reviews." New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 84, no. 3-4 (January 1, 2010): 277–344. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/13822373-90002444.

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The Atlantic World, 1450-2000, edited by Toyin Falola & Kevin D. Roberts (reviewed by Aaron Spencer Fogleman) The Slave Ship: A Human History, by Marcus Rediker (reviewed by Justin Roberts) Extending the Frontiers: Essays on the New Transatlantic Slave Trade Database, edited by David Eltis & David Richardson (reviewed by Joseph C. Miller) "New Negroes from Africa": Slave Trade Abolition and Free African Settlement in the Nineteenth-Century Caribbean, by Rosanne Marion Adderley (reviewed by Nicolette Bethel) Atlantic Diasporas: Jews, Conversos, and Crypto-Jews in the Age of Mercantilism, 1500-1800, edited by Richard L. Kagan & Philip D. Morgan (reviewed by Jonathan Schorsch) Brother’s Keeper: The United States, Race, and Empire in the British Caribbean, 1937-1962, by Jason C. Parker (reviewed by Charlie Whitham) Labour and the Multiracial Project in the Caribbean: Its History and Promise, by Sara Abraham (reviewed by Douglas Midgett) Envisioning Caribbean Futures: Jamaican Perspectives, by Brian Meeks (reviewed by Gina Athena Ulysse) Archibald Monteath: Igbo, Jamaican, Moravian, by Maureen Warner-Lewis (reviewed by Jon Sensbach) Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones, by Carole Boyce Davies (reviewed by Linden Lewis) Displacements and Transformations in Caribbean Cultures, edited by Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert & Ivette Romero-Cesareo (reviewed by Bill Maurer) Caribbean Migration to Western Europe and the United States: Essays on Incorporation, Identity, and Citizenship, edited by Margarita Cervantes-Rodríguez, Ramón Grosfoguel & Eric Mielants (reviewed by Gert Oostindie) Home Cooking in the Global Village: Caribbean Food from Buccaneers to Ecotourists, by Richard Wilk (reviewed by William H. Fisher) Dead Man in Paradise: Unraveling a Murder from a Time of Revolution, by J.B. MacKinnon (reviewed by Edward Paulino) Tropical Zion: General Trujillo, FDR, and the Jews of Sosúa, by Allen Wells (reviewed by Michael R. Hall) Downtown Ladies: Informal Commercial Importers, a Haitian Anthropologist, and Self-Making in Jamaica, by Gina A. Ulysse (reviewed by Jean Besson) Une ethnologue à Port-au-Prince: Question de couleur et luttes pour le classement socio-racial dans la capitale haïtienne, by Natacha Giafferi-Dombre (reviewed by Catherine Benoît) Haitian Vodou: Spirit, Myth, and Reality, edited by Patrick Bellegarde-Smith & Claudine Michel (reviewed by Susan Kwosek) Cuba: Religion, Social Capital, and Development, by Adrian H. Hearn (reviewed by Nadine Fernandez) "Mek Some Noise": Gospel Music and the Ethics of Style in Trinidad, by Timothy Rommen (reviewed by Daniel A. Segal)Routes and Roots: Navigating Caribbean and Pacific Island Literatures, by Elizabeth M. DeLoughrey (reviewed by Anthony Carrigan) Claude McKay, Code Name Sasha: Queer Black Marxism and the Harlem Renaissance, by Gary Edward Holcomb (reviewed by Brent Hayes Edwards) The Sense of Community in French Caribbean Fiction, by Celia Britton (reviewed by J. Michael Dash) Imaging the Chinese in Cuban Literature and Culture, by Ignacio López-Calvo (reviewed by Stephen Wilkinson) Pre-Columbian Jamaica, by P. Allsworth-Jones (reviewed by William F. Keegan) Underwater and Maritime Archaeology in Latin America and the Caribbean, edited by Margaret E. Leshikar-Denton & Pilar Luna Erreguerena (reviewed by Erika Laanela)
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30

Robertson, John F. "Ledgers and Prices: Early Mesopotamian Merchant Accounts. Daniel C. Snell." Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 267 (August 1987): 82–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1356971.

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31

MacIntyre, Jean. "Buckingham the Masquer." Renaissance and Reformation 34, no. 3 (July 1, 1998): 59–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.33137/rr.v34i3.10817.

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George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham (1592-1628), favorite of James I and of Charles I as both prince and king, used skill in dancing, especially in masques, to compete for and retain royal favor. Masques in which he danced and masques he commissioned displayed his power with the rulers he ostensibly served. His example and teaching taught Prince Charles that through masque dancing he might win his father's favor, and probably made Charles believe that his appearance in court masques of the 1630s would similarly win his subjects' favor.
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32

Bakhtin, Alexander G. "The Life and Death of the Manghit Qarachi-bek, Divei." Golden Horde Review 9, no. 2 (June 29, 2021): 395–422. http://dx.doi.org/10.22378/2313-6197.2021-9-2.395-422.

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Research objectives: To trace the fate of the sixteenth-century aristocrats from the Mansur kin of the Crimean Manghits, namely the brothers Baki, Khoja-Akhmed, Ak-Bibi, and Divei. To identify their role in political events in Eastern Europe and to establish the circumstances of the capture, stay in captivity, and the death of Divei – the most famous of these brothers. Research materials: Chronicles, Razriad books, diplomatic documents, folklore, and secondary materials of historical research. Results and novelty of the research: The author traced the fate of the brothers from the noble Maghit kin of Mansur, namely Baki, Khoja-Akhmed, Ak-Bibi and Divei, three of whom became Qarachi-beks in Crimea. They participated in the political life of Crimea, the Nogai Horde, Astrakhan, Azov, the Russian state, Hungary, and Iran. Prince Divei was a typical steppe bagatur, a seeker of fame and fortune, as well as an active enemy of the Russian State. He repeatedly raided the Russian lands and displayed outstanding abilities as a commander. He was aggressive, brave, determined, and cruel. In 1572, he commanded the Crimean troops in the Battle of Molodino and was captured by the Russians. The capture of their commander was one of the reasons for the defeat of the Crimeans. This event once more saved the Russian state from external dependence. Devlet-Girei Khan made considerable efforts to free the Qarachi-bek during the battle, but these were in vain. Attempts to redeem or exchange the prisoner were likewise in vain. Ivan the Terrible was aware of the threat posed by this figure and did not want to free his noble prisoner. In 1576, the death of Prince Divei was announced in Moscow. Historiography calls into question his death in 1575. There is an opinion that Divei was baptized and entered the service of Ivan the Ter­rible under the name of Daniil-murza. In this article, the author contends that those historians who compared Divei with Daniil-murza approached the issue superficially, not considering all the sources, and therefore came to the wrong conclusions. These began to be repeated in subsequent publications. Prince Divei and Daniil-murza were different persons. Divei did not agree to accept Orthodoxy and was executed. The elimination of the famous military leader from its political life contributed to a decrease in the aggression of the Crimean Khanate towards Russia as well as the destabilization of the political situation in Crimea.
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Fitzpatrick, Richard. "The Demesne Farm at Inch, 1738–56." Irish Economic and Social History 45, no. 1 (August 29, 2018): 115–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0332489318794980.

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During the 1770s, Arthur Young dismissed demesne farming as a source of income for Irish landlords, and instead he observed how such farms were geared towards supplying domestic requirements. This article provides a more nuanced consideration of demesne farming during the first half of the eighteenth century through a case study of the example belonging to the Tipperary estate of Daniel Ryan of Inch from 1738 to 1756. It will be shown that this farm acted as an important source of income for its owner, while also highlighting the responsiveness of the farming practices at Inch to price signals and changing market conditions.
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34

van Sittert, Lance. "‘Ironman’: Joseph Daniels and the white history of South Africa's deep south." Polar Record 51, no. 5 (October 13, 2014): 501–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247414000576.

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ABSTRACTPolar history has historically been white history, nowhere more so than in South Africa, The recent attempt to imagine a post-apartheid deep south through the public recovery of a black boatman who drowned in the annexation of the Prince Edward Islands in 1948 has ironically left the white history largely intact. Re-reading the annexation not as ceremony and survey, but as labour calls the central claims of this white history into question; that the annexation was a triumph of white seamanship not black stevedoring; that Daniels’ death was a tragic accident not a result of racism; and that black labour was merely the manual appendage to white intellects. It reveals that the landing of 300 tons of cargo by black boatmen. was what enabled the ‘effective occupation’ of the islands. Daniels death was the avoidable result of an institutional racism that discounted the lives of black labour and exposed them at Marion Island to the dangerous work conditions of long hours in open boats in rough sea without adequate safety provisions; and that Daniels was a boatman, not an ‘unskilled labourer’, with a tradition of co-adventuring that valued an individual for their strength, skill and courage, not the colour of their skin and in which the individual was defined by their contribution to the group
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35

Song, Xianlin. "Owning the Olympics: Narratives of the New China. Monroe E. Price , Daniel Dayan." China Journal 62 (July 2009): 176–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/tcj.62.20648140.

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36

Goloubev, Igor. "Tumors of the Hand. Daniel V. EgloffTaylor & Francis, 2004 ISBN: 1841843717 Price: £75.00." Journal of Hand Surgery 30, no. 2 (April 2005): 236–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhsb.2004.10.004.

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37

HILL, WILLIAM G. "Likelihood, Bayesian, and MCMC Methods in Quantitative Genetics. DANIEL SORENSENAND DANIEL GIANOLA. Springer-Verlag. 2002. 740 pages. ISBN 0 387 95440 6. Price €89.95. (hardback)." Genetical Research 81, no. 2 (April 2003): 165. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0016672303009807.

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38

Lopatta, Kerstin, Felix Canitz, and Christian Fieberg. "Is there a priced risk factor associated with conservatism?" Journal of Risk Finance 17, no. 5 (November 21, 2016): 545–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jrf-05-2016-0065.

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Purpose García Lara et al. (2011) argue that there is a conservatism-related priced risk factor in US stock returns. To put this to the test, the authors aim to analyze whether the conditional conservatism effect comes from the loading on a conditional conservatism-related factor-mimicking portfolio (systematic risk) or the conservatism characteristic itself. Design/methodology/approach The authors form characteristic-balanced portfolios from dependent sorts of stocks on the firm’s degree of conservatism and the firm’s loading on the conservatism-related factor-mimicking portfolio as proposed by Daniel and Titman (1997) and Davis et al. (2000). Findings The tests indicate that it is the conditional conservatism characteristic rather than the factor loading that explains the cross-sectional differences in average stock returns. Consequently, they do not find evidence for a conservatism-related priced risk factor. Originality/value This finding suggests that investors misvalue the conservatism characteristic and casts doubt on the rational risk explanation as proposed by García Lara et al. (2011).
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Kluver, Randolph. "Monroe E. Price & Daniel Dayan (eds), Owning the Olympics: Narratives of the New China." Information, Communication & Society 11, no. 8 (December 2008): 1177–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13691180802375912.

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40

Sumiala, Johanna Maaria, and Katja Valaskivi. "Introduction: Toward Hybrid Media Events of Terrorist Violence." Television & New Media 19, no. 2 (December 6, 2017): 128–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1527476417747653.

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This is an introdcution to a special section in the journal in which we examine terrorism as a media event. The introduction reviews the classic works by Elihu Katz and Daniel and adds our own contemporary extension of their theories. It acknowledges the significance of temporality and related mnemonic patterns (Zelizer, Kraidy, in this introduction); networked, relational territorialities (Kraidy, in this introduction); and the discursive politics applied to categorize the violence in question (Hervik; Cui and Rothenbuhler; Price, in this introduction), but it also suggests a more detailed focus on the hybrid dynamics between actors, platforms, and messages which circulate during violent media events. The authors continue the debate on the complex relationship between media, event, and terror by introducing hybridity as yet another angle to this topical discussion.
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41

Boyle, Raymond. "Book Review: Neil Farrington, Daniel Kilvington, John Price and Amir Saeed, Race, racism and sports journalism." Journalism 14, no. 7 (September 12, 2013): 983–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884913480299.

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42

Cherrier, Béatrice. "Making Chicago Price Theory: Friedman–Stigler Correspondence 1945–1957 – J. Daniel Hammond, and Claire H. Hammond." American Journal of Economics and Sociology 67, no. 2 (April 2008): 389–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1536-7150.2008.00577.x.

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43

Rogers-Dillon, Robin. "Barrio Economies: The Price of Poverty by Daniel Dohan University of California Press, 2003, 295 pages." Contexts 4, no. 4 (November 2005): 61–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ctx.2005.4.4.61.

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44

Sporton, Gregory. "The Ballet Called ‘Siegfried’: the Enigmatic Prince of Swan Lake." New Theatre Quarterly 24, no. 3 (August 2008): 281–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x0800033x.

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Swan Lake has a central place in the ballet repertoire. Generally seen as the ballerina's ballet, one of the greatest difficulties in presenting Swan Lake as a credible drama has been the historically marginal role played by Siegfried, the Prince. As choreographer-producers have struggled in the challenge to make the ballet work dramatically, his character has been transformed from onlooker to major influence in a series of reinterpretations of this classic work. In this article Gregory Sporton raises questions about what motivates Siegfried and why that is important for our understanding of the ballet, offering an alternative view of Siegfried's character. Gregory Sporton is Director of the Visualisation Research Unit in the Department of Art at Birmingham Institute of Art and Design. His interest in Swan Lake emerges from his background as a dancer and long periods of research in the former Soviet Union during 2004–2006, when he was able to see at first hand most of the Russian productions referenced in this article. His other published work includes ethnographic accounts of dance and its place in the flow of culture.
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45

Akhavi, Shahrough. "Islamic Political Culture, Democracy, and Human Rights. By Daniel E. Price. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1999. 221p. $59.95." American Political Science Review 94, no. 2 (June 2000): 493–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2586076.

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46

Black, Ian. "Computer-Integrated Manufacturing Handbook. By V. Daniel Hunt (Chapman and Hall, 1989.) [Pp. ix + 322.] Price: £4500." International Journal of Production Research 28, no. 3 (March 1990): 611–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00207549008942743.

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47

Polat, Necati. "Book Review: Daniel W. Conway, Nietzsche and the Political (London: Routledge, 1997, 163 pp., no price given)." Millennium: Journal of International Studies 27, no. 1 (March 1998): 164–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03058298980270010506.

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48

Goff, Moira. "The Celebrated Monsieur Desnoyer, Part 1: 1721–1733." Dance Research 31, no. 1 (May 2013): 67–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/drs.2013.0059.

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George Desnoyer first danced in London in 1721 and 1722, and returned to pursue a successful performing career there between 1731 and 1742. He may have been born around 1700 in Hanover, for he was the son of the dancing master ‘Denoyé’ employed by Georg Ludwig Elector of Hanover (later King George I of England) from at least 1694. 1 Musicians named ‘Desnoyers’ can be found in Paris records from the 1650s. 2 The elder Desnoyer may have been related to Antoine Desnoyers, who was a member of the ‘violons de la Chambre’ at the court of Louis XIV from at least the late 1670s until about 1694. 3 He may also have been the Desnoyers who danced in the 1689 and 1690 revivals at the Paris Opéra of Lully's Atys and Cadmus et Hermione respectively. 4 Whatever his lineage, George Desnoyer was already a skilled exponent of French belle dance style and technique when he first appeared in London, at the Drury Lane Theatre, early in 1721. Desnoyer's father died on 18 April 1721, and he was presumably appointed to succeed him for he left England during the summer of 1722 to become dancing master to George I's grandson Prince Frederick, who had remained in Hanover. His appointment at the electoral court formally ended early in 1730, and the following year Desnoyer returned to London. He was billed as ‘first dancer to the King of Poland’ when he appeared at Drury Lane in late 1731, and for the next few years he divided his time between London, Dresden and Warsaw. Desnoyer's London career lasted until 1742. Over the years, he performed solos, duets and group dances as well as appearing in a variety of afterpieces, and he enjoyed notable partnerships with several leading female dancers. Although virtually all the choreographies he performed are lost, there is much other evidence to shed light on Desnoyer's dancing style and technique. I have documented the lives and careers, as dancing masters, of George Desnoyer and his son Philip elsewhere. 5 In this article I will explore and analyse George Desnoyer's repertoire during his first two periods in London, 1721–1722 and 1731–1733. In a second article, I will look at his repertoire and his dancing partnerships between 1734 and his retirement from the London stage in 1742. 6
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Skoczyński, Michał. "The Difficult alliance. Military cooperation between the ruthenian king Daniel and the Piasts of Mazovia." Open Military Studies 1, no. 1 (January 1, 2020): 104–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/openms-2020-0108.

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Abstract The article presents the military cooperation between the King of Galician-Volhynian Ruthenia, Daniel Romanowicz, and the Dukes of Mazovia, Konrad and his son Siemowit. The alliance, based as a counterweight for the cooperation between the King of Hungary and the Piast princes of Lesser Poland, who were trying to conquer Ruthenia and dominate all Piast principalities in then fragmented Poland. It lasted for several decades from the 1220’s to the 1260’s and was primarly aimed at mutual protection against the invasions of the pagan Yotvingians and supporting each other in armed conflicts. The text contains an analysis of war expeditions, tactics and ways of support that were given by both sides of the allianace. It is a new point of view on this aspect of political strategy of both sides that in some ways defined the regional situation. Ruthenians granted masovian Piasts some mobile and political uncommited support in fight with their relatives in Poland, and also secured their border with the Yotvingians. On the other hand, masovian knights were an additional strike force in ruthenian plundering expeditions to Yotvingia. The research was based on the analysis of preserved historical sources and scientific literature using historical methodology.
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Read, Colin. "Review of Key Risk and Uncertainty Theories Influencing Contemporary Financial Economics." International Journal of Risk and Contingency Management 1, no. 4 (October 2012): 18–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijrcm.2012100102.

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Ironically, the 2008 credit crisis and the subsequent global financial meltdown were brought about by efforts of those whose stated purpose was to manage risk. Somehow, the efforts of financial regulators to manage and contain uncertainty created the greatest downside risk experienced since the Great Depression. At this juncture in financial history, it is purposeful to examine the meaning of risk and uncertainty, how it is priced, the assumptions one makes when one uses market-priced risk hedges, and the degree to which the modern science of financial risk management informs or obfuscates the very nature of risk. This paper performs such a retrospective analysis of key risk theories and how they impact financial markets, through the developments of innovators: Daniel Bernoulli, Carl Friedrich Gauss, Louis Bachelier, Jacob Marschak, Harry Markowitz, William Sharpe, Paul Samuelson, Fischer Black, and Myron Scholes. This paper makes an additional contribution to the literature by identifying unresolved issues that require additional research to improve risk management in financial markets. In particular, this paper concludes that while the author have numerous tools to manage risk, they have few tools to manage uncertainty, the latter of which is where future research should be undertaken.
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