Academic literature on the topic 'St. Pankratiuskirche (Hamburg, Germany)'

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Journal articles on the topic "St. Pankratiuskirche (Hamburg, Germany)"

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Kotin, Igor Yu, and Ekaterina D. Aloyants. "Century of Indology at the University of Hamburg." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Asian and African Studies 13, no. 1 (2021): 91–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2021.106.

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The article is devoted to the development of Indology at the University of Hamburg and analyzes the contribution of Hamburg Indologists to the study of ancient and medieval India and the study of modern languages and literature of India in the discipline’s development in the sister city of St. Petersburg. The authors note that the development of Indology has a long history in Germany and the uniqueness of the Hamburg school is observed. Germany had more than forty Indology departments in the 19th century, much more than Great Britain then had. The teaching of Indian languages in Hamburg began in 1914 in the classrooms of the university’s predecessor, the Hamburg Colonial Institute founded in 1908 and dissolved in 1919, soon after World War I. The University of Hamburg started as new and progressive institution of education in Weimar Germany, and continued for the next hundred years, where the teaching of Sanskrit, studying ancient medieval monuments of Indian literature, philosophy, and religious texts reached a global level thanks to outstanding Indologists, such as Walter Schubring, Ludwig Alsdorf, Albrecht Welzer, and Lambert Schmithausen. The article also considers the contribution to the development of Indology in Hamburg by current Professors Eva Wilden, Michael Zimmermann, Harunaga Isaacson et al. Thanks to the activities of these professors and their colleagues from Russia and India such as Tatiana Iosifovna and Ram Prasad Bhatta, the study and teaching of the languages and cultures of India within the framework of the Center for Culture and History of India and Tibet of the Institute of Asia and Africa now includes the study of Tamil language and literature as well as North Indian languages and literature.
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Budrina, E. V., E. V. Kirillova, and I. S. Rykova. "Megapolis Transport Flow Management by Implementing Dedicated Bands for Public Transport (In Russ.)." Economics. Law. Innovaion, no. 4 (December 30, 2021): 26–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.17586/2713-1874-2021-4-26-34.

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The article presents the results of a study of the experience and effectiveness of the introduction of dedicated lanes for public transport as a method of dealing with congestion on the roads of large cities. The problem of excessive motorization is considered. The experience and effectiveness of the introduction of lanes in such cities of the world as Chicago (USA), Nashville (USA), Hamburg (Germany), Paris (France), Wiesbaden (Germany), London (England), Moscow (USSR, Russia), St. Petersburg (Russia).The analysis is carried out and the features of the arrangement of the strips are highlighted. The main barriers to the use of dedicated lanes as a method for managing traffic flows in megacities are identified and evaluated. With the help of an expert survey, the most significant of them for Russia were identified, and methods for overcoming barriers or minimizing their impact were proposed.
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Splettstoesser, John, and Beezie Drake Splettstoesser. "The first transit of the Northwest Passage by Russian icebreaker." Polar Record 29, no. 169 (April 1993): 148. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247400023615.

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In a voyage beginning 24 July in Ulsan, South Korea, and ending i n St Petersburg, Russia, on 21 September 1992, the icebreaker Kapitan Khlebnikov successfully completed an unassisted transit of the Northwest Passage, from Bering Strait to the North Atlantic Ocean. The ship was chartered jointly by Polar Schiffahrts-Consulting, Hamburg, Germany; Blyth and Company Travel, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and D.G. Wells Marine Ltd, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was marketed for tourists, some of whom traveled the entire distance of 14,120 nautical miles [26,150 km]. Khlebnikov was the fifty-third vessel to complete the Northwest Passage since Roald Amundsen first accomplished it in 1906 (Pullen and Swithinbank 1991, and confirmed by the office of Coast Guard Northern, Ottawa, Canada).
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Wilmer, S. E. "Cultural Encounters in Modern Productions of Greek Tragedy." Nordic Theatre Studies 28, no. 1 (June 22, 2016): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/nts.v28i1.23969.

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The exiled character in need of asylum is a recurrent theme in ancient Greek tragedy. In many of these plays, we see uprooted and homeless persons seeking sanctuary, and for the ancient Greeks, hospitality was an important issue. Many of these plays have been updated to comment on the current social and political conditions of refugees and often reflect on the notion of hospitality, something which both Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida considered to be fundamental to ethics. Recently there has been a series of demonstrations and occupations of public spaces by asylum seekers that has gained considerable news coverage. In Austria a group of about sixty refugees (from the Afghanistan-Pakistan border area) occupied the famous Votiv church in the middle of Vienna in 2012 and went on hunger strike. In Germany a large group of asylum seekers marched from various parts of the country to Berlin where they occupied the square at the Brandenburg Gate before being allowed to establish a tent community in Kreuzberg. In Hamburg a group of 80 asylum seekers who came to Germany via Lampedusa found refuge in St Pauli church, and it was there that Nicholas Stemann presented a first reading of Elfriede Jelinkek’s play Die Schutzbefohlenen in September 2013. More recently right-wing groups have mounted weekly marches through Dresden to call for a halt to immigration, and these have been contested by simultaneous counter-demonstrations in favour of immigrants and refugees. In this paper I will consider several adaptations of Greek tragedy that highlight cultural encounters between the local population and those arriving from abroad who are looking for asylum. In particular I will examine Stemann’s production that has been running at the Thalia Theater in Hamburg since September 2014, and features asylum seekers from Lampedusa on stage who beg the audience for the right to remain in Germany.
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Silver, Hilary. "Book Reviews." German Politics and Society 37, no. 1 (June 1, 2019): 66–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/gps.2019.370104.

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Rafaela Dancygier, Dilemmas of Inclusion: Muslims in European Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017) Reviewed by Hilary Silver, Sociology, George Washington University Thomas Großbölting, Losing Heaven: Religion in Germany since 1945; translated by Alex Skinner (New York: Berghahn Books, 2017. Reviewed by Jeffrey Luppes, World Languages, Indiana University South Bend Hans Vorländer, Maik Herold, and Steven Schäller, PEGIDA and New Right-Wing Populism In Germany (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018) Reviewed by Joyce Mushaben, Political Science, University of Missouri St. Louis Kara L. Ritzheimer, “Trash,” Censorship, and National Identity in Early Twentieth-Century Germany (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016) Reviewed by Ambika Natarajan, History, Philosophy, and Religion, Oregon State University Anna Saunders, Memorializing the GDR: Monuments and Memory After 1989 (New York: Berghahn Books, 2018) Reviewed by Jeffrey Luppes, World Languages, Indiana University South Bend Desmond Dinan, Neill Nugent and William E. Paterson, eds., The European Union in Crisis (London: Palgrave, 2017) Reviewed by Helge F. Jani, Hamburg, Germany Noah Benezra Strote, Lions and Lambs: Conflict in Weimar and the Creation of Post-Nazi Germany (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017). Reviewed by Darren O’Byrne, History, University of Cambridge Chunjie Zhang, Transculturality and German Discourse in the Age of European Colonialism (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2017) Reviewed by Christopher Thomas Goodwin, History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Marcel Fratzscher, The Germany Illusion: Between Economic Euphoria and Despair (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018). Reviewed by Stephen J. Silvia, International Relations, American University
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Romashina, Ekaterina Yu. "Text and Image: Conversation in Different Languages (Oscar Pletsch’s Book Graphics in Germany, England, and Russia)." Tekst. Kniga. Knigoizdanie, no. 24 (2020): 113–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/23062061/24/6.

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In the second half of the 19th century, children’s picture books became a mass phenomenon in European book publishing practice. The development of printing technology, the formation of psychology as scientific knowledge, the improvement of methods of educational interaction between adults and children led to the appearance of children’s books not only for reading them aloud, but also for looking at pictures in them. However, the connections between the textual and visual narratives of books were not yet strong. Often, for economic reasons, the same illustrations were used in combination with different texts, and translations and reprints added discrepancies. In the article, this is illustrated by materials from the analysis of German, Russian, and English editions with drawings by Oscar Pletsch: Die Kinderstube (Hamburg, 1860), Gute Freundschaft (Berlin, 1865), Kleines Volk (Berlin, 1865), Allerlei Schnik-Schnak (Leipzig, 1866); Malen’kie Lyudi (St. Petersburg, 1869), Tesnaya Druzhba (St. Petersburg, 1869), Pervye Shagi Zhizni (St. Petersburg, 187?), Yolka (St. Petersburg, 1874); Child- Land (London, 1873). The plots Pletsch created are compared with the texts in three languages. As a result of the analysis, significant differences between the texts and the visual range of the editions were revealed. The article identifies the options of transforming meanings and interpreting drawings, reveals the tendency of their use for didactic purposes. The album Gute Freundschaft (initially containing only short captions to the drawings) acquired detailed poetic texts—monologues or dialogues of depicted children—in the Russian translation. The English publisher “scattered” the visual series: in Child-Land, the same drawings were placed randomly and mixed with other illustrations without observing any logic. The London edition contained prosaic texts, many of which did not coincide in meaning with the storyline of the original. The author (translator) sometimes interpreted the images “taken out of context” in a neutral way and sometimes added other (including sharply negative) characteristics to children’s postures, gestures, and movements. In a number of cases, the texts emotionally “loaded” the images in a completely different way than the artist conceived: a gesture of greeting turned into a threat, expectation turned into boredom, and so on. It should be stressed that the Russian publisher Mauritius Wolf treated the German originals more carefully than his English colleagues from S.W. Partridge & C°. The analysis of publications and the comparison of their verbal and visual plots allowed identifying the nature of the interrelation of text and image as a “conversation in different languages”. The reason for the “discord” could be translation problems, general changes in the functional tasks of the publication (for example, towards a didactic purpose), the mismatch of cultural codes in the system of different European languages, and technical difficulties in printing. All this led to the emergence of new senses and meanings—sometimes unexpected, but always important, interesting and never accidental.
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Durukan, Sebahat Melike, Burak Gümüştaş, and Soner Şişmanoğlu. "Shear bond strength of composite to demineralized enamel conditioned with resin infiltration." International Dental Research 12, Suppl. 1 (December 31, 2022): 114–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5577/intdentres.441.

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Aim: The aim of this in vitro study was to evaluate the influence of resin infiltration on bond-strength of composite resin to demineralized enamel. Methodology: Thirty bovine incisors were used in this study. Buccal enamel surfaces of bovine incisors were wet polished and then were divided into three groups: sound enamel; demineralized enamel; demineralized enamel infiltrated with a low-viscosity resin (ICON, DMG, Hamburg, Germany). After acid-etching with 37% phosphoric acid for 20 seconds, a two-step, total-etch adhesive (Single Bond 2, 3M ESPE, St. Paul, MN, USA) was applied using a microbrush for 20 seconds, followed by gentle air-drying for 5 seconds. The adhesive was light-cured for 10 seconds. Following the adhesive application, flowable composite resin (Filtek Supreme Flowable, 3M ESPE, St. Paul, MN, USA) was gently placed into a microtubule and was photopolymerized using an LED curing unit (Elipar Deep Cure; 3M ESPE, St. Paul, MN, USA). The microshear bond strength (µSBS) tests were performed using a microshear testing machine at a cross-head speed of 0.5 mm/min. One-way ANOVA and Bonferroni tests were used to analyze the data (5%). Results: Significant differences were found according to the ANOVA (p < 0.05). Pair-wise comparison results of µSBS (mean ± SD) were: sound enamel (25.16 ± 2.3); demineralized enamel (17.93 ± 2.1); demineralized enamel infiltrated with a low-viscosity resin (28.51 ± 3.76). Conclusion: Resin infiltration applied to demineralized enamel before composite application increased the bond strength. No difference was found in the bond strength values obtained for sound enamel and resin infiltrated enamel. How to cite this article: Durukan SM, Gümüştaş B, Şişmanoğlu S. Shear bond strength of composite to demineralized enamel conditioned with resin infiltration. Int Dent Res 2022;12(Suppl.1):114-19. https://doi.org/10.5577/intdentres.441 Linguistic Revision: The English in this manuscript has been checked by at least two professional editors, both native speakers of English.
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Jetoo, Savitri. "Experimentalist Governance to Foster Cooperation in the Baltic Sea Region: A Focus on the Turku Process." Sustainability 10, no. 8 (July 31, 2018): 2685. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10082685.

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The Baltic Sea is one of the most severely polluted water bodies on earth, with stressors resulting from anthropogenic pressures of 85 million inhabitants in nine coastal countries. All are members of the European Union (EU) with the exception of Russia. This exception poses challenges for governing the Sea, as Russia is excluded as a member country from EU Baltic Sea governing policies, such as the EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region (EUSBSR). This added complexity has led to the emergence of new forms of cooperation to include Russia in the governing process. One such initiative is the Turku process, an initiative by the cities of Turku (Finland), Hamburg (Germany), and St. Petersburg (Russia) to promote cooperation, especially with Russian partners. Since its emergence in 2010, there has been no study of it in the literature. This study aims to bridge this gap by analyzing the history and evolution of the Turku process under the lens of experimentalist governance. It aims to illustrate the experimentalist governance perspective through the Turku process and to present the theoretical foundations of the concept. It does the former through key informant interviews with main actors in the Turku Process and the latter with the help of the literature on experimentalist governance. This study adds to the dialogue on governance in an especially challenging time when the Ukraine crisis has negatively impacted EU–Russia relations.
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Fehse, Boris, Nicolaus Kröger, Carol Stocking, and Axel Zander. "In memory of Professor Rolf Neth October 6, 1926 – March 17, 2020." Cellular Therapy and Transplantation 9, no. 2 (July 30, 2020): 83–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.18620/ctt-1866-8836-2020-9-2-83-84.

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With great sadness, we learned of the passing of Professor Dr. med. Rolf-Dietmar Neth, the founder of the Wilsede meeting, on March 17, 2020, aged 93 in his home town Buchholz near Wilsede/Lüneburger Heide. Rolf Neth was born 6.10.1926. After the 2nd World War, Rolf Neth studied Medicine from 1949 to 1955 at the University of Göttingen. Then he was at the Max-Planck-Institut für Experimentelle Medizin (University Göttingen, 1956-1957), and promoted his skills in clinical and experimental hematology in St. George Hospital (1958-1959) in Hamburg. From 1960, his activity was connected with the pediatric clinics of Hamburg University where he became a Professor at the Children Hospital in 1972. From 1970 to 1980, Rolf Neth was occupied implementing new laboratory diagnostic approaches in the booming field of clinical hematology. Blood cancer treatment was developed, due to novel drugs invented to combat leukemic cells and rescue the small patients which 10-20 years ago had only zero chance to survive. Histo- and immunochemical diagnostics became routine tests for evaluation of clinical forms of leukemias and efficiency of their therapy. Since 1982, he coordinated laboratory hematology at the Department of Clinical Chemistry, University Hamburg, until retirement in 1992. Along with contribution to clinical laboratory science, Professor Neth, over 1973 to 2002, arranged a series of famous Wilsede Meetings "Modern Trends in Human Leukemia" dedicated to leukemia research and treatment. Rolf Neth and Robert Gallo decided time and topic of the meeting, and Rolf Neth proposed a place, i.e., a lonely village in the Luneburg heath, not far from his home. Hence, Leukemia and Viruses was selected as a specific topic for a meeting in Germany, because it was timely for convergence between clinical medicine and cancer biology. Rolf Neth organized the first Wilsede meetings himself for more than 20 years, until he passed these efforts to Wolfram Ostertag and Axel Zander. In the late 1990s, Carol Stocking and Boris Fehse took on this responsibility. Over last years, Wilsede meetings were arranged by Nicolaus Kröger and Boris Fehse. And as long as his health permitted, Rolf Neth came along to see how his baby was doing. He participated and assisted at any stage of the next meeting. We are thankful to have had the privilege of knowing and cooperating with Rolf Neth and to cherish his legacy by keeping the Wilsede tradition alive. He was married with Hanne-Lore Cohrs, 8.11. 1958, survived by his wife of 62 years Hanne-Lore, and four sons and several grandchildren.
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Wiedermann, Gotthelf. "Alexander Alesius' Lectures on the Psalms at Cambridge, 1536." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 37, no. 1 (January 1986): 15–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046900031894.

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In the summer of 1535 Anglo-German relatios assumed a new dimension. Faced with the prospect of a Catholic alliance on the continent and the possibility of a general council in the near future, Henry VIII was forced to consider more seriously than ever before a defensive alliance with the German Protestants. In August of that year, while Robert Barnes was approaching Wittenberg via Hamburg, commissioned by Henry both to prevent Melanchthon's rumoured visit to France and to make preparations for a full diplomatic mission to the princes of Lutheran Germany, Philip Melanchthon sent copies of the latest edition of his Loci Communes to the king of England, to whom they had been dedicated. The envoy on this mission was the Scottish Augustinian, Alexander Alesius, who was lecturing at the University of Wittenberg at that time. Alesius had received his own university education in St Andrews. Upon his graduation in 1515, he had entered the Augustinian priory there and subsequently proceeded to the study of theology. As a successful student of scholastic theology he had felt himself called to refute Lutheran theology as soon as it began to be debated in Scotland. In February 1528 he was commissioned to bring about the recantation of Patrick Hamilton, but the discussions with this first martyr of the Scottish Reformation as well as the latter's steadfast death at the stake led to a profound questioning of his own convictions. In the following year Alesius emerged as a severe critic ofthe old Church, for which he paid dearly by persecution and imprisonment. After an adventurous escape from St Andrews and months of travelling he finally reached Wittenburg, where he was inscribed in the faculty of arts in October 1532. So far very litde is known about Alesius' activities in Wittenberg. Yet there are two reasons why some elucidation of his academic activities and theological development during his three years at Wittenberg is highly desirable. First, it would be surprising indeed if his first experiences at this university, and especially the direct contact with Luther and Melanchthon, had not left a mark on his thought and career as a reformer. Second, his close friendship with the English reformers and his involvement in the doctrinal debates in England during the late 1530s suggests that Alesius formed an important link between the Reformation in England and in Germany.
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Books on the topic "St. Pankratiuskirche (Hamburg, Germany)"

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photographer, Ulich Beate, and Vogel, Harald, writer of foreword, eds. Mein Schall aufs Ewig weist: Die Bildprogramme an Orgelemporen und Kirchenausstattungen in der St. Bartholomäuskirche Golzwarden und der St. Pankratiuskirche Hamburg-Neuenfelde im Kontext der Orgeln von Arp Schnitger : eine kunsthistorische sowie theologie- und frömmigkeitsgeschichtliche Studie der norddeutschen lutherischen Orgelkultur des späten Barock am Beispiel Arp Schnitgers. Oldenburg: Isensee Verlag, 2017.

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Wölber, Hans-Otto. St. Nikolai: Wegzeichen Hamburgs. Hamburg: Christians, 1989.

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Bürgerverein, St Georg (Sankt Georg Hamburg Germany). St. Georg lebt!: 125 Jahre Bürgerverein St. Georg : ein Lese-Bilder-Buch. Hamburg: VSA, 2005.

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Eppendorfer, Hans. Neue Szenen aus St. Pauli. München: Knaur, 1994.

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Brunzema, Manya. Der Lukasaltar in St. Jacobi zu Hamburg. Hamburg: Christians Verlag, 1997.

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Schleswig-Holstein, Ingeborg zu. Weg ins Licht: Bild- und Klangkompositionen für St. Katharinen in Hamburg. Hamburg: Christians, 1988.

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Nesch, Rolf. Rolf Nesch, "St. Pauli" und "Hamburger Brücken". Hamburg: Ellert & Richter, 1989.

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Kelber, Rudolf. Rettet die Arp-Schnitger-Orgel in Hamburg. Hamburg: Stiftung St. Jacobus, Geschäftsstelle Arp-Schnitger-Orgel, 1986.

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Eckart, Klessmann, Zimmermann Katrin, and Meyer-Tönnesmann Carsten, eds. 50 Jahre St. Michaelis-Chor, 1945-1995. Hamburg: St. Michaelis-Chor, 1995.

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Andrist, Marilen. Das St. Pauli-Theater: 150 Jahre Volkstheater am Spielbudenplatz. Hamburg: Galgenberg, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "St. Pankratiuskirche (Hamburg, Germany)"

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Sanders, Andrew. "Post—War and Post—Modern Literature." In The Short Oxford History of English Literature, 577–640. Oxford University PressOxford, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198711575.003.0011.

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Abstract When the Second World War ended in Europe in the summer of 1945, much of Britain was in ruins. Quite literally in ruins. Its devastated industrial cities were not exactly the heaps of rubble that appalled post-war visitors to Germany (Stephen Spender, for one, spoke of the ‘astonishing and total change, that incalculable shift from a soaring to a sinking motion which distinguishes a dead body’ that disturbed him when revisiting Hamburg), but British cities as diverse in character as Glasgow, Coventry, Canterbury, Bristol, Exeter, and Portsmouth had been torn apart by bombs. London, in particular, had been universally pitted and scarred and was now marked by absences where familiar landmarks had once stood. Whole districts were in ruins and most streets somehow bore the signs of blast, shrapnel, fire-bombs, or high explosives. Although its greater monuments, such as St Paul’s, had survived largely intact, the cathedral itself now rose hauntingly and, to some imaginative observers, resolutely above the shells of churches and blasted office buildings. This broken London of bricks, façades, and dangerously exposed basements can now be only recognized from paintings and photographs and from the cinematic exploitation of bomb-sites in films such as the two early comedies made at the famous Ealing Studios, Charles Crichton’s rowdy Hue and Cry (1947) and Harry Cornelius’s farce Passport to Pimlico (1949).
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