Littérature scientifique sur le sujet « Privateering – history – 18th century »

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Articles de revues sur le sujet "Privateering – history – 18th century"

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Butel, Paul, et François Crouzet. « Empire and Economic Growth : the Case of 18th Century France ». Revista de Historia Económica / Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History 16, no 1 (mars 1998) : 177–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0212610900007096.

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Among the colonial powers of the early modern period, France was the last to emerge. Although, the French had not abstained from the exploration of fhe New World in the 16th century: G. de Verrazano discovered the site of New York (1524), during a voyage sponsored by King Francis I; Jacques Cartier sailed up the St. Lawrence to Quebec and Montreal (1535). From the early 16th century, many ships from ports such as Dieppe, St. Malo, La Rochelle, went on privateering and or trading expeditions to the Guinea coast, to Brazil, to the Caribbean, to the Spanish Main. Many French boats did fish off Newfoundland. Some traded in furs on the near-by Continent. Moreover, during the 16th century, sporadic attempts were made to establish French settlements in «Equinoctial France» (Brazil), in Florida, in modern Canada, but they failed utterly. Undoubtedly, foreign wars against the Habsburgs, during the first half of the 16th and of the 17th centuries, civil «wars of religion» during the second half of the 16th century, political disorders like the blockade of La Rochelle or the Fronde during the first part of the 17th century, absorbed the attention and resources of French rulers, despite some ambitious projects, like those of Richelieu, for overseas trade. As for the port cities they tried to trade overseas but they were isolated and not strong enough (specially during die wars of religion) to create «colonies». Some small companies, which had been started in 1601 and 1604, to trade with the East Indies, were very short-lived, and the French did not engage seriously in Asian trade before 1664.
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Starkey, David J. « Eighteenth-Century Privateering Enterprise ». International Journal of Maritime History 1, no 2 (décembre 1989) : 279–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/084387148900100213.

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Parmentier, Jan. « A touch of Ireland : Migrants and migrations in and to Ostend, Bruges and Dunkirk in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries ». International Journal of Maritime History 27, no 4 (novembre 2015) : 662–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0843871415610280.

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Mercantile activities, privateering and fishing in the ports of Ostend, Bruges and Dunkirk during the 17th and 18th centuries were often in the hands of migrants. Irish entrepreneurs, no longer welcome in their occupied home country, searched for opportunities elsewhere in maritime trade and, during war-time, in privateering. In both enterprises they proved very successful and developed international mercantile networks. In the wake of this emerging business, sailors from both sides of the French-Austrian border settled in these ports or migrated between Ostend, Bruges and Dunkirk to wherever the economic climate seemed most promising. In this article we analyse these waves of migration which created distinctive communities in Ostend, Bruges and Dunkirk, connecting together the economic and social lives of these ports for more than two centuries.
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Jamieson, Alan G., et David J. Starkey. « British Privateering Enterprise in the Eighteenth Century. » Economic History Review 44, no 4 (novembre 1991) : 727. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2597814.

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Swanson, Carl E. « Book Review : The French War on Trade : Privateering 1793–1813, British Privateering Enterprise in the Eighteenth Century, “Wealth and Honour“ : Portsmouth during the Golden Age of Privateering 1775–1815 ». International Journal of Maritime History 3, no 1 (juin 1991) : 250–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/084387149100300125.

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Carroll, Jerome. « William James and 18th-century anthropology ». History of the Human Sciences 31, no 3 (9 mai 2018) : 3–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0952695118764060.

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This article discusses the common ground between William James and the tradition of philosophical anthropology. Recent commentators on this overlap have characterised philosophical anthropology as combining science (in particular biology and medicine) and Kantian teleology, for instance in Kant’s seminal definition of anthropology as being concerned with what the human being makes of itself, as distinct from what attributes it is given by nature. This article registers the tension between Kantian thinking, which reckons to ground experience in a priori categories, and William James’s psychology, which begins and ends with experience. It explores overlap between James’s approach and the characteristic holism of 18th-century philosophical anthropology, which centres on the idea of understanding and analysing the human as a whole, and presents the main anthropological elements of James’s position, namely his antipathy to separation, his concerns about the binomial terms of traditional philosophy, his preference for experience over substances, his sense that this holist doctrine of experience shows a way out of sterile impasses, a preference for description over causation, and scepticism. It then goes on to register the common ground with key ideas in the work of anthropologists from around 1800, along with some references to anthropologists who come in James’s wake, in particular Max Scheler and Arnold Gehlen, in order to reconceptualise the connection between James’s ideas and the tradition of anthropological thinking in German letters since the late 18th-century, beyond its characterisation as a combination of scientific positivism and teleology.
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Marker, Gary. « The Ambiguities of the 18th Century ». Kritika : Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2, no 2 (2001) : 241–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/kri.2008.0094.

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Rjéoutski, Vladislav. « Key Concepts in 18th-Century Russia ». Kritika : Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 21, no 2 (2020) : 319–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/kri.2020.0014.

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Speck, W. A. « Will the Real 18th Century stand up ? » Historical Journal 34, no 1 (mars 1991) : 203–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x00014011.

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Hewson, John. « An 18th-century Missionary Grammarian ». Historiographia Linguistica 21, no 1-2 (1 janvier 1994) : 65–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hl.21.1-2.04hew.

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Summary Until the publication of the Micmac grammar of Father Pacifique (1939, 1990), the only published grammar of Micmac was that of Father Pierre-Antoine Maillard (c. 1710–1762), which although it was written early in the 18th century, was not published until the middle of the 19th century (1864). This work has formed the basis of all subsequent linguistic analysis of Micmac, since the missionary priests used it to help them learn the language, and Father Pacifique, in his 1939 grammar (which is today used as a handbook by those learning the language) acknowledges his profound debt to his distinguished predecessor.
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Thèses sur le sujet "Privateering – history – 18th century"

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Macdonald, Simon James Stuart. « British communities in late eighteenth-century Paris ». Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.609294.

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Riordan, Michael Benjamin. « Mysticism and prophecy in Scotland in the long eighteenth century ». Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2015. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.709304.

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Sinclair, Alistair John. « The emergence of philosophical inquiry in 18th century Scotland ». Thesis, University of Glasgow, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.284694.

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Brito, Nadia Francisca. « Merchants of Curacao in the early 18th century ». W&M ScholarWorks, 1989. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539625499.

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LEDERLE, Julia Christine. « Mission und Ökonomie der Jesuiten in Indien : Intermediäres Handeln im 18. Jahrhundert am Beispiel der Malabar - Provinz ». Doctoral thesis, European University Institute, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/10406.

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Defence date: 21 September 2007
Examining Board: Prof. Dr. Peter Becker, University of Linz (EUI) ; Prof. em. Dr. Dietmar Rothermund, (University of Heidelberg) ; Prof. Dr. Martin van Gelderen, (EUI) ; Prof. Pius Malekandathil (University of Sanskrit, Delhi)
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digital archive of EUI PhD theses
no abstract available
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Dwyer, John. « Virtuous discourse : sensibility and community in late eighteenth-century Scotland ». Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/25786.

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This study explores the moral characteristics of late eighteenth-century Scottish culture in order to ascertain both its specific nature and its contribution to modern consciousness. It argues that, while the language of moral discourse in that socio-economic environment remained in large part traditional, containing aspects from both neo-Stoicism and classical humanism, it also incorporated and helped to develop an explicitly modern conceptual network. The language of sensibility as discussed by Adam Smith and adapted by practical Scottish moralists, played a key role in the Scottish assessment of appropriate ethical behaviour In a complex society. The contribution of enlightened Scottish moralists to the language and literature of sensibility has been virtually overlooked, with a corresponding impoverishment of our understanding of some of the most important eighteenth-century social and cultural developments. Both literary scholars and social historians have made the mistake of equating eighteenth century sensibility with the growth of individualism and romanticism. The Scottish contribution to sensibility cannot be appreciated in such terms, but needs to be examined in relation to the stress that its practitioners placed upon man's social nature and the integrity of the moral community. Scottish moralists believed that their traditional ethical community was threatened by the increased selfishness, disparateness, and mobility of an imperial and commercial British society. They turned to the cultivation of the moral sentiments as a primary mechanism for moral preservation and regeneration in a cold and indifferent modern world. What is more their discussion of this cultivation related in significant ways to the development of new perspectives on adolescence, private and domestic life, the concept of the feminine and the literary form of the novel. Scottish moralists made a contribution to sentimental discourse which has been almost completely overlooked. Henry Mackenzie, Hugh Blair and James Fordyce were among the most popular authors of the century and their discussion of the family, the community, education, the young and the conjugal relationship was not only influential per se but also reflected a particularly Scottish moral discourse which stressed the concept of sociability and evidenced concern about the survival of the moral community in a modern society. To the extent that literary scholars and historians have ignored or misread their works, they have obscured rather than enlightened eighteenth-century culture and its relationship with the social base.
Arts, Faculty of
History, Department of
Graduate
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Hübner, Regina Beate. « State medicine and the state of medicine in Tokugawa, Japan : Kōkei saikyūhō (1791), an emergency handbook initiated by the Bakufu ». Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2015. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.708725.

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Stubbs, Tristan Michael Cormac. « The plantation overseers of eighteenth-century Virginia, South Carolina and Georgia ». Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.608227.

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Nadeau, Martin. « Theatre et esprit public : le role du Theatre-Italien dans la culture politique parisienne a l'ere des revolutions (1770-1799) ». Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=37795.

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Taking as a case study the Theatre-Italien, here considered both as a particular theatrical practice and as a specific stage in Paris---one of the most popular at the time---this dissertation asks what role this theatre played in the novel competition of discourses which characterized political culture in the era of Revolutions. All too often, historians have overestimated print culture as the main medium through which discourses were produced in the eighteenth century, and this despite the fact that theatre played a fundamental role in the public life of this period. Furthermore, when theatre is studied, historians emphasize too often the written form of the plays.
The dissertation's structure seeks to underline the specificity of the cultural practice represented by the theatre. The discrepancies between the meaning of a play written by a particular author and the same play as it is performed on stage are emphasized. Political messages emerge out of the language of the actors and actresses without any possibility to control them, so that the players become, in effect, co-authors of the play. Similarly, the variety of the nature of the audience and the way in which it becomes at once judge, co-author and co-actor make the public, neither intangible nor invisible, but simply gathered, a crucial feature of this cultural practice which allows us to argue that theatre was actually a very bad instrument of propaganda. Instead, theatre can be seen at the time to be a public scene of immediate political debate. The conflicting opinions expressed there turn theatre not into the minor of political reality intended by various regimes confronted to the diversity of the polity---what some people have called "a school for the people"---but rather as the mirror of the reality experienced by a large number of Parisians at the time. It is in this sense that we relate the theatrical practices studied with the concept of public spirit, expressing the people's understanding of the general interest, instead of that of public opinion, expressing the unified message imposed by a dominant political group.
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Baker, Daniel Alexander. « Technologies of encounter : exhibition-making and the 18th century South Pacific ». Thesis, University of the Arts London, 2018. http://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/13703/.

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Between 1768 and 1780 Captain James Cook led three epic voyages from Britain into the Pacific Ocean, where he and his fellow explorers- artists, naturalists, philosophers and sailors, were to encounter societies and cultures of extraordinary diversity. These 18th Century South Pacific encounters were rich with performance, trade and exchange; but they would lead to the dramatic and violent transformation of the region through colonisation, settlement, exploitation and disease. Since those initial encounters, museums in Britain have become home to the images and artefacts produced and collected in the South Pacific; and they are now primary sites for the representation of the original voyages and their legacies. This representation most often takes the form of exhibitions and displays that in turn choreograph and produce new encounters with the past, in the present. Drawing on Alfred Gell's term 'technologies of enchantment' my practice reconceives the structures of exhibitions as 'technologies of encounter': exploring how they might be reconfigured to produce new kinds of encounter. Through reflexive practice I critically engage with museums as sites of encounters, whilst re-imagining the exhibition as a creative form. The research submission takes the form of an exhibition: an archive of materials from the practice, interwoven with a reflective dialogue in text. The thesis progresses through a series of exhibition encounters, each of which explores a different approach to technologies of encounter, from surrealist collage (Cannibal Dog Museum) and critical reflexivity (The Hidden Hand), to a conversational mode (Modernity's Candle and the Ways of the Pathless Deep).
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Livres sur le sujet "Privateering – history – 18th century"

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British privateering enterprise in the eighteenth century. Exeter, Devon : University of Exeter Press, 1990.

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Kalman, Bobbie. 18th century clothing. New York : Crabtree Pub. Co., 1993.

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Kalman, Bobbie. 18th century clothing. New York : Crabtree Pub. Co., 1993.

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18th century stone buildings. Reykjavík : Salka, 2013.

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The long 18th century. London : Arnold, 2004.

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18th century embroidery techniques. Lewes [England] : Guild of Master Craftsman, 2012.

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Vivian, Uı́bh Eachach, et Féile Zozimus (1st : 1991 : Dublin, Ireland), dir. 18th/19th century Dublin. Baile Átha Cliath : Gael-Linn, 1992.

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Warfare in the 18th century. Austin, TX : Raintree Steck-Vaughn, 1999.

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Robertazzi, Chiara. Africa : 8th to 18th century. Austin, Tex : Raintree Steck-Vaughn, 1997.

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Kerry, Sue. Late 18th & 19th century textiles. Easthampton, MA : Francesca Galloway in association with the Antique Collectors' Club, 2007.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "Privateering – history – 18th century"

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Oats, Joclyn M. « 18th century ». Dans An Illustrated Guide to Furniture History, 214–37. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2021. : Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367808297-11.

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Stearns, Peter N. « A Late-18th-Century Transition ». Dans Globalization in World History, 103–12. 4e éd. New York : Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003439615-9.

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Aginaga, J., A. Claver, J. M. Pintor et X. Iriarte. « The Yeregui Family (18th–Twentieth Century) ». Dans History of Mechanism and Machine Science, 359–79. Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-31075-1_15.

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Caffiero, Marina. « The Turning Point of the 18th Century ». Dans The History of the Jews in Early Modern Italy, 137–62. London : Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003188445-11.

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Jaecks, Duane H. « Developments in 18th Century Optics and Early Instrumentation ». Dans The History and Preservation of Chemical Instrumentation, 51–65. Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-4690-3_6.

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Carocci, C. F., V. Macca et C. Tocci. « The roots of the 18th century turning point in earthquake-resistant building ». Dans History of Construction Cultures, 623–30. London : CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003173434-185.

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Seris, Jean-Pierre. « Mechanical Models and the Language Sciences in the 18th Century ». Dans Studies in the History of the Language Sciences, 45. Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sihols.74.05ser.

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Chan, Eugene. « The general development of Chinese ophthalmology from its beginnings to the 18th century ». Dans History of Ophthalmology 1, 177–84. Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1307-3_19.

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Franckowiak, Rémi. « Jean Hellot and 18th Century Chemistry at the Service of the State ». Dans History of Mechanism and Machine Science, 179–93. Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9645-3_10.

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Golvers, Noël. « The Jesuits as translators between Europe and China (17th–18th century) ». Dans Studies in the History of the Language Sciences, 101–28. Amsterdam : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sihols.130.03gol.

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Actes de conférences sur le sujet "Privateering – history – 18th century"

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Markovic, Ivancica. « AGRICULTURAL CHANGES IN SLAVONIA DURING 18TH CENTURY ». Dans SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s10.055.

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Gluchman, Vasil. « ETHICS AND EDUCATION IN THE SLOVAK HISTORY OF THE 18TH CENTURY ». Dans 4th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference on Social Sciences and Arts SGEM2017. STEF92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2017/22/s09.062.

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Calvo Serrano, Julio, Carlos Malagón Luesma, Jorge Bezares Batista, Jesús Rodríguez Bulnes et Adelaida Martín Martín. « La Torre de Martil, Tetuán, Marruecos ». Dans FORTMED2024 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Valencia : Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2024.2024.17910.

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Tetuan, located on the slopes of Mount Dersa, on the banks of the Martil (Martin) River, did not assume an important urban role until after the fall of Ceuta, located 60 km away, sometimes in the hands of Castilian troops and others of the Portuguese. Its location 10 km from the sea, avoided any maritime attack but, through shallow draft boats, the Martil River, made communication with the Mediterranean possible, assuming the function of naval base of the kingdom of Fez in the Strait. Historically, the economy of Tetuan was constituted by the tributes received in the name of the sultan among the tribes of the district, maritime trade with other ports of Barbary, and above all the product of privateering, ransoms of Christian captives and slave trade. The latter led to the development of simple port infrastructures at the mouth of the Martil River, as well as to the growth of a small coastal settlement. It would be at the beginning of the 18th century when privateering activity definitively gave way to maritime trade with the peninsula and British settlements in the Mediterranean. It was under the mandate of Caid Ahmad al-Riffi in 1720 when construction took place at its mouth, of Martil Tower. It is an artillery tower without passage holes at ground level, which can be accessed by a portable staircase to the first floor and is crowned by three watchtowers and a turret. This work aims to lay the foundations for its rehabilitation. The working methodology is based on photogrammetric plans as a basis for functional and constructive analysis, its materials, and a mapping of its most significant lesions, as well as an important search for information, especially graphic, that allows establishing its original state and its evolution over time.
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Zhuravel, Olga D. « From the history of Russian journalism : rhetorical strategies of the 18th century Old Believer leader Andrei Denisov ». Dans Communication and Cultural Studies : History and Modernity. Novosibirsk State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/978-5-4437-1258-1-28-32.

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Bierganns, Morten. « The Creative Process in 18th Century Poetics : A Prologue to Psychological Conceptualisations of the 20th Century ». Dans 14th European Conference on Creativity in Innovation. AIJR Publisher, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21467/proceedings.154.1.

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Since Rhodes’ 4P model, the creative process has been of great interest to the psychology of creativity. Although most psychologists were not aware of it, their conceptions of the creative process on a structural level reiterated those of 18th century poetics. To demonstrate this, the paper methodologically draws on the analytical tools of historical semantics. It proposes to broaden our approach to the creative process by studying poetic views of the past and encourages practitioners to consult these aesthetic texts as inspiration for the development of creativity techniques. Above all, the paper sees itself as a contribution to understanding the history of a concept that is inscribed in our contemporary culture.
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Stansfield, Billy, et William B. Ouimet. « HISTORY, MAPPING, AND PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF 18TH – 19TH CENTURY RELICT CHARCOAL HEARTHS IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT ». Dans 54th Annual GSA Northeastern Section Meeting - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019ne-328410.

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Kurganov, Nikolai. « Restoration of a storeroom of pottery of the early 18th century from Novaya Ladoga ». Dans Field session of the Institute for History of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences. Institute for the History of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31600/978-5-907053-11-3-2018-8-237-240.

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Malysheva, Irina А. « The History of the Word in the Historical Dictionary ». Dans Lexicography of the digital age. TSU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/978-5-907442-19-1-2021-109.

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The report discusses the problems of representing word history and the dynamics of lexical composition in a historical dictionary. Possibilities and different ways of showing fate are analyzed on the example of the Dictionary of 18th century Russian language. In the 18th century, there were active processes of development and changes in the vocabulary of the Russian language.
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Sosnitsky, D. A. « Images of Russian history in popular art works of the second half of the 18th century ». Dans Current Challenges of Historical Studies : Young Scholars' Perspective. Novosibirsk State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/978-5-4437-1110-2-318-327.

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Nakishova, M. T. « S. N. Shubinsky and the history of St. Petersburg in the first quarter of the 18th century ». Dans Current Challenges of Historical Studies : Young Scholars' Perspective. Novosibirsk State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/978-5-4437-1110-2-28-35.

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