Letteratura scientifica selezionata sul tema "Bloemendaal (North Holland, Netherlands)"

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Articoli di riviste sul tema "Bloemendaal (North Holland, Netherlands)"

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LÓPEZ MOLINA, J. A. "(n + 1)-TENSOR NORMS OF LAPRESTÉ'S TYPE". Glasgow Mathematical Journal 54, n. 3 (31 luglio 2012): 665–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017089512000286.

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AbstractWe study an (n + 1)-tensor norm αr extending to (n + 1)-fold tensor products, the classical one of Lapresté in the case n = 1. We characterise the maps of the minimal and the maximal multi-linear operator ideals related to αr in the sense of Defant and Floret (A. Defant and K. Floret, Tensor norms and operator ideals, North Holland Mathematical Studies, no. 176 (North Holland, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1993). As an application we give a complete description of the reflexivity of the αr-tensor product (⊗j = 1n + 1 ℓuj, αr).
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Frolova, Elena. "Healthcare in the Netherlands". Spravočnik vrača obŝej praktiki (Journal of Family Medicine), n. 8 (27 luglio 2020): 67–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.33920/med-10-2008-09.

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What do we know about the Netherlands — a small country in western Europe? This state is home to about 17 million inhabitants who are fluent in at least two languages. Contrary to popular belief that the Netherlands is the birthplace of tulips, these flowers were brought there from Turkey in the 16th century, and only then became the real treasure of this country [2]. The Netherlands became the first country in the world to legalize euthanasia. Prostitution was legalized there in 2001, and women of easy virtue even have the right to a pension when they reach a certain age. It is allowed to drink alcohol from the age of 16 in the Netherlands, and soft drugs can legally be purchased in coffee shops. The Netherlands is also distinguished by a very high percentage of «home birth» cases — every fifth resident of this country gave birth to her child outside the hospital. The Netherlands is sometimes mistakenly called Holland, but this is fundamentally wrong: only two of the 12 districts have such a name — North and South Holland. This fact has been fixed at the state level most recently — all government facilities,institutions, embassies are obliged to refer to this country exclusively as the Kingdom of the Netherlands from now on.
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Visser, O., e F. E. van Leeuwen. "Stage-specific survival of epithelial cancers in North-Holland/Flevoland, The Netherlands". European Journal of Cancer 41, n. 15 (ottobre 2005): 2321–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2005.03.037.

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Visser, O., e F. E. van Leeuwen. "Cancer risk in first generation migrants in North-Holland/Flevoland, The Netherlands, 1995–2004". European Journal of Cancer 43, n. 5 (marzo 2007): 901–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2006.12.010.

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Vos, P., J. de Koning e R. van Eerden. "Landscape history of the Oer-IJ tidal system, Noord-Holland (the Netherlands)". Netherlands Journal of Geosciences - Geologie en Mijnbouw 94, n. 4 (dicembre 2015): 295–332. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/njg.2015.27.

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AbstractThe prehistoric Oer-IJ tidal system in the coastal area of Noord-Holland, between Castricum, Uitgeest, Velsen and Amsterdam, was the successor of the Haarlem tidal system when this was silted up around 3000 BC and large peat bogs formed in the Zaanstreek and Haarlemmermeer areas. Since then the Oer-IJ has been the natural outlet to the sea, draining the peat hinterlands. About 800 BC the Oer-IJ system was connected to the fluvial system of the Utrechtse Vecht and became the northern branch of the river Rhine. During the Late Iron Age, when the Flevo lakes in the IJsselmeer region and the Utrechtse Vecht were connected with the Wadden Sea, the Oer-IJ lost its discharge function. The tidal area silted up and was closed between 200 and 100 BC by a barrier ridge. The settlement history of the Oer-IJ system and the archaeological heritage in the subsurface is closely related to the geological and hydrological development throughout the ages. The shape and location of the continuously migrating outlet determined the opportunities for human settlements and activities. The best locations were beach ridges, higher, silted-up salt marshes and marginal zones of the peatland. In the Late Iron Age the sand flats also became habitable since tidal activity had stopped. In the Early Roman period there was no direct connection from the harbour of Castellum Flevum at Velsen to the North Sea, but ships could navigate from the Oer-IJ channel between Velsen and Amsterdam, through the Flevo lakes and the Utrechtse Vecht to the Wadden Sea, and to the Roman border (Limes) along the Oude Rijn. Here the data used for the palaeogeographic landscape reconstruction of the Oer-IJ are presented and explained, and the most important landscape-forming processes, which led to the emergence and closure of the Oer-IJ, are described. The landscape reconstructions give a new perspective on the migration of the main tidal channel and the formation of the tidal-inlet system near Castricum, which was the result of the progradation of the beach ridges south and north of the Castricummerpolder (Binnendelta according to De Roo, 1953). The geological and archaeological observations in the Binnendelta prove that the Oer-IJ was closed from the open sea in the early Late Iron Age.
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Ditewig, Sanne, Anne-France Pinget e Willemijn Heeren. "Regional variation in the pronunciation of /s/ in the Dutch language area". Nederlandse Taalkunde 24, n. 2 (1 settembre 2019): 195–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/nedtaa2019.2.003.dite.

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Abstract This paper reports on an explorative sociophonetic study of the phoneme /s/ in the Dutch language area. Our aim is to investigate the regional variation in the realisation of this phoneme, and to test experimentally the observation of Collins & Mees (2003) that /s/ is sometimes pronounced more like [ ], especially in the Randstad area (called s-retraction). One hundred native speakers of Dutch produced nineteen monosyllabic words containing /s/ in different syllabic contexts. The speakers were born and raised in one of five regions of the Dutch language area (West Flanders, Flemish Brabant, Netherlands Limburg, South Holland and Groningen). Spectral centre of gravity (CoG) and duration were used to measure the degree of s-retraction. CoG values turned out to be significantly lower (consistent with more retraction) in the regions in The Netherlands than in the Flemish regions. Speakers from South Holland produced significantly shorter /s/ than the other speakers. In conclusion, /s/ shows patterns of regional variation that are not fully in line with the observation forwarded by Collins & Mees (2003). The difference between the Flemish and Dutch regions shows that s-retraction is found in an area larger than the Randstad, possibly pointing towards a North-South pattern of variation.
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TETER, JOHAN. "Het Wassende Water". Tijdschrift voor Historische Geografie 4, n. 2 (1 gennaio 2019): 89–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/thg2019.2.002.tete.

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Rising water. Deserted settlements in Holland after 1514 The abandonment of villages in Northwestern Europe between 1200 and 1400 AD is a much-studied subject. Little is known about the presence of this phenomenon after 1500 AD. In the historic County of Holland (more or less the western part of the Netherlands) evaluation of an old taxation document from 1514 showed that 7,5% of the villages and 15% of the hamlets present in 1514 had disappeared by 2018. Main reason is the slowly rising North Sea. Another cause is the destructive peat industry, which caused a steady and dangerous enlargement of inland lakes. The research also showed that smaller and economically weaker settlements have a higher chance to be left deserted. Cities, and traditional agricultural villages not close to the sea or big lakes, were practically immune to permanent abandonment in the last 500 years.
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Vismans, Roel. "1992 - Jan Stroop: Towards the end of the standard language in the Netherlands. Amsterdam, North-Holland". Internationale Neerlandistiek 50, n. 1 (1 gennaio 2012): 91–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/ivn2012.0.vism.

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Vos, Peter C., e Hein Wolf. "Palaeoenvironmental research on diatoms in early and middle Holocene deposits in central North Holland (The Netherlands)". Netherlands Journal of Aquatic Ecology 28, n. 1 (marzo 1994): 97–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf02334250.

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FAN, MING. "K-ENVELOPES FOR REAL INTERPOLATION METHODS". Glasgow Mathematical Journal 55, n. 2 (2 agosto 2012): 293–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0017089512000523.

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AbstractIn this paper, we study the K-envelopes of the real interpolation methods with function space parameters in the sense of Brudnyi and Kruglyak [Y. A. Brudnyi and N. Ja. Kruglyak, Interpolation functors and interpolation spaces (North-Holland, Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1991)]. We estimate the upper bounds of the K-envelopes and the interpolation norms of bounded operators for the KΦ-methods in terms of the fundamental function of the rearrangement invariant space related to the function space parameter Φ. The results concerning the quasi-power parameters and the growth/continuity envelopes in function spaces are obtained.
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Tesi sul tema "Bloemendaal (North Holland, Netherlands)"

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Abbink, Albertine Alie. "Make it and break it : the cycles of pottery : a study of the technology, form, function, and use of pottery from the settlements at Uitgeest-Groot Dorregeest and Schagen-Muggenburg 1, Roman period, North-Holland, the Netherlands /". Leiden : Faculty of archaeology, Leiden university, 1999. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37211134q.

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Libri sul tema "Bloemendaal (North Holland, Netherlands)"

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Zijl, Annejet van der. Jagtlust & verwante verhalen. Amsterdam: Em. Querido's Uitgeverij bv, 2012.

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2

Zijl, Annejet van der. Jagtlust: Hoe in een Goois buitenhuis de wereld openging. Amsterdam: Meulenhoff, 1998.

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Zijl, Annejet van der. Jagtlust: Hoe in een Goois buitenhuis de wereld openging. Meulenhoff, 1998.

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Make it and break it: the cycles of pottery: A study of the technology, form, function, and use of pottery from the settlements at Uitgeest-Groot Dorregeest and Schagen-Muggenburg 1, Roman period, North Holland, the Netherlands. Leiden: Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University, 1999.

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Capitoli di libri sul tema "Bloemendaal (North Holland, Netherlands)"

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Verstraelen, P. J. T., J. Wisserhof, Lj Rodić e R. Eijsink. "Eutrophication control strategies for three shallow Vecht lakes in the province of North Holland". In Restoration and Recovery of Shallow Eutrophic Lake Ecosystems in The Netherlands, 235–45. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-2432-4_22.

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van der Vegte, F. W., J. Faber e L. Kuiters. "Vegetation, land use and management of the inner-dune zone in the North-Holland Dune Reserve, The Netherlands". In Ecology of coastal vegetation, 449–56. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-5524-0_50.

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"Haarlem (North Holland, Netherlands)". In Northern Europe, 325–28. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203059159-78.

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"Amsterdam (North Holland, Netherlands)". In Northern Europe, 36–41. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203059159-9.

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Israel, Jonathan. "The Breakdown of the Habsburg Regime, 1549-1566". In The Dutch Republic, 129–54. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198730729.003.0007.

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Abstract Since 1492 the Habsburg Netherlands had been generally quiescent. With the unification process north of the rivers accelerating after 1522, the Low Countries were, to all appearances, being successfully welded into a single, increasingly integrated state serviced by a growing, university-trained bureaucracy.’ Admittedly, this transition towards a more orderly, cohesive, Habsburg Netherlands was not proceeding smoothly in all respects. The processes of unification, centralization, and bureaucratization were bound to generate serious stresses, especially where the changes were most extensive—in the north. The recently annexed provinces showed considerable reluctance to accept the new provincial high courts and other innovations introduced by the Habsburg authorities. In Holland the regime’s policy of turning the Hof into an instrument of central government, staffed by university-trained lawyers, discontinuing the Burgundian practice of drawing the Hof’s judges from the Holland and Zeeland nobility, as well as the general (and growing) reliance on non-noble administrators, had planted seeds of discord between regime and nobility
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Israel, Jonathan. "The Republic at its Zenith, I: The 1650s". In The Dutch Republic, 700–738. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198730729.003.0029.

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Abstract No sovereign prince (to Lipsius’ distress) attained sovereign power in the north Netherlands after 1572. The States of Holland assumed charge of the government, in that year, with Orange directing the war, and heading the executive, but with the promise to act only in consultation with the States ‘who best know the situation of the land and inclinations of the people’.’ Holland, with Zeeland and Utrecht, unlike Brabant and Flanders, firmly refused to transfer sovereignty to Anjou. Nevertheless, government in the north between 1572 and 1587 was not yet fully republican in character. This was less because Philip II was still acknowledged as sovereign in theory, until 1581, than because Orange —and briefly also Anjou and Leicester—loomed large in the processes of decision-making, military command, and appointments. Only with Leicester’s departure, in 1587, did a fully republican system evolve in which the States of Holland, led by Oldenbarnevelt, emerged in practice, if not in theory, as the principal decision-making body.
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Israel, Jonathan. "On the Threshold of the Modern Era". In The Dutch Republic, 9–40. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198730729.003.0002.

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Abstract The political, economic, and cultural core of the Dutch Republic after 1572 was the province of Holland, and it is logical that our story should begin with the rise of Holland to prominence in the Low Countries during the thirteenth century. The thirteenth century was indeed a crucial period in the shaping of the Dutch context. Much of the foundation for the later emergence of the north Netherlands in ways which were to astound Europe, and the wider world, was laid at that time. Earlier there had been some primitive construction of dikes and dams to control the movement of water and some digging of drainage channels. But, until around I 200, such work had been on a limited scale and insufflcient to allow regular cultivation of the low-lying western regions of the Netherlands. For even much of the area which was not normally under water remained subject to frequent flooding. Twelfth-century Holland, like Zeeland, much of Friesland, Groningen, and Utrecht, and the part of Flanders adjoining the Scheidt estuary, was a waterlogged marshy land, dangerous, thinly populated, and marginal to the life of the Low Countries as a whole. Most agricultural and commercial activity was carried out on the higher ground, safe from flooding, to the south and also to the east. At that time, north of the great rivers,
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Israel, Jonathan. "Territorial Consolidation, 1516-1559". In The Dutch Republic, 55–73. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198730729.003.0004.

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Abstract The unification of the Netherlands north of the rivers under the Habs-burgs during the years I 5I 6-49 was a complex political drama replete with implications for the future. It marked the culmination of a process reaching back three centuries whereby the outlying lesser states of the Low Countries were progressively absorbed into a power network dominated by the rulers, and now ruler, of the three big provinces—Flanders, Brabant, and Holland. During the course of these three centuries, the three large provinces had become more and more preponderant in terms of both population and economic influence. By the I 540s, the role of the States of these three in the affairs of the seventeen provinces of the Habsburg Netherlands was so overwhelming that they were providing around 75 per cent of the total revenue of the Habsburg Netherlands and the other fourteen provinces together a mere 25 per cent (see Table 2).
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brown, Stuart. "F. M. Van helmont: his philosophical connections and the reception of his later cabbalistic philosophy". In Studies in Seventeenth-Century European Philosophy, 97–116. Oxford University PressOxford, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198239406.003.0004.

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Abstract Franciscus Mercurius van Helmont was born at Vilvoorde in Brabant in 1614. His father was the famous medic and “chemist”, Jean-Baptiste van Helmont. When the father died in 1644, Francis Mercury signed over his inheritance and spent most of the rest of his life in Holland, Germany, or England. In a number of respects he deserves his reputation as the prototypical “scholar gypsy”,1 and it is perhaps not very meaningful to raise the question of which country he really belonged to. He spent many years in Germany, spoke German fluently, and was there when he died in 1699. But the Netherlands were his base, in so far as he had one; Dutch was his native language, and more of his books were published in Amsterdam than anywhere else, except perhaps in London. In his own person he epitomized the role of the Netherlands as the crossroads of north European culture in the seventeenth century. By 1677 he was already a link between Christian cabbalists in Germany and others in England. And, partly through his own travels and partly through his being in the Netherlands, he was a mutual acquaintance of two very different philosophers who themselves never met¬ Leibniz and Locke.
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Blickle, Peter. "The Low Countries". In Resistance, Representation, and Community, 256–90. Oxford University PressOxford, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198205487.003.0019.

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Abstract The Low Countries have been a highly urbanized region ever since the eleventh century. This makes it particularly appropriate to consider this region as one of the cases where the tension between the self-created public sphere of the cities conflicted with the state-making efforts of monarchs. Here, the interaction between cities and states obviously contributed substantially to the ultimate shape of the early modern state, both in the United Provinces and in the Habsburg-ruled Southern Netherlands. Until the end of the sixteenth century, the core of the economic system of north-western Europe was located in Flanders and Brabant; afterwards it shifted to Holland. Therefore, it seems logical to focus on the Dutch Republic for the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and on the southern and western territories for the earlier period
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