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Journal articles on the topic '1790-1890'

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1

Balmori, Diana. "Family and Politics: Three Generations (1790-1890)." Journal of Family History 10, no. 3 (September 1985): 247–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/036319908501000303.

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Bodenhamer, David J., and Timothy S. Huebner. "The Southern Judicial Tradition: State Judges and Sectional Distinctiveness, 1790-1890." Journal of Southern History 67, no. 2 (May 2001): 440. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3069879.

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3

Aucoin, Brent J., and Timothy S. Huebner. "The Southern Judicial Tradition: State Judges and Sectional Distinctiveness, 1790-1890." Arkansas Historical Quarterly 59, no. 4 (2000): 459. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40023201.

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Galperin, William. "Sentimental Masculinity and the Rise of History, 1790-1890. Mike Goode." Wordsworth Circle 42, no. 4 (September 2011): 274–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/twc24043175.

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Hobson, Charles F., and Timothy S. Huebner. "The Southern Judicial Tradition: State Judges and Sectional Distinctiveness, 1790-1890." Journal of the Early Republic 20, no. 2 (2000): 344. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3124721.

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6

Crompton, Constance. "Sentimental Masculinity and the Rise of History, 1790–1890 by Mike Goode." Victorian Review 38, no. 2 (2012): 135–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/vcr.2012.0043.

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7

Bebbington, D. W. "Evangelicalism in the Church of England, c.1790–c.1890: A Miscellany." English Historical Review CXXI, no. 490 (February 1, 2006): 324–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cej088.

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8

Rabb, Theodore K. "Opera, Musicology, and History." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 36, no. 3 (January 2006): 321–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/002219506774929782.

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The interactions between operas and the societies in which they were composed and first heard are of interest to both historians and musicologists, especially because operas since the seventeenth century have had significant connections with political and social change. The essays in this special double issue of the journal, entitled “Opera and History”, pursue the connection in six settings: seventeenth-century Venice; Handel's London; Revolutionary Europe from 1790 to 1830; Restoration and Risorgimento Italy; Europe during the birth of Modernism from 1890 to 1930; and twentieth-century America.
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Pearson, R. "Knowing One's Place: Perceptions of Community in the Industrial Suburbs of Leeds, 1790-1890." Journal of Social History 27, no. 2 (December 1, 1993): 221–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jsh/27.2.221.

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Higgott, Suzanne. "The Purchase of the Past: Collecting culture in post-Revolutionary Paris, c.1790–1890." Journal of the History of Collections 33, no. 2 (June 30, 2021): 393–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhab022.

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11

PLATT, TRISTAN. "The Alchemy of Modernity. Alonso Barba's Copper Cauldrons and the Independence of Bolivian Metallurgy (1790–1890)." Journal of Latin American Studies 32, no. 1 (February 2000): 1–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x99005453.

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Those natures which, when they meet, quickly lay hold on and mutually affect one another we call affined. This affinity is sufficiently striking in the case of alkalis and acids which, although they are mutually antithetical … most decidedly seek and embrace one another, modify one another, and together form a new substance … It is in just this way that truly meaningful friendships can arise among human beings: for antithetical qualities make possible a closer and more intimate union.Goethe, Elective affinities (1809)A linear mode of historical understanding relegated alchemy to a ‘pre-scientific’ era, with the enlightenment's New Chemistry creating a break between ‘empirical’ and ‘scientific’ metallurgies. Similarly, Bolivia's early Republican silver-production has been regarded as ‘stagnant’ and ‘colonial’ from the ‘modern’ perspective of late nineteenth century liberalism. This article questions both periodisations by documenting an ‘alchemical renaissance’ in Bolivian silver-refining methods during the first part of the 19th century. The relaunch of Alonso Barba's ‘hot method’ of amalgamation in copper cauldrons (1609), and its associated technical discourses, expressed a creole desire for an independent ‘modernity’. This rediscovery of a seventeenth century technology, carried out shortly before the Independence War in the Potosí provinces (Chichas), and slightly later in Oruro and Carangas, is distinguished from the version reinvented in Central Europe by Ignaz von Born (1786), as well as from two pre-Bornian experiments in Potosí and New Spain. Its nineteenth century consolidation was, in part, a little-known reaction to Nordenflicht's failure to introduce the new European method of rotating barrels to the Andes during the 1790s. The article shows that this ‘alchemy of modernity’ held its ground for several decades, suggesting a fresh approach to America's postcolonial ambiguities from the perspective of a comparative history of technology.
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Renan, Ittai, Thorsten Assmann, and Amnon Freidberg. "Taxonomic revision of the Graphipterus serrator (Forskål) group (Coleoptera, Carabidae): an increase from five to 15 valid species." ZooKeys 753 (April 26, 2018): 23–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.753.22366.

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The south-west Palaearctic Graphipterusserrator group is revised. The systematic concept of the G.serrator group has undergone many changes during the last two centuries, and several different classifications have been published in recent decades. Here, the numerical taxonomy approach is used with the morphological characterization similarity level of the sympatric taxa in order to delimit allopatrically occurring taxa at the species and subspecies level. A key to the species and distribution maps are provided along with analyses of the conservation status and habitat preferences of the taxa. The Graphipterusserrator group currently comprises 16 taxa. Five new species are described: Graphipterusmagnus Renan & Assmann, sp. n., Graphipterusmauretensis Renan & Assmann, sp. n., Graphipteruspiniamitaii Renan & Freidberg, sp. n., Graphipterussharonae Renan & Assmann, sp. n., and Graphipterusstagonopsis Renan & Assmann, sp. n. In addition, five taxa are revalidated to full species status: Graphipterusheydeni Kraatz, 1890, stat. rest. (lectotype designated), Graphipterusmultiguttatus (Olivier, 1790), stat. rest. (lectotype designated), Graphipteruspeletieri Laporte de Castelnau, 1840, stat. rest. (the frequently used name lepeletieri is an error), Graphipterusrotundatus Klug, 1832, stat. rest. (lectotype designated), and Graphipterusvaldanii Guérin-Méneville, 1859 stat. rest., and a full species status is proposed for Graphipterusreymondi Antoine, 1953, stat. n. One new synonymy is proposed: Graphipteruskindermanni Chaudoir, 1871, syn. n. of Carabusmultiguttatus Olivier, 1790. Lectotype designations were made for Graphipterusheydeni, Graphipterusminutus Dejean, 1822, Graphipterusmultiguttatus, and Graphipterusrotundatus. Neotype designations were made for Graphipterusreichei Guérin-Méneville, 1859, Graphipterusintermedius Guérin-Méneville, 1859, and Graphipterusvaldanii Guérin-Méneville, 1859.
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13

Bazzi, Samuel, Martin Fiszbein, and Mesay Gebresilasse. "Frontier Culture: The Roots and Persistence of “Rugged Individualism” in the United States." Econometrica 88, no. 6 (2020): 2329–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3982/ecta16484.

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The presence of a westward‐moving frontier of settlement shaped early U.S. history. In 1893, the historian Frederick Jackson Turner famously argued that the American frontier fostered individualism. We investigate the “frontier thesis” and identify its long‐run implications for culture and politics. We track the frontier throughout the 1790–1890 period and construct a novel, county‐level measure of total frontier experience (TFE). Historically, frontier locations had distinctive demographics and greater individualism. Long after the closing of the frontier, counties with greater TFE exhibit more pervasive individualism and opposition to redistribution. This pattern cuts across known divides in the United States, including urban–rural and north–south. We provide evidence on the roots of frontier culture, identifying both selective migration and a causal effect of frontier exposure on individualism. Overall, our findings shed new light on the frontier's persistent legacy of rugged individualism.
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14

Sanchez, Michelle C. "Orr and Kant: An analysis of the intellectual encounter behind ‘The Christian worldview’." Scottish Journal of Theology 74, no. 2 (May 2021): 103–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0036930621000296.

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AbstractToday, Christianity is often described as a ‘worldview’, especially among Reformed evangelicals in the USA. In this article I return to the 1890 lectures where Scottish theologian James Orr adapted the concept of Weltanschauung for Christian purposes. Although it was coined by Immanuel Kant in 1790, and primarily used in subsequent decades to theorise cultural difference and evaluate aesthetic expression, Orr nevertheless claims that the idea of a worldview is ‘as old as the dawn of reflection’ and thus appropriate to articulating Christianity. I examine Orr's engagement with the Kantian and emerging historicist context, paying particular attention to his epistemological and aesthetic citations and showing how Orr both adopts and departs from the characteristic features of the Kantian subject. I conclude by assessing the philosophical and theological costs of this project that, among other things, positions Christianity for perpetual culture war within secular societies similarly shaped by the post-Kantian subject.
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15

Craton, Michael J. "Reshuffling the pack : the transition from slavery to other forms of labor in the British Caribbean, ca. 1790-1890." New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 68, no. 1-2 (January 1, 1994): 23–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/13822373-90002659.

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Analysis of a century of (evolutionary) socio-economic transition in the British Caribbean. According to the author, this process demonstrated aspects of a continuum, rather than sharply marked phases and abrupt changes. Before the abolition of slavery slaves behaved as proto-peasants and proto-proletarians and many aspects of slavery survived the abolition.
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16

SMETANA, ALEŠ, and ANDREW B. T. SMITH. "Type species designations and other nomenclatural notes on Palaearctic Melolonthinae and Cetoniinae (Coleoptera: Scarabaeoidea: Scarabaeidae)." Zootaxa 1220, no. 1 (May 30, 2006): 45. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1220.1.4.

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The nomenclatural status and correct spelling of several genus-group and species-group names of Palaearctic scarab beetles are discussed. Type species are designated for the following genus-group names of Palaearctic Melolonthinae: Brachydema Fairmaire, 1881 (type species Brachydema lamberti Fairmaire, 1884), Microtrichia Brenske, 1900 (type species Phytalus eurystomus Burmeister, 1855), Pseudohoplia Reitter, 1890 (type species Hoplia gabriellina Fairmaire, 1887), and Sparophysa Burmeister, 1855 (type species Pachydema bullata Burmeister, 1855). Type species are designated for the following genus-group names of Palaearctic Cetoniinae: Melanosa Mulsant & Rey, 1871 (type species Cetonia morio Fabricius, 1781), Pachnotosia Reitter, 1891 (type species Cetonia marmorata Fabricius, 1792), Polydomia Thomson, 1880 (type species Macronota cervina Wallace, 1867), Potosia Mulsant & Rey, 1871 (type species Cetonia floricola Herbst, 1790), and Tetragonus Gory & Percheron, 1833 (type species Agestrata dehaani Gory & Percheron, 1833). The following genus-group names were determined to be unavailable: “Microtrogus” Mikšić, 1965, “Paramonotropus” Medvedev, 1951, “Sinoliocola” Alexis & Delpont, 1998. Clarifications are made on the nomenclature and correct spelling of several other genus-group and species-group names.
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17

Regan, John. "Mike Goode. Sentimental Masculinity and the Rise of History 1790-1890. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2009. ISBN: 9780521898591. Price: US$90." Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net, no. 56 (2009): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1001109ar.

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18

Villalba, Ricardo. "Climatic Fluctuations in Northern Patagonia during the Last 1000 Years as Inferred from Tree-Ring Records." Quaternary Research 34, no. 3 (November 1990): 346–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0033-5894(90)90046-n.

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AbstractMillennium-old alerce trees (Fitzroya cupressoides (Mol.) Johnst.) have been used to develop a 1120-year reconstruction of the summer temperature departures for the Andes of northern Patagonia in Argentina. Four main climatic episodes can be distinguished in this proxy paleoclimatic record. The first, a cold and moist interval from A.D. 900 to 1070, was followed by a warm-dry period from A.D. 1080 to 1250 correlative with the Medieval warm epoch of Europe. Afterward, a long, cold-moist period followed from A.D. 1270 to 1670, peaking around A.D. 1340 and 1650. These cold maxima are contemporaneous with two principal Little Ice Age events registered in the Northern Hemisphere. Warmer conditions then resumed between A.D. 1720 and 1790. These episodes are supported by glaciological and palynological data in Patagonia. Following a cold period in the early 1800s, tree-ring indices have oscillated around the long-term mean, except for a warmer period from A.D. 1850 to 1890. Correlations between the Rio Alerce reconstruction and the regional weather stations indicate that the tree-ring variations are correlated with a homogeneous summer weather pattern covering Patagonia east of the Andes from 38° to 50°S.
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19

Guiry, Eric, Paul Szpak, and Michael P. Richards. "ISOTOPIC ANALYSES REVEAL GEOGRAPHICAL AND SOCIOECONOMIC PATTERNS IN HISTORICAL DOMESTIC ANIMAL TRADE BETWEEN PREDOMINANTLY WHEAT- AND MAIZE-GROWING AGRICULTURAL REGIONS IN EASTERN NORTH AMERICA." American Antiquity 82, no. 2 (March 29, 2017): 341–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2016.34.

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Historical zooarchaeologists have made significant contributions to key questions about the social, economic, and nutritional dimensions of domestic animal use in North American colonial contexts; however, techniques commonly employed in faunal analyses do not offer a means of assessing many important aspects of how animals were husbanded and traded. We apply isotopic analyses to faunal remains from archaeological sites to assess the social and economic importance of meat trade and consumption of local and foreign animal products in northeastern North America. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of 310 cattle and pigs from 18 rural and urban archaeological sites in Upper Canada (present-day southern Ontario, Canada; ca. A.D. 1790–1890) are compared with livestock from contemporary American sources to quantify the importance of meat from different origins at rural and higher- and lower-status urban contexts. Results show significant differences between urban and rural households in the consumption of local animals and meat products acquired through long-distance trade. A striking pattern in urban contexts provides new evidence for the social significance of meat origins in historical Upper Canada and highlights the potential for isotopic approaches to reveal otherwise-hidden evidence for social and economic roles of animals in North American archaeology.
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Guiry, E., and M. Buckley. "Urban rats have less variable, higher protein diets." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 285, no. 1889 (October 17, 2018): 20181441. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2018.1441.

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Over the past 1000 years, rats ( Rattus spp.) have become one of the most successful and prolific pests in human society. Despite their cosmopolitan distribution across six continents and ubiquity throughout the world's cities, rat urban ecology remains poorly understood. We investigate the role of human foods in brown rat ( Rattus norvegicus ) diets in urban and rural areas over a 100 year period ( ca AD 1790–1890) in Toronto, Canada using stable carbon ( δ 13 C) and nitrogen ( δ 15 N) isotope analyses of archaeological remains. We found that rat diets from urban sites were of higher quality and were more homogeneous and stable over time. By contrast, in rural areas, they show a wide range of dietary niche specializations that directly overlap, and probably competed, with native omnivorous and herbivorous species. These results demonstrate a link between rodent diets and human population density, providing, to our knowledge, the first long-term dietary perspective on the relative value of different types of human settlements as rodent habitat. This study highlights the potential of using the historical and archaeological record to provide a retrospective on the urban ecology of commensal and synanthropic animals that could be useful for improving animal management and conservation strategies in urban areas.
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Barclay, Katie. "Mike Goode, Sentimental Masculinity and the Rise of History, 1790–1890, Cambridge; Cambridge University Press, 2009. Pp. xi + 253. Hardback ISBN 9780521898591, £50.00." Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 31, no. 1 (May 2011): 137–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jshs.2011.0012.

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22

Villanueva Díaz, José, Julián Cerano Paredes, Vicenta Constante García, Peter Z. Fulé, and Eladio Cornejo Oviedo. "Variabilidad hidroclimática histórica de la sierra de Zapalinamé y disponibilidad de recursos hídricos para Saltillo, Coahuila." Madera y Bosques 15, no. 3 (August 30, 2016): 45–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.21829/myb.2009.1531185.

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La Sierra de Zapalinamé (SZA) es la fuente de agua más importante para Saltillo, Coahuila y poblaciones aledañas. La presión sobre los recursos hídricos debido al incremento poblacional, demanda un conocimiento detallado de su variabilidad hidroclimática histórica con fines de planeación. En este trabajo, se integraron tres series dendrocronológicas regionales a lo largo del gradiente altitudinal de SZA, con una extensión de 412 años (1595-2006), 306 años (1700-2005) y 603 años (1400-2002), para la parte baja, media y alta, respectivamente. La cronología de la parte baja, desarrollada con Pinus cembroides fue más sensible a periodos secos. Sequías de gran magnitud e intensidad se presentaron en todo el gradiente altitudinal en las décadas de 1440 y 1450; 1530, 1590, 1640 , 1660, 1690, 1710, 1740, 1750, 1760, 1790, 1860, 1890, 1920, 1950 y 2000, con impacto en la disponibilidad de alimentos y presencia de epidemias y hambrunas generalizadas a nivel local y regional. Eventos secos de alta intensidad se presentaron en periodos aproximados de 100 años, con sequías intermedias cada 50 años. El impacto histórico de patrones atmosféricos circulatorios como ENSO, no indicó una influencia significativa en la variabilidad hidroclimática de SZA y el efecto de otros fenómenos atmosféricos (frentes fríos, huracanes, tormentas tropicales), pudieran explicar con mayor detalle el comportamiento climático de esta montaña.
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23

Dent, Jonathan. "Mike Goode, Sentimental Masculinity and the Rise of History, 1790–1890 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), 270 pp. £47.50, $90.00 (USD), €62.32, ISBN: 0521898595, ISBN-13: 978-0521898591." Victoriographies 1, no. 1 (May 2011): 124–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/vic.2011.0010.

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24

Fernandez, Mark F. "Timothy S. Huebner, The Southern Judicial Tradition: State Judges and Sectional Distinctiveness, 1790–1890, Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 1999. Pp. xiii + 263. $45.00 (ISBN 0-8203-2101-X)." Law and History Review 20, no. 2 (2002): 410–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/744047.

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25

Farina, Jonathan. "Manly Leaders in Nineteenth-Century British Literature. Daniela Garofalo.Sentimental Masculinity and the Rise of History, 1790-1890. Mike Goode.The Mighty Scot: Nation, Gender, and the Nineteenth-Century Mystique of Scottish Masculinity. Maureen M. Martin." Wordsworth Circle 40, no. 4 (September 2009): 168–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/twc24043560.

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MORRIS, JEREMY. "Evangelicalism in the Church of England, c. 1790–c. 1890. A miscellany. Edited by Mark Smith and Stephen Taylor. (Church of England Record Society, 12.) Pp. xii+342. Woodbridge: Boydell Press (for the Church of England Record Society), 2004. £50. 1 84383 105 8; 1351 3087." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 58, no. 2 (March 28, 2007): 360–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046906000534.

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ETZLER, FRANK E. "Generic Reclassification of Limonius Eschscholtz, 1829 (Elateridae: Dendrometrinae) sensu Candèze 1860 of the World." Zootaxa 4683, no. 3 (October 9, 2019): 301–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4683.3.1.

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The genus Limonius Eschscholtz, 1829 was last treated as a whole by Candèze (1860). Since then, members have been placed in eight other genera: Cidnopus Thomson, 1859; Gambrinus LeConte, 1853; Elathous Reitter, 1890; Kibunea Kishii, 1966; Limoniscus Reitter, 1905; Nothodes LeConte, 1861; Pheletes Kiesenwetter, 1858; and Solskyana Dolin, 1978. Based on the examination of adult and larval characters, five genera are recognized: Elathous Reitter, 1890; Gambrinus LeConte, 1853; Limonius Eschscholtz, 1829; Pheletes Kiesenwetter, 1858; and Tetralimonius new genus. Limoniscus Reitter, 1905 and Sichuanelater Platia and Gudenzi, 2006 are new synonymies of Gambrinus LeConte, 1853; Micrathous Lane, 1971, Neoathousius Schimmel and Platia, 1991 and Solskyana Dolin, 1978 are all new synonymies of Limonius. A total of 84 new combinations are proposed: Nearctic: Elathous huguenini (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Gambrinus angulatus (Motschulsky, 1859) new combination; Gambrinus bicolor (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Gambrinus clypeatus (Motschulsky, 1859) new combination; Gambrinus confusus (LeConte, 1853) new combination; Gambrinus cribriceps (Van Dyke, 1943) new combination; Gambrinus crotchii (Horn, 1872) new combination; Gambrinus flavomarginatus (Knull, 1938) new combination; Gambrinus fulvipilis (Candèze, 1860) new combination; Gambrinus griseus (Beauvois, 1805) new combination; Gambrinus humidus (Lane, 1941) new combination; Gambrinus interstitialis (Melsheimer, 1846) new combination; Gambrinus lanchesteri (Lane, 1941) new combination; Gambrinus meridianus (Knull, 1947) new combination; Gambrinus mirus (LeConte, 1853) new combination; Gambrinus norahae (Al Dhafer, 2009) new combination; Gambrinus olentangyi (Knull, 1947) new combination; Gambrinus plebejus (Say, 1825) new combination; Gambrinus propexus (Candèze, 1860) new combination; Gambrinus rudis (Brown, 1933) new combination; Gambrinus rufihumeralis (Lane, 1941) new combination; Gambrinus seminudus (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Gambrinus shircki (Lane, 1965) new combination; Gambrinus sinuifrons (Fall, 1907) new combination; Gambrinus snakensis (Lane, 1965) new combination; Gambrinus stigma (Herbst, 1806) new combination; Gambrinus pictus (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Gambrinus ulkei (Horn, 1871) new combination; Gambrinus ursinus (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Gambrinus venablesi (Wickham, 1913) new combination; Limonius brevis (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Limonius sordidus (Van Dyke, 1932) new combination; Pheletes lecontei (Lane, 1971) new combination; Tetralimonius definitus (Ziegler, 1845) new combination; Tetralimonius humeralis (Candèze, 1860) new combination; Tetralimonius maculicollis (Motschulsky, 1860) new combination; Tetralimonius nimbatus (Say, 1825) new combination; Tetralimonius ornatulus (LeConte, 1857) new combination. Palearctic: Gambrinus elegans (Buysson, 1891) new combination; Gambrinus gibbosus (Platia and Gudenzi, 2006) new combination. Gambrinus henanensis (Schimmel, 2006) new combination; Gambrinus hinakurai (Kishii, 1998) new combination; Gambrinus katoi (Kishii, 2002) new combination; Gambrinus kawaharai (Kishii, 2002) new combination; Gambrinus kucerai (Schimmel, 2006) new combination; Gambrinus nanshanensis (Arimoto and Hiramatsu, 2013) new combination; Gambrinus naomii (Kishii, 1997) new combination; Gambrinus shaanxiensis (Schimmel, 2006) new combination; Gambrinus suturalis (Gebler, 1844) new combination; Gambrinus takabai (Kishii, 1997) new combination; Gambrinus violaceus (Müller, 1821) new combination; Gambrinus wittmeri (Chassain, 1998) new combination; Gambrinus yamato (Kishii, 1998) new combination; Gambrinus yujii (Arimoto, 2013) new combination; Gambrinus zhejiangensis (Schimmel, 2015) new combination; Limonius brancuccii (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius decorus (Gurjeva, 1975) new combination; Limonius exiguus (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius hartmanni (Schimmel, 1998) new combination; Limonius hiermeieri (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius hirtus (Dolin, 1978) new combination; Limonius hubeiensis (Kishii and Jiang, 1996) new combination; Limonius kubani (Schimmel, 1996) new combination; Limonius loebli (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius longicornis (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius macedonicus (Cate and Platia, 1989) new combination; Limonius marginellus brusteli (Leseigneur, 2004) new combination; Limonius manaliensis (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius miandamensis (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius minusculus (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius nigronitidus (Han and Lee, 2012) new combination; Limonius platiai (Mertlik, 1996) new combination; Limonius pseudopilosus (Platia and Gudenzi 1985) new combination; Limonius recticornis (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius riesei (Platia, 1988) new combination; Limonius rusticus (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius schurmanni (Platia and Gudenzi, 1998) new combination; Limonius sinensis (Schimmel and Platia, 1994) new combination; Limonius singularis (Schimmeland Platia, 1991) new combination; Limonius stapfi (Schimmel, 2007) new combination; Limonius turcicus (Platia, 2004) new combination; Limonius wittmeri (Schimmel and Platia, 1991) new combination; Tetralimonius quercus (Olivier, 1790) new combination; Tetralimonius reitteri (Gurjeva, 1976) new combination. The following 12 North American species are removed from synonymy and recognized as valid species: Gambrinus interstitialis (Melsheimer, 1846) status resurrected; Gambrinus propexus (Candèze, 1860) status resurrected; Gambrinus shircki (Lane, 1965) status resurrected; Gambrinus snakensis (Lane, 1965) status resurrected; Gambrinus ulkei (Horn, 1871) status resurrected; Limonius anceps LeConte, 1853 status resurrected; Limonius dubitans LeConte, 1853 status resurrected; Limonius infuscatus Motschulsky, 1859 status resurrected; Limonius pilosulus Candèze, 1891 status resurrected; Limonis semianeus LeConte, 1853 status resurrected. Tetralimonius humeralis (Candèze, 1860) status resurrected; Tetralimonius maculicollis (Motschulsky, 1860) status resurrected. New replacement names are proposed for three homynyms: Limonius schimmeli Etzler new name for Neoathousius ferrugineus Schimmel and Platia, 1991; Elathous malatyanus Etzler new name for Elathous bicolor Platia, 2010, not Elathous bicolor (LeConte, 1853); and Microdesmes carteri Etzler new name for Limonius angulatus Carter, 1939 (= Microdesmes angulatus). Limonius kondratieffi Al Dhafer, 2009 is a new synonymy of Elathous bicolor (LeConte, 1853). A key to genera, generic descriptions, notes on species, and definitions of important characters are provided.
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COLONNELLI, ENZO. "A revised checklist of Italian Curculionoidea (Coleoptera)." Zootaxa 337, no. 1 (October 24, 2003): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.337.1.1.

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A list of Curculionoidea (Nemonychidae, Anthribidae, Rhynchitidae, Attelabidae, Brentidae, Apionidae, Nanophyidae, Brachyceridae, Curculionidae, Erirhinidae, Raymondionymidae, Dryoph-thoridae, Scolytidae, Platypodidae) thus far known from Italy is drawn up, updating that by Abbazzi et al. published in 1995. Distributional data of each species are given for broad regions such as northern, central, southern Italy, Sicily and Sardinia. New synonymies are: Acentrotypus laevigatus (Kirby, 1808) (= A. brunnipes (Boheman, 1839), syn.nov.), Ceutorhynchus talickyi Korotyaev, 1980 (= C. strejceki Dieckmann, 1981, syn. nov.), Ceutorhynchus pallipes Crotch,1866 (= Curculio minutus Reich, 1797 not Drury, [1773], syn. nov.; = Curculio contractus Marsham, 1802 not Fourcroy, 1785, syn. nov.), Dodecastichus consentaneus (Boheman, 1843) (= D. c. latialis (Solari & Solari, 1915), syn. nov.; = D. c. dimorphus (Solari & Solari, 1915), syn. nov.; = D. c. pentricus Di Marco & Osella, 2001, syn. nov.), Dodecastichus dalmatinus (Gyllenhal, 1843) (= D. d. lauri (Stierlin, 1861), syn. nov.), Dodecastichus mastix (Olivier, 1807) (= D. m. perlongus (Solari & Solari, 1915), syn. nov.; = D. m. scabrior (Reitter, 1913), syn. nov.), Dorytomus Germar, 1817 (= D. subgen. Chaetodorytomus Iablokov-Khnzorian, 1970, syn. nov.; = D. subgen. Euolamus Reitter, 1916, syn. nov.; = D. subgen. Olamus Reitter, 1916, syn. nov.), Exapion Bedel, 1887 (= Ulapion Ehret, 1997, syn. nov.), Larinus ursus (Fabricius, 1792) (= L. carinirostris Gyllenhal, 1837, syn. nov.; = L. genei Boheman, 1843, syn. nov.), Lixini Schönherr, 1823 (= Rhinocyllini Lacordaire, 1863, syn. nov.), Metacinops rhinomacer Kraatz, 1862 (= M. calabrus Stierlin, 1892, syn. nov.), Microplontus nigrovittatus (Schultze,1901) (= Ceutorhynchus subfasciatus Chevrolat, 1860 not Schönherr, 1826, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus amicalis cenomanus Colonnelli & Magnano, nom. nov. (= O. a. lessinicus (Osella, 1983) not O. lessinicus Franz, 1938, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus anophthalmoides omeros nom. nov. (= O. a. istriensis (F. Solari, 1955) not Germar, 1824, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus anthracinus (Scopoli, 1763) (= O. calabrus Stierlin, 1880, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus armadillo (Rossi, 1792) (= O. halbherri Stierlin, 1890, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus clibbianus Colonnelli & Magnano, nom. nov. (= O. judicariensis (Osella, 1983) not Reitter, 1913, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus cornicinus Stierlin, 1861 (= Curculio laevigatus Fabricius, 1792 not Paykull, 1792, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus fortis Rosenhauer, 1847 (= O. fortis valarsae Reitter, 1913, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus nodosus (O. F. Müller, 1764) (= O. nodosus comosellus Boheman, 1843, syn. nov.; = O. nodosus gobanzi Gredler, 1868, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus pupillatus Gyllenhal, 1834 (= O. p. angustipennis Stierlin, 1883, syn. nov.; = O. venetus F. Solari, 1947, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus serradae Colonnelli & Magnano, nom. nov. (= O. carinatus (Osella 1983) not (Paykull, 1792), syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus strigirostris Boheman, 1843 (= O. aterrimus : Di Marco & Osella, 2002 not Boheman, 1843, syn. nov.; = O. calvus Fiori, 1899, syn. nov.), O. sulcatus (Fabricius, 1775) (= O. linearis Stierlin, 1861, syn. nov.), Otiorhynchus tenebricosus (Herbst, 1784) (= O. olivieri Abbazzi & Osella, 1992, syn. nov.), Phrydiuchus augusti Colonnelli, nom. nov. (= Ceuthorrhynchus speiseri Schultze, 1897 not C. speiseri Frivaldszkyi, 1894, syn. nov.), Phyllobius maculicornis Germar, 1824 (= P. m. lucanus Solari & Solari, 1903, syn. nov.), Phyllobius pyri (Linné, 1758) (= P. vespertinus (Fabricius, 1792), syn. nov.), Polydrusus subgen. Chaerodrys Jacquelin du Val, [1854] (= P. subgen. Metadrosus Schilsky, 1910, syn. nov.), Polydrusus subgen. Eudipnus C. G. Thomson, 1859 (= P. subgen. Chrysoyphis Gozis, 1882, syn. nov.; P. subgen. Thomsoneonymus Desbrochers, 1902, syn. nov.), Polydrusus subgen. Eurodrusus Korotyaev & Meleshko, 1997 (= P. subgen. Neoeustolus Alonso-Zarazaga & Lyal, 1999, syn. nov.), Polydrusus armipes Brullé, 1832 (= P. a. faillae Desbrochers, 1859, syn. nov.), Pseudomyllocerus invreae invreae (F. Solari, 1948) (= Curculio cinerascens Fabricius, 1792 not [Gmelin], 1790], syn. nov. ), Zacladus Reitter, 1916 (= Z. subgen. Amurocladus Korotyaev, 1997, syn. nov.; = Z. subgen. Angarocladus Korotyaev, 1997, syn. nov.; = Z. subgen. Gobicladus Korotyaev, 1997, syn. nov.; = Z. subgen. Scythocladus Korotyaev, 1997, syn. nov.). New placements are: Amalini Wagner, 1936 as a tribe from synonymy under Ceutorhynchini; Acentrotypus Alonso-Zarazaga, 1990, Aizobius Alonso-Zarazaga, 1990, Aspidapion Schilsky, 1901, Catapion Schilsky, 1906, Ceratapion Schilsky, 1901, Cistapion Wagner, 1924,Cyanapion Bokor, 1923, Diplapion Reitter, 1916, Eutrichapion Reitter, 1916, Exapion Bedel, 1887, Helianthemapion Wagner, 1930, Hemitrichapion Voss, 1959, Holotrichapion Györffy, 1956, Ischnopterapion Bokor, 1923, Ixapion Roudier & Tempère,1973, Kalcapion Schilsky, 1906, Lepidapion Schilsky, 1906, Melanapion Wagner, 1930, Mesotrichapion Györffy, 1956, Metapion Schilsky, 1906, Omphalapion Schilsky, 1901, Onychapion Schilsky, 1901, Oryxolaemus AlonsoZarazaga, 1990, Osellaeus Alonso-Zarazaga, 1990, Perapion Wagner, 1907, Phrissotrichum Schilsky, 1901, Pirapion Reitter, 1916, Protapion Schilsky, 1908, Pseudapion Schilsky, Pseudoperapion Wagner, 1930, Pseudoprotapion Ehret, 1990, Pseudostenapion Wagner, 1930, Rhodapion AlonsoZarazaga, 1990, Squamapion Bokor, 1923, Stenopterapion Bokor, 1923, Synapion Schilsky, 1902, Taeniapion Schilsky, 1906, Trichopterapion Wagner, 1930, all as genera from subgenera of Apion Herbst, 1797; Aspidapion subgen. Koestlinia Alonso-Zarazaga, 1990 and Phryssotrichum subgen. Schilskyapion Alonso-Zarazaga, 1990 from synonymy with Apion Herbst, 1797; Phyllobius italicus Solari & Solari, 1903 and Phyllobius reicheidius Desbrochers, 1873, both from subspecies of P. pyri (Linné, 1758); Mogulones aubei (Boheman, 1845) as a valid species from synonymy with M. talbum (Gyllenhal, 1837); Styphlidius italicus Osella, 1981 as species from subspecies of S. corcyreus (Reitter, 1884). Otiorhynchus subgen. Presolanus Pesarini, 2001 is here selected over O. subgen. Pesolanus Pesarini, 2001, alternative original spelling, here rejected. The incorrect original spelling Otiorhynchus nocturnus peetzi Franz, 1938 is emended in O. n. peezi. New combination are: Eremiarhinus (Depresseremiarhinus) dilatatus (Fabricius, 1801), comb. nov.; Eremiarinus (Pseudorhinus) impressicollis (Boheman, 1834) jarrigei (Roudier, 1959); E. (Pseudorhinus) impressicollis luciae (Ragusa, 1883), comb. nov.; E. (Pseudorhinus) impressicollis peninsularis (F. Solari, 1940), comb. nov.; E. (Pseudorhinus) laesirostris (Fairmaire, 1859), comb. nov., all resulting from the new placement of Depresseremiarhinus Pic, 1914 and of Pseudorhinus Melichar, 1923 as subgenera of Eremiarhinus Fairmaire, 1876. The subfamilial name Phytonominae Gistel, 1848 is used as valid over Hyperinae Marseul, 1863. Nomenclatural changes published from 1992 to date, and affecting Italian weevils are also listed.
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Eldridge, John, Duncan Mitchell, Derek Layder, C. E. Ashworth, Paul Hirst, C. G. A. Bryant, Dennis Smith, et al. "Book Reviews: Essays on the History of British Sociological Research, Three Sociological Traditions, Macro Sociological Theory: Perspectives on Sociological Theory Vol. I, Micro Sociological Theory: Perspectives on Sociological Theory Vol. II, Powers and Liberties: The Causes and Consequences of the Rise of the West, Is Democracy Possible?, Talcott Parsons and the Capitalist Nation-State, G.H. Mead. A Contemporary Re-Examination of His Thought, Language, Structure and Reproduction. An Introduction to the Sociology of Basil Bernstein, Measuring Culture: A Paradigm for the Analysis of Social Organisation, Food in the Social Order, Classes, Annals of the Labouring Poor, Beyond Employment: Household, Gender and Subsistence, Women's Working Lives: Patterns and Strategies, On Women, Sexuality and Love, A Woman's Place, An Oral History of Working-Class Women 1890–1940, The Autobiography of the Working Class: An Annotated, Critical Bibliography. Volume 1: 1790–1900, The Sociology of Law, Legal Systems and Social Systems, The Politics of the Police, European Immigration Policy: A Comparative Study, The Elementary Forms of the New Religious Life, The Need for Religious Certainty: A Sociological Study of Conventional Religion, No Pope of Rome: Militant Protestantism in Modern Scotland, American Journal of Islamic Studies, Volume 1, No 1, 1984, Ancient Judaism, The Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem, Islamic Sociology, Categories of Medieval Culture, Science for Social Scientists, The Intellectual and Social Organization of the Sciences, Framing Science: The Making of a BBC Documentary." Sociological Review 34, no. 3 (August 1986): 657–729. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.1986.tb00693.x.

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Lowe, W. J., Thomas Acton, Christine Kinealy, Conor McNamara, Seán Mac Liam, Maura Cronin, Ruth McManus, et al. "Reviews: The Memoirs of John M. Regan, a Catholic Officer in the RIC and RUC, 1909–1948, Becoming Conspicuous: Irish Travellers, Society and the State 1922–1970, Nineteenth-Century Ireland: The Search for Stability, Landlords, Tenants, Famine: The Business of an Irish Land Agency in the 1840s, Ireland's Great Famine: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, When the Potato Failed: Causes and Effects of the last European Subsistence Crisis, 1845–1850, Local Government in Nineteenth-Century County Dublin: The Grand Jury, a South Roscommon Emigrant: Emigration and Return, 1890–1920, Edenderry, County Offaly, and the Downshire Estate, 1790–1800, Restoration Strabane, 1660–1714: Economy and Society in Provincial Ireland, Cavan, 1609–1653: Plantation, War and Religion, Aloys Fleischmann, Raymond Deane, the Murders at Wildgoose Lodge: Agrarian Crime and Punishment in pre-Famine Ireland, the Georgian Squares of Dublin: An Architectural History, Exploring the History and Heritage of Irish Landscapes, the Oxford History of the Irish Book, Spinning the Threads of Uneven Development: Gender and Industrialization in Ireland during the long Eighteenth Century, Irish Agriculture: A Price History from the Mid-Eighteenth Century to the End of the First World War, Subversive Law in Ireland, 1879–1920: From ‘Unwritten Law’ to the Dáil Courts, the De Vesci Papers, Michael Davitt: Freelance Radical and Frondeur, Redmond, the Parnellite, Freemasonry in Ulster, 1733–1813, the Writings of Theobald Wolfe Tone, 1763–1798, Dublin Docklands Reinvented, are You Still Below? The Ford Marina Plant, Cork, 1917–1984, the Irish County Surveyors, 1834–1944: A Biographical Dictionary, Kathleen Lynn, Irishwoman, Patriot, Doctor, Census of Ireland circa 1659 with Essential Materials from the Poll Money Ordinances, 1660–1661, Nationalism and the Irish Party: Provincial Ireland, 1910–1916, Portraying Irish Travellers: Histories and Representations, Davitt, Court of Claims: Submissions and Evidence, 1663." Irish Economic and Social History 35, no. 1 (December 2008): 105–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/iesh.35.8.

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31

"U.S. orientalisms: race, nation, and gender in literature, 1790-1890." Choice Reviews Online 36, no. 01 (September 1, 1998): 36–0189. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.36-0189.

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32

"Fins de siecle: English poetry in 1590, 1690, 1790, 1890, 1990." Choice Reviews Online 33, no. 01 (September 1, 1995): 33–0135. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.33-0135.

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33

"Book Reviews." Journal of Economic Literature 51, no. 3 (September 1, 2013): 903–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/jel.51.3.883.r10.

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Updated second edition explores the history of Wall Street and examines the major events in finance and government that changed the way securities were created and traded. Discusses the early years, 1790–1840; the railroad and Civil War eras, 1840–70; the robber barons, 1870–90; the age of the trusts, 1880–1910; the money trust, 1890–1920; the booming twenties, 1920–29; Wall Street meets the New Deal, 1930–35; the struggle continues, 1936–54; the bull market, 1954–69; the bear market, 1970–81; mergermania, 1982–97; running out of steam, 1998–2003; the cataclysm, 2004–08; and the Great Recession, 2009–the present. Geisst is Ambassador Charles A. Gargano Professor of Finance at Manhattan College.
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