Academic literature on the topic 'Creation – Miscellanea'

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Journal articles on the topic "Creation – Miscellanea"

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Poliakov, Ivan A., and Maria A. Smirnova. "The Notes of Different Years’ of the Moscow Merchant Pyotr Porokhovshchikov: a Family Chronicler in a historical Miscellanea of the Second Half of the 18th century." Two centuries of the Russian classics 3, no. 1 (2021): 6–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.22455/2686-7494-2021-3-1-6-23.

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The article focuses on the family chronicler of the Moscow merchants Porokhovshchikovs,Abstract: The article focuses on the family chronicler of the Moscow merchants Porokhovshchikovs,discovered in the collection of A. A. Titov in the Manuscripts Departmentof the National Library of Russia. The handwritten Notes are located on the last pages of thehistorical miscellanea of the second half of the 18th century. Annual records were kept from1753 to 1803 first by Petr Isaevich, and then by his son Andrey Petrovich Porokhovshchikovs.The article reflects the history of the creation of The Notes, makes observations aboutthe tradition of keeping such chroniclers in the merchant environment of the second half ofthe 18th — early 19th centuries in general, and in the Porokhovshchikovs family in particular.The authors traced the reflection of the author’s “social circles” in the text of The Notes. Thearticle precedes the commented edition of the monument, which will be published in thenext issue of the journal.
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Anpilova, Larisa N. "The Story of a Drawing from Chukokkala Miscellany." RUDN Journal of Studies in Literature and Journalism 26, no. 1 (December 15, 2021): 33–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2312-9220-2021-26-1-33-42.

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A novel detailed analysis of a page from Chukokkala , Korney Chukovsky's handwritten miscellany with drawings by Yuri Annenkov, dated March 1923, is given. Involvement of archival sources makes up the history of the drawing creation. It turns out that Annenkov worked at the page of the miscellany and the portrait of Leo Trotsky at the same time. The analysis of the stylistic features of the drawing reconstructs the elements of the literary life of the 1920s. The study of the depicted persons clarifies the circle of friends and associates of prominent cultural figures of the first post-revolutionary decade. The article provides little-known biographical information about the characters depicted in the drawing. It specifies how Annenkov met Gorky's closest associate, the prominent public figure Albert Pinkevich. The author highlights little-known facts of friendship of A. Pinkevich, Boris Pilnyak, a Soviet writer, and the avant-garde artist Boris Shaposhnikov. The history of the creation of graphic portraits of Soviet writers made by Annenkov is considered. In conclusion, the page of the handwritten miscellany, and Chukokkala as a whole, are presented as a unique monument that captures the living passage of time.
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Treadwell, Luke. "Who Compiled and Edited the Mashhad Miscellany?" Al-ʿUsur al-Wusta 28, no. 1 (October 1, 2020): 45–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.52214/uw.v28i1.8409.

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The identity of the editors of the Mashhad miscellany generated considerable scholarly debate for a couple of decades after Togan’s discovery of the Mashhad manuscript in 1923, but interest in the topic declined after the middle of the century. In the last seventy years, it is the miscellany’s four texts, in particular the Kitāb of Ibn Faḍlān, that have monopolized scholarly attention. This paper reopens the file on the mysterious editors in the belief that their role remains the key to understanding the majmūʿa as well as its component texts. It reexamines the paratextual apparatus with which the editors framed the miscellany and concludes that the editors did not belong to the Mashriqī literary elite as earlier scholars maintained. The “editors” were in all probability not men of flesh and blood, but the fictional creations of the traveler, poet, and nadīm Abū Dulaf al-Khazrajī, author of the miscellany’s two Risālas. His role as the mastermind of the Mashhad miscellany compels us to reevaluate the miscellany’s literary context and to think again about the provenance, structure, and contents of its four texts.
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Clark, John R. "Anonymous on Alchemy, Aristotle, and Creation: An Unedited Thirteenth-Century Text." Traditio 61 (2006): 149–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0362152900002877.

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Around the year 1200 there appeared a Latin translation of Pseudo-Aristotle's De mineralibus, in which the author denied the possibility of the transmutation of metals. This statement, especially when placed in the mouth of the revered Aristotle, was a severe blow to the aim of the alchemists. Indeed it had been Aristotle's theory of the generation of metals in his Meteorologica and his theory of a common origin of all metals that had encouraged the alchemists in their efforts to transmute base metals into gold. This pseudo-Aristotelian challenge to the truth of alchemy seems to have elicited at least one previously unrecognized response. In a short treatise, tucked away in a sixteenth-century manuscript of alchemical miscellany, an anonymous author quotes “Aristotle” saying that the species of metals cannot be transformed or transmuted, but includes the proviso, also taken from Aristotle: unless they be reduced to their primary matter. This materia prima is identified by our author as the moistness that comes from water, water whose creative power our author grounds in Holy Scripture, especially in the hexaemeral tradition of the story of creation from the book of Genesis.
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Kuchmurukova, Ekaterina A., Yuliya S. Rinchinova, Galina А. Shanginova, and Irina A. Fokicheva. "Young Adults and Reading in the Focus of the Regional University of Culture." Bibliotekovedenie [Library and Information Science (Russia)] 68, no. 5 (November 27, 2019): 543–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.25281/0869-608x-2019-68-5-543-552.

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The article considers the work of the Department of Library-Information Resources (LIR) of the East-Siberian State Institute of Culture (VSGIK), aimed at supporting the reading of young people. The purpose of this article is to reveal the experience of the Department of Library-Information Resources in the implementation framework of the project “Self-realization of young people in the journalistic creativity as the basis of psychological preventive health care”. The authors consider the stages of project implementation: conducting the contest of journalistic materials, publication of miscellany containing the best journalistic works of pupils of secondary schools, distribution of miscellany in school and university libraries of the Republic of Buryatia, implementation of different preventive events with VSGIK students and school pupils basing on the publication materials. The authors characterize the expert evaluation of competition works of pupils of senior school, based on the use of qualitative and quantitative criteria. The contest was held in two categories: “Best analytical materials” and “Best information materials”. The article describes the results of voting in the nomination “Popular vote Winner” in the social network “Vkontakte” on the VSGIK official web page. The authors describe the stage of work associated with publication of miscellany “On the threshold of adulthood: reflections of schoolchildren on literature, creativity and life”, which includes 28 competition works.The article highlights the most interesting works of senior school students, rich in reasoning, reflecting the emotional state of person, empathy for the main characters and clearly expressed life positions. The miscellany received feedback from library staff of the Republic of Buryatia, Irkutsk Region, Trans-Baikal Region, which gave high assessment of the overall level of published materials and emphasized the wide readership of the publication. Based on the feedback of library specialists and school pupils, the article concludes about the main results of the project: there were created interesting creative works containing the authors’ arguments and reference to their own, though small life experience. Students revealed the role of book in their lives and disclosed how the book forms the personality of a person.The authors present the quantitative and qualitative indicators of project performance. Distribution of the miscellany in 368 school libraries of the Republic of Buryatia makes it possible to ensure its wide application in the educational process.
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Anisimova, Tatiana V. "The 15th-century Synodal Hexameron (Shestodnevets)." Slovene 9, no. 1 (2020): 110–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2305-6754.2020.9.1.4.

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The article is devoted to the textual analysis and publication of the short Hexameron, titled Shestodnevets, which became part of the Miscellany from the Synodal collection in the State Historical museum (No. 951). An archaeographical description of the manuscript (dated to around 1460) is given; it is noted that 13 folios from it are now in the Miscellany from the V. M. Undolsky collection (RSL, col. 310, No. 562). The analysis of the Shestodnevets showed that the source for its initial part was the prototype of the Sofiisky chronograph, which had a more elaborate form compared to that conserved in manuscripts. The rest of the text is based on the Palaea Interpretata and “The Word about the Creation of Heaven and Earth”, which is a part of another brief chronograph, Parenios. An attempt to trace the history of the spread of “The Word …” in the Old Russian literature revealed its use as an introduction to the illuminated Palaea Interpretata of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, the initial part of which is now largely lost. It turned out that a copy of these pages, in addition to two well-known 16th-century copies, is copied from the “Word …” in a manuscript of the Trinity-Sergius monastery, dated to the end of the 14th or the beginning of the 15th century (RSL, сol. 304/I, No. 39). Four more copies of the same text were also identified. A version of the “Word about the Creation of Heaven and Earth” is also used in the “Word about the Existence of the Whole World”, where the story of the six days, starting with the narrative of Cain and Abel, is supplemented by the “Speech of the philosopher” from the The Tale of Bygone Years. The Synodal Shestodnevets has textual features of “The Word about the Creation of Heaven and Earth” in the Parenios version, but it also contains individual additional fragments from the Book of Enoch. In conclusion, the importance of the Shestodnevets for our knowledge about the book repertoire and the guiding principles of Old Russian authors working on Palaea compilations in the middle of the XV century is underlined. Another significant result is the acquisition of new data on the content and the terminus ante quem for the Sofiisky chronograph’s archetype, the earliest copy of which dates from the 1530s.
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Wathey, Andrew. "PHILIPPE DE VITRY, BISHOP OF MEAUX." Early Music History 38 (September 11, 2019): 215–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261127919000019.

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AbstractPhilippe de Vitry’s tenure of the bishopric of Meaux in the last decade of his life, 1351–61, the crowning event of his court and church career, has often been regarded as a period of retirement from creative activity. A reassessment of this judgement is timely, following new musical discoveries and literary work exposing links between Vitry and his contemporaries. Using new archival material, this article explores the geopolitical context of Vitry’s work in the diocese of Meaux; his engagement with political society, king and court; and his role in events under a national government fractured by the capture of Jean II at Poitiers in 1356. It examines the interplay of Vitry’s career, relationships and output, identifying the composer’s house in Paris, and exploring his family relationships, and his engagement with Pierre Bersuire, among others, in the creative circles of mid-fourteenth-century Paris. It also illuminates a context and opportunities for the continuation of his creative work into the late 1350s, some remnants of which survive in the literary miscellany Paris, BN Lat. 3343.
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Boeck, Brian J. "Miscellanea Attributed to Kurbskii: The 17th Century in Russia Was More Creative Than We Like to Admit." Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 13, no. 4 (2012): 955–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/kri.2012.0059.

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Юдин, Далмат. "Unpublished Materials and Research of Academician M. N. Speransky, Dedicated to the Yaroslavl Horologion (XIII century)." Слово и образ. Вопросы изучения христианского литературного наследия, no. 1(2) (August 15, 2020): 57–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.31802/wi.2020.2.1.003.

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В статье выявлены и описаны архивные материалы (главным образом из фондов РГАЛИ), отражающие исследовательскую работу академика М. Н. Сперанского по изучению языка и состава Ярославского Часослова (XIII в.). Научный интерес ученого связан в первую очередь с вопросами изучения творческого наследия свт. Кирилла, епископа Туровского (XII в.). Раскрыто содержание и дан краткий анализ обобщающей работы М. Н. Сперанского «Ярославский сборник молитв XIII в.». Этот неопубликованный научный доклад вобрал в себя основные результаты нескольких лет работы ученого по данной теме. The archival materials (mainly from the Russian State Archives of Literature and Art, «RGALI»), reflecting the research work of Academician M. N. Speransky on the study of the language and composition of the Yaroslavl Horologion (XIII c.), have been identified and described. The scientific interest of the sholar is primarily associated with the study of the creative heritage of St. Kirill of Turov (XII c.). The content is revealed and a brief analysis of the generalizing work of M. N. Speransky «Yaroslavl miscellany of prayers of the XIII century» is given. This unpublished scientific report incorporates the main results of several years of work of the sholar on this topic.
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Polyvyannyy, Dmitry. "Byzantino-Slavic and Bulgarian Middle Ages in the Recent Works by Scholars from the University of Lodz." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 4. Istorija. Regionovedenie. Mezhdunarodnye otnoshenija, no. 6 (February 2021): 305–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu4.2020.6.25.

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The review considers the recent works by Polish academicians from two departments of the University of Lodz – History of Byzantium and Slavic Philology dedicated or related to the history and culture of medieval Bulgaria and the entire Byzantino-Slavic community of the 10th – 15th c. aiming to represent them to Russian audience, to reveal their contributions to the mentioned fields and to appreciate the current achievements of the forming academic school of the University of Lodz. Its beginning cannot be divided from the name of the disciple of prominent Polish Byzantinist Professor Halina Ewert-Kappesowa (1904–1985), Professor Waldemar Ceran (1936–2009), whose research and organizational activities led to the establishment of “Byzantina Lodziensia” book series (39 volumes published in 1997–2020), and in 2003 – to the Department of the History of Byzantium opening. These foundations met resonance and support from a new trend of the research activities in the University of Lodz – Old Slavonic literature studies – initiated by highly skilled paleoslavist Professor Georgi Minczew who began his work at the Department of Slavic Philology in the middle of the 1990s. The growing synergy of the Byzantine and Slavic trends resulted in the creation in 2011 of Ceraneum – the Centre of Research in History and Culture of Mediterranean and South-Eastern Europe named after W. Ceran (Centrum Badań nad Historią i Kulturą Basenu Morza Śródziemnego i Europy Południowo-Wschodniej im. prof. Waldemara Cerana, Ceraneum). Under its aegis the University of Lodz is editing annual scholarly journal “Studia Ceranea” (10 issues in 2011–2020) and since 2019 convenes in the historical venue of Bidermann Palace, the residence of the centre, annual international colloquium “Colloquia Ceranea” which attracts leading Polish and international scholars in Byzantine, Slavic and Bulgarian medieval history and culture. The author critically reviews monographs and miscellanies published by academicians of the University of Lodz in the recent five years and concludes upon the main research directions, results and perspectives of the University of Lodz school of Byzantine, Medieval Slavic and Bulgarian research.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Creation – Miscellanea"

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Fisher, John Dwight. "Learning from shamanic cultures: Returning the spirit to education through the arts." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2000. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1643.

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Books on the topic "Creation – Miscellanea"

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G, Bennett John. Creation. Santa Fe, NM: Bennett Books, 1998.

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Hanson, Julia. Awakening to your creation. Huntsville, AR: Ozark Mountain Pub., 2009.

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Rooker, Mark F. 40 questions about creation & evolution. Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel, 2014.

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The song of creation: The story of Genesis. [Brookline]: Avatar Publications, 2007.

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Bentov, Itzhak. A cosmic book on the mechanics of creation. Rochester, Vt: Destiny Books, 1988.

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Wakefield, June. Cosmic creation of the galaxy and solar systems. Tempe, Ariz: American Federation of Astrologers, 1985.

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Nilov, Viktor. Tekhnologii︠a︡ tvorenii︠a︡: "Gospodi! I︠A︡ poni︠a︡l, kak Ty tvorishʹ Mir!". Moskva: Kanon+, 2007.

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Reyes, Carmen V. Bunster. La segunda creación. Santiago de Chile: Red Internacional del Libro, 1996.

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Korsun, Evgeniĭ Lʹvovich. Pristanʹ soznanii︠a︡: Zametki obrashchennogo. Novosibirsk: Manuskript, 2004.

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110 fun facts about God's creation: Is it animal, vegetable, or mineral? Liguori, Mo: Liguori Publications, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Creation – Miscellanea"

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Pérez-Fernández, Tamara. "Shared Exemplars and the Creation of Miscellanies in the Manuscripts of Troilus and Criseyde." In The Dynamics of the Medieval Manuscript, 241–56. Göttingen: V&R unipress, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737007542.241.

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Turilov, Anatolij A. "Towards the Dating of the Vienna Octoechos (Codex Hankenstein)." In Slavic and Balkan linguistics, 284–305. Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2658-3372.2020.1.14.

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The section is devoted to the dating of the so-called «Vienna Octoechos» («Codex of Hankenstein») – the old Russian parchment liturgical miscellanea of GalicianVolyn origin. Currently, the scientific literature is dominated by its dating to the end of the 12th – beginning of the 13th century, which was proposed by foreign slavists in the middle of the 19th century. This opinion was based on the linguistic (spelling) dating of the codex, which in reality only defines the lower limit of its creation. Meanwhile, a number of Russian scientists, including such an experienced paleographer as I. I. Sreznevsky, dated the manuscript by the end of the 13th century and even the border of the 13th and 14th centuries. Starting the study the author proceeded from the fact that over the past decades many manuscripts (both South Slavic and Оld Russian) began to date much later (sometimes a century or more) than in the 19th century. Based on the found close paleographic analogies the author came to the conclusion that the «Vienna Octoechos» should be dated by the end of the 13th – the beginning of the 14th century.
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"3 The Juvenile Miscellany: The Creation of an American Children's Literature." In The First Woman in the Republic, 57–79. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780822398387-008.

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Schoolman, Edward M. "Of Lost Libraries and Monastic Memories: Creating the Eleventh-Century Novalesa Miscellany." In The Haskins Society Journal 28, 39–62. Boydell and Brewer Limited, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781787441446.004.

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Barker, Sheila, and Sharon Strocchia. "Household Medicine for a Renaissance Court." In Gender, Health, and Healing, 1250-1550. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463724517_ch05.

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Household recipe books were the most prevalent form of women’s authoritative medical writing in Renaissance Europe. Among the most significant female-authored collections from fifteenth-century Italy was that of Caterina Sforza (1463-1509), Countess of Imola and Forlì. Two recently discovered manuscripts shed new light on her creative praxis and the practical knowledge she collected, developed, and tested. We argue that Caterina’s vast miscellany of ‘secrets’ must be read intentionally within the context of a household economy writ large, simultaneously serving the health needs and political objectives of a Renaissance court. These discoveries highlight the authority of experiential knowledge within the domestic realm and beyond. Since the manuscripts were subjected to censorship, we interrogate the later reclassification of some of Caterina’s authoritative knowledge as heterodox.
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