Academic literature on the topic 'Daughter of nicholas ii'

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Journal articles on the topic "Daughter of nicholas ii"

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Князев, М. А. "From ‘childhood history’ to ‘gender history’: a new look at the life of the family of the last Russian emperor." Диалог со временем, no. 76(76) (August 17, 2021): 456–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.21267/aquilo.2021.76.76.024.

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В статье представлена рецензия на монографию Хелен Раппапорт «Дневники княжон Романовых. Загубленные жизни». Реконструкция биографий дочерей Николая II Ольги, Татьяны, Марии и Анастасии осуществлена через призму «истории детства» и «гендерной истории». Отмечается как методологическая новизна подхода автора книги, так и противоречивость некоторых суждений и выводов. The article presents a review of the monograph by Helen Rappaport ‘The Diaries of the Romanov Princesses. Ruined lives’ [‘The Romanov Sisters: The Lost Lives of the Daughters of Nicholas and Alexandra’]. The reconstruction of the biographies of the four daughters of Nicholas II was carried out through the prism of ‘childhood history’ and ‘gender history’. Both the methodological novelty of Rappaport's approach and the inconsistency of some of the author's judgments and conclusions are noted.
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Kaskina, Yulia U. "I. S. Shmelev's Story ‘Candle’ and the Fate of Prince Golitsyn." Vestnik slavianskikh kul’tur [Bulletin of Slavic Cultures] 67 (2023): 132–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.37816/2073-9567-2023-67-132-141.

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The story “Candle” (1924) tells about a huge exemplary economy in the South of Russia, which name of Star-Novka is consonant with the Crimean Novy Svet, acquired in 1878 by Prince L.S. Golitsyn who created a winery in it. The fate of Star-Novka is described by Shmelev from the words of the Manager, who loved his business, but was forced to go abroad at the risk of his life after the establishment of Soviet power. However even in a foreign land he continues to believe in the undying humanity in people — the light in the soul, metaphorically manifested in the narrative by the image of a candle. The state of affairs of Prince Golitsyn, for 37 years skillfully and fruitfully managed the New World, gradually fell into decay, so that the estate in 1913 was donated to Nicholas II. L.S. Golitsyn died in 1915. His daughter and two granddaughters, underwent the troubles similar to those described in Shmelev's story. Thus, under the threat of execution in 1918, their jewelry was confiscated, in the 1920s their granddaughters were arrested, the husband of one of them managed to escape and settled in Paris. The real events he experienced, perhaps told and heard by Shmelev, could serve, in our opinion, a historical basis for the plot of the story “Candle”.
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Anan'ich, Boris V., and Rafail Sh Ganelin. "Nicholas II." Russian Studies in History 34, no. 3 (December 1995): 68–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.2753/rsh1061-1983340368.

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Alydrus, Nafisah, Ceisy N. Wuntu, and Merlin Maukar. "STRUGGLE FOR RECONCILIATION IN THE LAST SONG BY NICHOLAS SPARKS." SoCul: International Journal of Research in Social Cultural Issues 1, no. 2 (December 15, 2022): 152–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.53682/soculijrccsscli.v1i2.2601.

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The purpose of this research is to reveal the struggle to reconcile in Nicholas Sparks The Last Song. In conducting this research, the writers use qualitative research because the data are collected in the form of words and quotations from the primary source which is the novel itself The Last Song written by Nicholas Sparks, and secondary sources are related documents such as books, journal, internet browsing, dictionary, and some materials that can support this research. In analyzing the data, the writers use objective approach to get the information about Steve Miller struggle for reconciliation. The result of research shows the struggle of Steve Miller for reconcile the relationship. In addition, in solving the struggle, the writers conclude in Steve struggle that he did several things, namely by following his daughter's wishes, believing in his daughter, and fighting to hide his illness. Steve Miller gets several effects. Steve Miller more aware of the real love of God, being his daughter aware of Steve's Miller affection, his daughter knows the reason for her parents divorce decision, Making his daughter Peace with Self, and finally they can reconcile the relationship. So, in the struggle it is not easy people need to patient and never give up in facing them. Because there is no struggle without challenges, people must disappointment and tears faced it.
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Denyer, Nicholas. "II–Nicholas Denyer." Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 74, no. 1 (July 1, 2000): 163–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-8349.00068.

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Holt, Geoffrey. "Fr. Charles Shireburn: An Early Eighteenth Century Jesuit." Recusant History 29, no. 1 (May 2008): 44–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034193200011845.

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The accounts kept by Sir Nicholas Shireburn of Stonyhurst with his goldsmith for the years 1697–1702 and the following years show that he was paying for the education at St. Omers College of two Shireburn ‘nephews’, Charles and Richard or ‘Dick’. The exact relationship is not known, ‘sons of a poor relation’, ‘distant relations’, ‘connected with the Shireburnes of Stonyhurst but the exact connection is uncertain’. When Charles Shireburn died in 1745The Gentleman’s Magazinestated that he was related to the Dowager Duchess of Norfolk, Mary, daughter of Sir Nicholas Shireburn.The Extinct Baronetciesshows that some of the Shireburns of Stonyhurst in the sixteenth century had younger sons. Charles and Richard may have been descended from one of these.
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Florinskii, Mikhail F. "Nicholas II and Stolypin's Cabinet." Russian Studies in History 50, no. 4 (April 2012): 33–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2753/rsh1061-1983500402.

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Florinskii, Mikhail F. "Nicholas II and Stolypin's Cabinet." Russian Social Science Review 53, no. 4 (July 2012): 4–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10611428.2012.11065484.

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Kusumaningrum, Nur Fitrah. "The Impact of divorce on the main male character, Steve Miller, as reflected in Nicholas Sparks’s the last song." COMMICAST 2, no. 1 (February 2, 2021): 23. http://dx.doi.org/10.12928/commicast.v2i1.2735.

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The Last Song written by Nicholas Sparks is a novel that tells about family conflict that begins from the divorce between the parents and involves their children. The children must face the reality about their parents’ divorce when they are at the age of ten and seventeen. Not only for their children, but the divorce also brings an impact to the main male character, Steve Miller, in this novel. There is misunderstanding at the beginning in children’s comprehension about the causes of the divorce in their family. But after they know, especially the daughter, everything has changed between the main male character and his children. The aims of this study are to analyze the cause of the divorce and the impact of divorce on male male character, Steve Miller, as reflected in Nicholas Sparks’s The Last Song. The writer uses psychological approach to analyse the cause and the impact of the divorce on the main male character, Steve Miller, as reflected in Nicholas Sparks’s The Last Song. The writer also uses qualitative research method. The primary data are taken from the copy of novel The Last Song (2010) in the form quotation, phrase, and clauses or in the form of sentences that are related to the points discussed in this research. While, the secondary data are taken from all the analysis and criticism related to the novel. This secondary data of this research are also taken from some library documents and internet sources. The result of this study shows that the cause of the divorce in Nicholas Sparks’s The Last Song is because the male main character’s wife had affair with the stranger that he does not know before. It makes the communication with his wife is rarely done. It also involves their children and makes the relationship between father and daughter is broken. Not only to the relationship between the family members, but this divorce also give effects to the main character’s psychological and physical states.
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Ankusheva, Kseniya A. "Shaping the Image of Nicholas II in Historical Memory." Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta, no. 462 (2021): 110–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/15617793/462/14.

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The image of the last Russian emperor’s family arouses big interest despite the fact that times are changing. Nicholas II is quite an ambiguous historical figure. It may be stated that public opinion about him varies a lot. It causes a great number of discussions, every time another newsbreak comes to light. Basically, it is the mass media that stimulate people’s memory: anniversary announcements, new movies, etc. The research is relevant as far as the story considered in the article is one of those that shape our collective memory. The latter contributes to the shaping of the state identity. That is why it is significant to examine the way Nicholas II’s image has been shaped in historical context. The author analyzes the data that shape the image of Emperor Nicholas II in historical memory. The growing variety of such data is considered, their content is studied. She examines the documents from Nicholas II’s epoch, scholarly works of the Soviet and post-Soviet times, textbooks, the most popular information resources, some commemoration practices, and the museum space. The author separately presents the national tourist project “Emperor’s Route” and some visual sources targeted at the broad target audience. She defines the basic trends in evaluating the personality of Nicholas II, as well as the basic components of his image including the recent ones according to which the Russian Emperor is referred to as a passion bearer. The article contains some references to sociological studies. The image of Nicholas II is widely recognizable and consists of a definite number of beliefs and values. Nicholas II’s epoch and his personality arouse big interest, the emperor being a symbol of that time. The society has numerous and various sources and channels of information. On the one hand, it allows getting an almost unlimited access to the data, evaluative data as well. On the other hand, it complicates the process of shaping a single image. The name of Nicholas II is still retained by historical memory, associated with tragic events in the history of our country, and his reign is evaluated ambiguously. At present, we can clearly distinguish the presence of two main trends in the assessment of Nicholas II’s personality: critical and apologetic. People sympathize with the emperor’s family, especially with the children. This component of Nicholas II’s image does not cause any major controversies regardless of sex or age group, political views or other characteristics of the audience.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Daughter of nicholas ii"

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McKee, C. T. "British perceptions of Tsar Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Fedorovna 1894-1918." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2014. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1420957/.

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Attitudes towards Tsar Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Fedorovna can be characterised by extremes, from hostility to sentimentality. A great deal of what has been written about the imperial couple (in modern times) has been based on official records and with reference to the memoirs of people who knew the tsar and empress. This thesis recognises the importance of these sources in understanding British perceptions of Nicholas and Alexandra but it also examines reactions in a wider variety of material; including mass circulation newspapers, literary journals and private correspondence. These sources reveal a number of the strands which helped form British understanding of the tsar and empress. In particular, perceptions were influenced by internal British politics, by class and by attitudes to the role of the British Empire in world affairs, by British propaganda and by a view of Russia and her society which was at times perceptive and at others antiquated. This thesis seeks to evaluate diverse British views of Nicholas and Alexandra and to consider the reasons behind the sympathetic, the critical, the naïve and the knowledgeable perceptions of the last tsar and empress of Russia.
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Baker, Helen Samantha. "Nicholas II and the Khodynka coronation catastrophe, May 1896 : a study of contemporary responses." Thesis, University of Leeds, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.531071.

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Cooke-Jackson, Angela F. "INTERGENERATIONAL COMMUNICATION ABOUT AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN'S HEALTH: THE SHARING OF HEALTH MESSAGES BETWEEN DIABETIC MOTHERS AND THEIR NON-DIABETIC ADULT DAUGHTERS." Lexington, Ky. : [University of Kentucky Libraries], 2006. http://lib.uky.edu/ETD/ukycomm2006d00453/etd.pdf.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Kentucky, 2006.
Title from document title page (August 3, 2006). Document formatted into pages; contains viii, 142 p. Includes abstract and vita. Includes bibliographical references (p. 125-140).
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Demchak, Tony Eugene. "Reform, foreign technology, and leadership in the Russian Imperial and Soviet navies, 1881–1941." Diss., Kansas State University, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32720.

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Doctor of Philosophy
History
Michael Krysko
David R. Stone
This dissertation examines the shifting patterns of naval reform and the implementation of foreign technology in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union from Alexander III’s ascension to the Imperial throne in 1881 up to the outset of Operation Barbarossa in 1941. During this period, neither the Russian Imperial Fleet nor the Red Navy had a coherent, overall strategic plan. Instead, the expansion and modernization of the fleet was left largely to the whims of the ruler or his chosen representative. The Russian Imperial period, prior to the Russo-Japanese War, was characterized by the overbearing influence of General Admiral Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich, who haphazardly directed acquisition efforts and systematically opposed efforts to deal with the potential threat that Japan posed. The Russo-Japanese War and subsequent downfall of the Grand Duke forced Emperor Nicholas II to assert his own opinions, which vacillated between a coastal defense navy and a powerful battleship-centered navy superior to the one at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. In the Soviet era, the dominant trend was benign neglect, as the Red Navy enjoyed relative autonomy for most of the 1920s, even as the Kronstadt Rebellion of 1921 ended the Red Navy’s independence from the Red Army. M. V. Frunze, the People’s Commissar of the Army of Navy for eighteen months in 1925 and 1926, shifted the navy from the vaguely Mahanian theoretical traditions of the past to a modern, proletarian vision of a navy devoted to joint actions with the army and a fleet composed mainly of submarines and light surface vessels. As in the Imperial period, these were general guidelines rather than an all-encompassing policy. The pattern of benign neglect was shattered only in 1935, when Stalin unilaterally imposed his own designs for a mighty offensive fleet on the Soviet military, a plan that was only interrupted by the outbreak of World War II.
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Howard, Jeff S. "The effective use of the tsarist wealth by the Soviet government." [Johnson City, Tenn. : East Tennessee State University], 2002. http://etd-submit.etsu.edu/etd/theses/available/etd-1113102-175520/restricted/HowardJ112502a.pdf.

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Brina, Elizabeth. "Not Japanese." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2018. https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/2443.

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A memoir that focuses on the complications of growing as the only daughter of a mother from Okinawa and a father from the United States. They met at a nightclub, where her mother worked as a waitress, outside an Army base, where her father was stationed during U.S. Military occupation of the island. These marriages between Okinawan women and U.S. Servicemen have been quite common since 1945, after the Battle of Okinawa, when a massive complex of bases was first established. Okinawan women must leave their homes and their families to follow their husbands to the United States, where they are faced with challenges of racism, language barriers and isolation. Their children often grow up rejecting and resenting their Okinawan identities, causing further alienation.
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Ignatenko-Desanlis, Oxana. "L'image de la Révolution russe dans la presse satirique russe de 1917." Thesis, Paris 1, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PA010651/document.

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Basé sur des documents authentiques rares et inédits, ce travail a pour but d’étoffer une nouvelle image de la Révolution russe via les revues satiriques de l’époque. Ces revues sont de véritables œuvres d’art révolutionnaires qui interrogent la liberté de la presse et l’art durant une période charnière en Russie. Il s’agit d’une témoignage direct de cette année révolutionnaire, véhiculé par des artistes avant-gardistes libérés de la censure, et qui vont, au fil des semaines, composer une image originale de l’année 2017 et des deux révolutions russes de février et d’octobre au travers des couvertures illustrées. Afin de conserver la dynamique chronologique des événements, les revues ont été mises en parallèle avec les témoignages écrits d’époque, de personnalités diverses telles que Claude Anet, Pierre Pascal, Maxime Gorki, Maurice Paléologue, ou encore John S. Reed. Tous ont accompagné les bouleversements révolutionnaires à leur manière et constituent l’écho historique de ces revues satiriques illustrées qui nous permettent de plonger au cœur même du quotidien des révolutions russes caractérisant une nouvelle image de la Révolution, mouvante, singulière et remarquable
Based on rare and authentic documents, this work endeavors to elaborate a new image of the Russian Revolution through satirical magazines of the time. These illustrated reviews are genuine works of art that question freedom of the press and art itself during a transnational period in Russia. They serve as a direct testimony of this revolutionary year, providing an original image of the two Russian revolutions of February and October and featuring on the review’s front cover week after week avant-garde artists freed from censorship of the press. In order to preserve the chronological dynamic of the events, satirical reviews are coupled with historical testimony of various writers such as Claude Anet, Pierre Pascal, Maxime Gorki, Maurice Paleologue, and John S. Reed, among others. All of them had supported the revolutionary turmoil in their own way and constitute an historical echo of the illustrated satirical reviews allowing us to plunge into the heart of daily life during the two Russian revolutions, and thus creating a new image of the Revolution, set in motion, single-minded, and noteworthy
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Nováková, Veronika Kateřina. "Náboženské poměry v Rusku na počátku 20. století." Master's thesis, 2017. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-370770.

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Master thesis Religious circumstances in Russia at the beginning of the 20th century will deal with religio-spiritual situation within czarist Russia since the dawn of 20th century till the rise of Bolshevik regime in 1917. It aims not only to analyse and describe religious circumstances of contemporary Orthodox church, but also reflect those circumstances in "minority" religious communities. It introduces the state at which the Orthodox church was at and enlighten the situation, that was influenced both by Russian course to industrial society and the outbreak of the First world war and revolution at 1917.
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Su, Pin-Tzu, and 蘇品慈. "Investigation of Interactions between Bacteria and the Surroundings: Part I. Factors Affecting Daughter Cells’ Arrangement during the Early Bacterial Divisions Part II. Type III Secretion of EHEC in the Presence of Host Cells." Thesis, 2010. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/arm827.

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博士
國立陽明大學
微生物及免疫學研究所
98
Part I. Factors affecting daughter cells’ arrangement during the early bacterial divisions On agar plates, daughter cells of Escherichia coli mutually slide and align side-by-side in parallel during the first round of binary fission. This phenomenon has been previously attributed to an elastic material that restricts apparently separated bacteria from being in string. We hypothesize that the interaction between bacteria and the underneath substratum may affect the arrangement of the daughter bacteria. To test this hypothesis, bacterial division on hyaluronic acid (HA) gel, as an alternative substratum, was examined. Consistent with our proposition, the HA gel differs from agar by suppressing the typical side-by-side alignments to a rare population. Examination of bacterial surface molecules that may contribute to the daughter cells’ arrangement yielded an observation that, with disrupted lpp, the E. coli daughter cells increasingly formed non-typical patterns, i.e. neither sliding side-by-side in parallel nor forming elongated strings. With oscillatory optical tweezers, we further demonstrated that the interaction force decreased in bacteria without Lpp, a result substantiating our notion that the side-by-side sliding phenomenon directly reflects the strength of in-situ interaction between bacteria and substratum. Besides, we examined the membrane proteins profile by 2D and further suggested the interactions between the bacterial membrane and underneath substratum that involved in a multitude of adhesive factors on the bacterial surface. Part II. Type III Secretion of EHEC in the Presence of Host Cells Type III secretion system (TTSS) are key features of many pathogenic gram-negative bacteria that enable the injection of multiple bacterial effectors through membrane barriers directly into host cells. TTSS of EHEC inject bacterial effectors into epithelial cells that enables bacterial attachment and promotes colonization. Upon the cell contact, the bacterial injector (EspA) of TTSS translocates the translocon (EspB and EspD), that is required for the bacterial effectors translocate into the host cytosol. In addition, the bacterial injectors have been shown distributed all over the bacterial surface. Therefore, we directly visualized the translocation of effectors fused with GFP or tetracysteine motif by epi-fluorescent to investigate whether the polarity secretion of TTSS of EHEC upon the cell contact. Here, we showed it is only when bacteria attach in the host cell that the translocation of Tir has polarity. Furthermore, the polarity of Tir translocation was not observed in the TTSS deficient bacteria (?悶scN or ?惻er/L43). Besides, calcium is a well-known regulator of TTSS and our results showed EHEC induced the calcium concentration in the host cell post 1 h of infection. Therefore, the relationship between the transportation of Tir and calcium response in the host cell is still needed to more exploration.
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Books on the topic "Daughter of nicholas ii"

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Helen, Mingay, ed. The search for Anastasia. London: Smith Gryphon, 1996.

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Lovell, James Blair. Anastasia: The lost princess. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995.

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Lovell, James Blair. Anastasia: The lost princess. Washington, D.C: Regnery Gateway, 1991.

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Kurth, Peter. Anastasia: The life of Anna Anderson. London: Pimlico, 1995.

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Kurth, Peter. Anastasii︠a︡: Zagadka velikoĭ kni︠a︡zhny. Moskva: Zakharov, 2005.

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Kurth, Peter. Anastasia: The life of Anna Anderson. London: Pimlico, 1985.

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d'Encausse, Hélène Carrère. Nicholas II: The interrupted transition. New York: Holmes & Meier Publishers, 2000.

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Lieven, D. C. B. Nicholas II: Twilight of the Empire. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994.

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Lieven, D. C. B. Nicholas II: Twilight of the Empire. New York: St. Martin's Griffin, 1996.

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Lieven, D. C. B. Nicholas II: Emperor of all the Russias. London: John Murray, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Daughter of nicholas ii"

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Strickland, John. "Nicholas II." In Government Leaders, Military Rulers and Political Activists, 134. New York: Routledge, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315063706-133.

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Baird, Forrest E. "Nicholas Cusanas, 1401–1464." In Philosophic Classics, Volume II: Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, 481–87. 6th ed. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003416425-35.

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Cotsonis, John A. "A seal of Patriarch Nicholas II." In The Religious Figural Imagery of Byzantine Lead Seals I, 110–19. New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Variorum collected studies; CS1085: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429327193-6.

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Nedd, Andrew M. "Nicholas II: The Centennial, Art, Spectacle, and Historical Memory." In History and Myth in Pictorial Narratives of the Russian 'Patriotic War', 1812-1914, 205–43. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-60335-8_6.

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Sztern, Sylvia. "From Janus to Janus: Peter I, Nicholas II, and Industrialization." In Russia on the Move, 319–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89285-2_8.

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Heimerl, Joachim. "Nicholas Boyle: Goethe. Bd. I: 1741–1790. Bd. II: 1790–1803." In Goethe-Jahrbuch, 377–81. Stuttgart: J.B. Metzler, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-02861-7_35.

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Rogger, Hans. "The Beilis Case: Anti-Semitism and Politics in the Reign of Nicholas II." In Jewish Policies and Right-Wing Politics in Imperial Russia, 40–55. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-06568-4_3.

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Cotsonis, John A. "An image of Saint Nicholas with the “Tongues of Fire” on a Byzantine lead seal *." In The Religious Figural Imagery of Byzantine Lead Seals II, 193–207. Abington, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Variorum collected studies ; CS1086: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429327216-8.

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"EsTher Kello (Née Inglis/Langlois) (1571-1624)." In Early Modern Women Poets (1520-1700), edited by Jane Stevenson Peter Davidson, Meg Bateman, Kate Chedgzoy, and Julie Saunders, 124–25. Oxford University PressOxford, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198184263.003.0047.

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Abstract Estheringlis, ‘l’unique et souveraine Dame de la plume’, as she was termed in 1612, was The daughter of Hugenot refugees who came initially to London, but settled in Scotland. If she was born in France, Then her date of birth can be established by The 1571 register of aliens, which notes that in The parish of Black friars in London in that year were Nicholas Inglishe, Frenchman, schoolmaster, and householder, Mary his wife, David his son, and ‘Yester’ his daughter, and that They ‘[came] into this realm about two years past for religion’ (R. E. G. and E. F. Kirk, Returns of Aliens Dwelling in The City and Suburbs of London, Henry VII-James I, Publications of The Hugenot Society of London, ii. 15). A book which she wrote in 1624 gives her age as 53; which would make her born in 1571, but it is possible that deliberately or oTherwise, she knocked two years off her age.
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Smith, Gary Scott. "The 1900s." In Mark Twain, 163–209. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192894922.003.0007.

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During the final decade of his life, Twain received several devastating blows—the death of his beloved wife in 1904, the death of his daughter Jean in 1909, and his own declining health. These and other problems have led some scholars to portray him as a bitter, cynical, disillusioned codger who was hamstrung by his misfortunes and angry as his creative powers diminished and his health deteriorated. This, they say, led him to repudiate Christianity, adopt a deterministic worldview, and savagely rail against an implacable, depraved God, a hypocritical, heartless Christianity and the damned human race. Twain’s writings during his final decade allegedly displayed his relentless despair as he embraced social and spiritual nihilism. At the same time, his criticisms of various groups including missionaries, villains, especially Russian Czar Nicholas II and Belgian King Leopold II, and several ideologies—militarism, imperialism, anti-Semitism—became increasingly caustic.
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Conference papers on the topic "Daughter of nicholas ii"

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Bainova, Vlada. "Constructing the biographical narrative about Nicholas II in journalistic radio texts." In VII Information school of a young scientist. Central Scientific Library of the Urals Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.32460/ishmu-2019-7-0043.

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Fischer, Roman. "The importance of the support by the Roman popes for the success of the missionary work of Constantine Cyril and Methodius." In Tenth Rome Cyril-Methodian Readings. Indrik, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/91674-576-4.36.

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As part of the thematic block, we turn our attention to the importance of the support of the popes for the success of the missionary work of Constantine Cyril and Methodius. Pope Nicholas I, Adrian II and John VIII showed interest in the experiment of the conversion of the Slavs in the Slavic language. They approved worship in the Slavic language and defended Methodius from persecution by the Bavarian clergy.
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Li, Xiaona, Meiwen An, Li Wang, and Chengxing Liu. "Lamellipodium Locomition of the Daughter Cells Facilitates the Cytokinesis of NRK Cells without Myosin II." In 2010 4th International Conference on Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering (iCBBE). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icbbe.2010.5518280.

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Childs, Dara, Andrew Schaible, and Bader Al Jughaiman. "Static and Dynamic Performance of Pressure Dam Bearings With Dam Steps That Are (I) Square and (II) Filleted." In ASME Turbo Expo 2008: Power for Land, Sea, and Air. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2008-50136.

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Measured rotordynamic force coefficients (stiffness, damping, and added-mass) and static characteristics (eccentricity and attitude angle) are presented for two nearly identical pressure-dam bearings. One bearing has a square step at the dam; the other has a filleted step. Because of reduced manufacturing costs, the filleted-step design is used widely. The bearings’ groove dimensions are close to the optimum predictions of Nicholas and Allaire [2] and are consistent with current field applications. The bearings have a diameter of 117.1 mm (4.61 in), a length-to-diameter ratio of 0.655, and a nominal radial clearance of 0.133 mm (5.25 mils). The bottom pad has a deep, centered relief track over 25% of the pad’s axial length. The upper pad for both bearings has a step located at 130° from the horizontal and a 0.620 mm (15.75 mils) deep dam. The dam on the upper pad of one bearing has a square step; the other bearing has a filleted step. Test conditions include four shaft speeds (4000, 6000, 8000 and 10000 rpm) and bearing unit loads from 0 to 1034 kPa (150 psi). Laminar flow was produced for all test conditions within the bearing lands. For the same operating conditions, the filleted step bearing operates at a lower eccentricity ratio (has a larger minimum film thickness). The filleted step design has higher direct stiffness coefficients. Both cross-coupled stiffness coefficients are positive (favorable for stability) for both designs but the filleted design produces higher values. In regard to direct damping, the filleted-step design has higher damping in the load direction and comparable values in the unloaded direction. Hence, for the same operating conditions, a filleted step design should produce reduced amplitudes at or near a critical speed. With respect to stability as defined by WFR, the filleted design is consistently better (lower value) than the square step design, resulting in an elevated onset speed of instability for the filleted-step design.
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Dimitrijević, Milan S. "TEODOR METOHIT I NjEGOV UČENIK NIĆIFOR GRIGORA NA DVOROVIMA KRALjA MILUTINA I STEFANA DEČANSKOG." In Kralj Milutin i doba Paleologa: istorija, književnost, kulturno nasleđe. Publishing House of the Eparchy of Šumadija of the Serbian Orthodox Church - "Kalenić", 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/6008-065-5.223d.

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Theodore Metochites (Θεόδωρος Μετοχίτης; 1270–1332), a Byzantine Greek statesman and polymath, and his student, the greatest Byzantine astronomer Nicephoros Gregoras (1295-1360) were in several diplomatic missions on the courts of King Milutin and his son, King Stefan Dečanski. Both gave significant contributions in astronomy. Metochites, considered as the one of the greatest forerunners of the Renaissance in the Greek world, was a Platonist philosopher, astronomer and patron of the arts. From 1305 to 1328 he held the position of personal adviser (mesazon) to emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos. During his long political career he was also Great Logothetes (a kind of Prime Minister) of the Byzantine Empire. His teacher in astronomy was Manuel Bryennius. His known astronomical writting is an introduction to the study of Ptolemaic astronomy (Στοιχείωσις επί τη αστρονομική επιστήμη). Related to astronomy is also his paraphrases of Aristotle's works on natural philosophy and Σημειώσεις γνωμικαί (Annotations), where he provided an important critique of Aristotle. Metochites was five times on the court of King Milutin as the envoy of Andronikos II to make the peace with Serbia and to arrange the mariage of King Milutin with Simonida, grand daughter of the Byzantine emperor. He wrote a writting about his travels to Serbia (Пρεσβευτικός) which is translated to Serbian.
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Davico, Pia. "Fortificazioni della Tunisia contese tra Spagnoli e Turchi a metà del secolo XVI, documentate dall’iconografia coeva. Un’analisi dal ter-ritorio all’architettura." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Valencia: Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11347.

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Tunisian fortifications disputed between Spaniards and Turks in the mid-sixteenth century, documented by coeval iconography. An analysis from the territory to the architectureThe five volumes of the precious archival collection of drawings called Architettura Militare (Military Architecture), kept at the Archivio di Stato di Torino (Turin State Archive), propose documents made mostly by military engineers from the half of the sixteenth to the following first decade. The tomes collect mostly drawings of places under the aegis of the Duchy of Savoy, apart from the second one, dedicated to documents of Spanish military interest (Mediterranean Sea and Lombardy maps). As I pointed out at Fortmed Convention 2018, the reason why these documents are kept at the Turin State Archives is because of their belonging to Catherine of Aragon, daughter of the Spanish king and wife of Carlo Emanuele I di Savoia. In the volume Architettura Militare II (Military Architecture II) 26 tables, all datable from 1522 (Rhodes) to 1596 (Cadiz), concern territories, walled cities and fortifications, of islands and Mediterranean coasts, disputed by Christians and Turks for the supremacy on the sea. In the previous study I had examined drawings about Egypt, eastern Ottoman territories and Holy Land coasts, Spanish possessions as Perpignan and Cadiz bay. In this new study instead, I would like to examine in depth the iconography about Tunisia. Those drawings, so different from each other for scale and graphic quality, document those phases in which the Spanish control is characterized by alternate situations: the Iberian presidio dates back to 1535, reconquered by Ottomans in 1570, it is taken back in three years by Christians who keep it until 1574 only, when the whole Tunisian territory, precious bastion for the control of routes and trades, definitely returns in the hands of the Turks.
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Fisyak, Y., V. Ivanov, H. Ke, I. Kisel, P. Kisel, G. Kozlov, S. Margetis, A. Tang, and I. Vassiliev. "MISSING MASS METHOD FOR SHORT-LIVED PARTICLE RECONSTRUCTION IN THE CBM AND STAR EXPERIMENTS." In 9th International Conference "Distributed Computing and Grid Technologies in Science and Education". Crossref, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.54546/mlit.2021.91.98.002.

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The search for short-lived particles is an important part of physics research in experiments withrelativistic heavy ions. To find, select and study the properties of such short-lived particles in real timein the CBM experiment (FAIR/GSI, Germany), we have developed a package of algorithms, KFParticle Finder, which contains a search for more than 150 decay channels. The decays of short-livedcharged particles, when one of the daughter particles is neutral and cannot be registered in the detectorsystem, are also of great physics interest. To find and study such decays, we have extended the KFParticle Finder package by implementing the missing mass method, which is based on theconservation of energy and momentum laws.The method was studied in detail on simulated data of the CBM experiment, showing high efficiencywith a large signal-to-background ratio, as well as high significance. As part of the FAIR Phase-0program, the KF Particle Finder package of algorithms has been adapted for online and offlineprocessing in the STAR experiment (BNL, USA).Here we describe and discuss in detail the missing mass method for finding and analyzing short-livedparticles. The features of the application of the method to both simulated data in the CBM experimentand in the STAR experiment as part of real-time express data processing, as well as the results of thereal-time reconstruction of short-lived particle decays in the BES-II environment of the STARexperiment, are given.
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Fontcuberta, J., R. M. de los Inocentes, N. Sala, M. Borrell, and J. Félez. "STUDY OF A SPANISH FAMILY WITH INHERITED PROTEIN S DEFICIENCY." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1644298.

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Protein S (PS) is a plasma glycoprotein that serves as a cofactor for activated protein C (PC) anticoagulant activity. Inherited PS deficiency has been found to be associated to thrombotic disease in several families. In the present study, we report on a Spanish family with type II PS deficiency.The propositus is a 40 year-old male that was referred to our center for study after having suffered from multiples thrombotic events since he was 20 year-old. After his first episode of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) he had 4 recurrences, three of them complicated with pulmonary embolism. It should be remarked that one of the episodes occured while the patient was under oral anticoagulant treatment. The basic screening of haemostasis and hepatic function were normal for a patient that was being treated with oral anticoagulants. Functional and antigenic levels of antithrombin III, protein C and plasminogen were also normal. When total and free protein S levels (method of Comp et al.) were measured using both an electroimmunoassay and an ELISA assay ,almost indetectable levels of free protein S (between 0 and 10%) and very low levels (20%) of total plasma PS, were found. These results were also confirmed by crossed-electriimnunophoretic studies.When the family of this patient was studied it was found that his two sons, aged 15 and 8 years, as well as one of his sisters, aged 35 years, and her daughter of 4 years, were also affected (free PS levels between 38-60% and total PS between 35 and 39%). All these members had been assymptomatic up to now and are not under oral anticoagulants.
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9

Radisavljević, Dejan S. "KRALj MILUTIN I NjEGOVO DOBA U ISTORIJI, ARHEOLOGIJI I NARODNOJ TRADICIJI KRUŠEVAČKOG KRAJA." In Kralj Milutin i doba Paleologa: istorija, književnost, kulturno nasleđe. Publishing House of the Eparchy of Šumadija of the Serbian Orthodox Church - "Kalenić", 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/6008-065-5.177r.

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In this paper, through a multidisciplinary approach and analysis of available written material and material remains, we tried to shed light on the period of King Milutin's rule in the Kruševac area, laying the foundations for some future comprehensive research. According to the Žitije kralja Milutina (1324) by Archbishop Danilo II, this Serbian ruler stayed in the Kruševac area during a meeting with his brother King Dragutin in Mačkovac in the župa of Rasina, before the decisive attack on the state of Drman and Kudelin, most likely in the first half of 1292. Mačkovac can be reliably identified with today's village of the same name, about 8 km west of Kruševac. Based on the favorable geographical position not far from the crossroads of important medieval roads, it can be assumed that this settlement, before the rise of Kruševac in the second half of the 14th century, most likely enjoyed the status of a trg (mercatum, marketplace). At this time, the župa of Rasina was organized as a separate država (lord state) within Milutin's kingdom. Archaeological finds from the last decades of the 13th and the first decades of the 14th century are scarce, and we could talk only about two specimens of silver coins of King Milutin, accidentally found in the area of the villages of Laćisled and Mačkovac. The specimen from Laćisled, which was in secondary use as part of the jewelry, belongs to type 3.1, i.e. the dinar with the flag - de bandera, minted in Brskovo between 1282 and around 1310. The most significant written testimonies from the period of King Milutin's reign are two tombstone inscriptions. The first was carved on a massive river pebble, which today lies on the property of the Gajić family in the village of Zdravinje near Kruševac. It was performed in the Cyrillic alphabet in the Old Serbian language. He testified about the death of Marija Bogoslava (Bogoslav's wife), who died on June 8, 1292. In addition to Marija, the inscription also mentions her three sons, Radoslav, Radič and Vladel (Vladelj). This aristocratic family bore the family name or surname Poljak, from which the toponym Poljaci was derived, i.e. the name of their ancestral village in the neighborhood of Zdravinje. The second tombstone, discovered in 1967, was installed as an spolia in the bell tower of the church of St. Stephen in Kruševac (1377–1378). An inscription engraved on it speaks of the death of Vlkota, Medoš's son, who died between September 1, 1300 and August 31, 1301. It is characterized by East Slavic linguistic features, a consistent distinction between soft and hard semivowel (rabþ, vþ, sŠÿ1nþ, Vlýkota), as well as the use of the form oumér{iŠhþ1, in which é is used as a substitute for soft semivowel ý, which is attested in the tombstone inscription of the noblewoman Stanislava from the village of Gradec near Vidin (14th century), as well as in the fresco inscription between the figures of two deceased lords on the southern part of the western wall of the nave in the church of St. Nicholas in Staničenje near Pirot (1331–1332). Folk tradition links King Milutin to the origin of the toponym Milutovac near Trstenik, which is derived from the anthroponym Milutin, most probably according to the name of the lord or nobleman who owned this village during the late Middle Ages. According to local legend, King Milutin, as the greatest endower of Nemanjić family, was also the founder of the church of St. John the Baptist in Orašje near Varvarin. The original appearance and oldest past of this church, due to the absence of archaeological research and conservation research, as well as the lack of written sources, are not known to us. The existence of a medieval necropolis around its walls, dated on the basis of the appearance of tombstones in 14th and 15th century, and the mention of the priest Jovan in the Ottoman defter from 1476 indirectly indicate that this modest single-nave sacral building could have been erected as an endowment of some local lord during the period of Serbian independence before 1459, and could not be directly related to King Milutin. We hope that this article will draw the attention of the scientific public to the necessity of further multidisciplinary research of the medieval past of the Kruševac region, including the reign of King Stefan Uroš II Milutin, as one of the most famous Serbian medieval rulers.
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