Academic literature on the topic 'Diocese of Alessandria (Italy)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Diocese of Alessandria (Italy)"

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Polello, Loredana, Anna Rita Molinar Min, Angela Fanelli, Ennio Negri, Andrea Peano, Pier Giuseppe Meneguz, and Paolo Tizzani. "First Data on Gastrointestinal Parasitic Infection in the Red-Legged Partridge (Alectoris rufa) in Italy." Diversity 13, no. 7 (June 24, 2021): 287. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d13070287.

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The Red-legged partridge (Alectoris rufa) is a Mediterranean Galliformes, recently classified as Near Threatened by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, due to the constant and significant decline of its global population. While the gastrointestinal parasites of the species are well studied in some part of its range (Iberian peninsula), limited information is available for the Italian populations, that represent the eastern limit of the species range. This study was conducted to fill this gap of knowledge, determining the composition, richness, prevalence, intensity and abundance of A. rufa gastrointestinal parasite community in two populations in Italy. During the autumn seasons 2008–2009 and 2009–2010, necropsies were conducted on 18 Red-legged partridge from the southern part of Alessandria province (Piedmont, northwestern Italy) and 34 from the Parma province (Emilia Romagna, northern Italy). All the animals were examined for the presence of gastrointestinal parasites. Additionally, 229 fecal samples were collected from live animals in Alessandria province. Prevalence, abundance and intensity of infection were calculated for each parasite species, except for coccidia for which only the prevalence was determined. The following parasites were observed: Heterakis gallinarum, Ascaridia spp., Ascaridia columbae, Raillietina spp., Eimeria spp. The highest parasite prevalence was found in Alessandria province for Eimeria sp., infecting almost half of the sampled animals (P: 45%, CI95%: 39–51). Eimeria sp. was also the most prevalent parasite in Parma province but with much lower prevalence (P: 19%, CI95%: 5–32). Intestinal helminths prevalence ranged from 3% (CI95%: 0–9) for A. columbae and Raillietina spp. (Parma Province) to 9% for H. gallinarum in both Parma (CI95%: 0–19), and Alessandria province (CI95%: 0–22). To our knowledge, this is the first study providing information on the gastrointestinal parasites of the Red-legged partridge in Italy. Ascaridia columbae, a parasite typical of the domestic pigeon, was reported for the first time in A. rufa. The epidemiological descriptors reported herein could serve as a basis for future studies, allowing for epidemiological comparison across countries, locations, and time periods.
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Bichindaritz, Isabelle, and Stefania Montani. "Report on the Eighteenth International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning." AI Magazine 33, no. 1 (March 15, 2012): 79–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1609/aimag.v33i1.2394.

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This article reports on the main track papers, speakers, satellite events, and other activities of the Eighteenth International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning (ICCBR), held 19-22 July 2010 in Alessandria, Italy
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Pasini, Giovanni, and Alessandro Garassino. "A pinnotheroid pea crab (Decapoda, Brachyura, Pinnotheridae), from the early Pliocene of Cassine (Alessandria, Piemonte, NW Italy)." Natural History Sciences 6, no. 1 (March 18, 2019): 77–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/nhs.2019.397.

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A pinnotheroid pea crab (Pinnotheridae De Haan, 1833), is here reported from the Zanclean (early Pliocene) clays of a quarry located S-SW of Cassine (Alessandria, Piemonte, NW Italy). Though the studied specimen cannot be assigned to any genus within the Pinnotherinae (Pinnotheridae De Haan, 1833), it is the first record from the Pliocene of Italy and paleo-Adriatic Gulf, increasing the knowledge of the presence and fossil distribution of this family in the Mediterranean area.
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Marengo, Emilio, Maria Carla Gennaro, Elisa Robotti, Alessandro Maiocchi, Giuseppina Pavese, Alessia Indaco, and Alberto Rainero. "Statistical analysis of ground water distribution in Alessandria Province (Piedmont—Italy)." Microchemical Journal 88, no. 2 (April 2008): 167–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.microc.2007.11.011.

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Koster, Sjaak J. C., Giorgio Baldizzone, Helmut Deutsch, Peter Huemer, and Erik J. van Nieukerken. "The Eastern Palaearctic Cosmopterix feminella Sinev, 1988, introduced in Italy: taxonomy, biology and a new synonymy (Lepidoptera, Cosmopterigidae)." Nota Lepidopterologica 42, no. 1 (May 30, 2019): 49–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/nl.42.33962.

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CosmopterixfeminellaSinev, 1988, previously known from the East Palearctic, Primorskiy Territory in Russia and Japan has been collected at light in Europe. In northern Italy 58 females were collected in two localities in the province Asti, two in Alessandria, three in Udine, and in one locality in Pordenone.Cosmopterixfeminellais most likely parthenogenetic as only females are known. The caterpillars are leafminers on grasses. The species is redescribed and illustrated. DNA barcodes are provided and compared with other European species.CosmopterixfeminaeKuroko, 2015 is synonymised withC.feminella. The species was probably accidentally introduced into Italy.
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Fratini, Fabio, Manuela Mattone, Silvia Rescic, and Luisa Rovero. "Analysis of the earthen architectural heritage in Piedmont (northern Italy): typologies, construction techniques and materials." Gremium 7, no. 14 (August 1, 2020): 41–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.56039/rgn14a05.

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Piedmont is characterized by the presence of numerous earthen buildings mainly concentrated in the province of Alessandria. Studies conducted over the last decade, however, have shown the presence of interesting examples of these buildings also in the provinces of Asti, Torino, Biella and Cuneo. They are generally two-storied rural constructions, built with both fired bricks (for the bearing structures) and adobe (for internal and external walls).
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Scarsi, Marco, Laura Crispini, Cristina Malatesta, Chiara Spagnolo, and Giovanni Capponi. "Geological Map of a Treasure Chest of Geodiversity: The Lavagnina Lakes Area (Alessandria, Italy)." Geosciences 9, no. 5 (May 17, 2019): 229. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences9050229.

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The aim of this work is to present a new georeferenced geological map of an area in the Ligurian Western Alps (Lavagnina Lakes area) that includes both a unique geodiversity and great biodiversity, a peculiar geological heritage, and cultural features. The study area is located in the northern part of the Capanne di Marcarolo Regional Natural Park, occurring in the southern Piedmont Region (Alessandria, NW Italy) and close to the suburbs of Genoa. This area has been studied by multi-disciplinary scientific researchers who, so far, have focused their attention on the occurrence of alkaline springs and investigation of different endemic floral species. Moreover, in the past, the Lavagnina Lakes area has been exploited due to the presence of gold mineralization, and several mining records are still visible. We performed detailed geological mapping at a 1:10,000 scale, and collected data that were later integrated into a digital GIS map. The database associated with the map contains information that may be interesting from different points of view: (i) scientific research; (ii) outreach and dissemination activities; and (iii) geotourism (i.e., trail networks and panoramic viewpoints). The area represents a section of the Jurassic Piedmont Ligurian oceanic lithosphere, showing several geologic processes on different scales, such as the serpentinization process and intense and widespread carbonation of ultramafic rocks; the area is, moreover, characterized by fault systems showing paleoseismic structures. Beyond scientific research activities (i.e., geology, geoarchaeology, and mining archaeology), the area can also be promoted for geotourism, outreach and dissemination activities, field trips for schools, and gold panning activities. Hence, our new digital map and our 3D model could be a useful tool to illustrate the main characteristics of the area, leading a non-expert public to explore different geological features in a relatively “small” area. In this way, our map could help to improve geotourism, be used as a tool for educational activities, and, finally, could also help the Capanne di Marcarolo Regional Natural Park to be recognized as a geopark.
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Bo, Tiziano, Alessandro Candiotto, Giovanni Battista Delmastro, Gianluca Fea, Stefano Fenoglio, Daniela Ghia, and Laura Gruppuso. "[First reporting of the signal crayfish (Decapoda, Astacidae) in the Province of Savona, Italy]." Natural History Sciences 3, no. 1 (June 29, 2016): 63. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/nhs.2016.284.

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In this short note we report the sudden and numerically significant expansion of signal crayfish (<em>P. leniusculus</em>) from Piedmont towards Liguria. <em>P. leniusculus</em> (Decapode Astacidae) is native to northwestern America, introduced in Italy in 1981 in the province of Bolzano, a few years later it was reported in Brugneto Lake (Genova district) and during the 2009 in the Valla stream (Alessandria district). The peculiarities of this species, originally from “cold water”, making it potentially invasive in the Apennine watercourses and also the presence of this allochthonous decapod in the Savona district, would like to suggest the implementation of containment plans, acts at least to limit its spread.
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BIONDI, G., A. VIENNA, J. A. PEÑA GARCIA, and C. G. N. MASCIE-TAYLOR. "ISONYMY AND THE STRUCTURE OF THE PROVENÇAL-ITALIAN ETHNIC MINORITY." Journal of Biosocial Science 37, no. 2 (March 16, 2004): 163–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002193200400656x.

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Surnames were obtained for the second half of the 20th century from civil and religious marriage registers on fifteen Provençal-Italian and five Italian villages of Cuneo Province, Italy. To insert in the analysis an outward comparison, surnames from two Italian villages of Turin Province, one parish of Turin, one village of Alessandria Province and one village of Asti Province were also collected. Ethnicity does not seem to be the main factor affecting the present genetic structure of the Provençal-Italians. They are an open community, and evidence the end of the genetic isolation of the alpine populations.
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Fontefrancesco, Michele Filippo. "Modes and Forms of Knowledge of Farming Entrepreneurship: An Ethnographic Analysis among Small Farmers in NW Italy." Knowledge 1, no. 1 (September 8, 2021): 2–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/knowledge1010002.

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This article investigates the modes and forms of knowledge underpinning farming entrepreneurship through an ethnographic case study of Alessandria province in NW Italy. It shows that farming entrepreneurs base their decisions on explicit and implicit knowledge encompassing forms of knowledge linked to the environment where they live, their trade, the characteristics of their firms, issues concerning their family and private life, and even the emotions linked with their surroundings. All these forms of knowledge inform their vision of their future and guide them in their choices in terms of investments and crop selection. Accordingly, the article argues that farming entrepreneurship is embedded in the locale.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Diocese of Alessandria (Italy)"

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Basera, Michael. "The mission of the church as family: implementing the ecclesiology of the African Synod (1994) in the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo." Thesis, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27721.

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Bibliography: leaves 221-244
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the mission of the ‘Church as family’ and to explore its implications in terms of levels of inclusion and participation of church members in the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo. The background of the study is the 1994 African Synod that suggests the ecclesiology of the mission of the ‘Church as family.’ The study helps the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo to evaluate the implementation of the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family’ and draw implications for nuclear, single parent, child-headed, reconstituted and extended families within the church. The study explores Shorter’s culture model to examine how cultural practices, symbols, values and belief systems can be used as an analytic framework for the human dimension of the church. A qualitative research methodology that involves 36 participants in semi-structured interviews, three focus group discussions in urban, semi-urban and rural parishes and participant observation was used to collect data from parishioners, priests and religious of the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo. The study reveals that each family type contributes to Evangelisation as proclamation of the Good News and inculturation differently thereby enriching the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family.’ Furthermore, the study shows that guilds, associations and commissions help to strengthen families through spiritual, psychological, social and economic support. Findings also indicate that the Trinity is the theological foundation of the family and it finds acceptance in African communal setup. Family types in Masvingo Diocese are analysed using the notion of the Trinity to show that dignity, equality and respect among family types can be used to strengthen the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family.’ At pastoral level, economic, social and cultural obstacles to family ministry stand as a challenge to the full implementation and realisation of the ideal of the mission of the ‘Church as family’. In the light of the research, recommendations for mission strategies were suggested at different levels that involve Diocesan administration, priests, religious, catechists and parish leaders. Recommendations for further researches were also suggested for areas that seem to be important yet outside the scope of this study. The theological, pastoral, and cultural issues raised in this study combine to help the Catholic Diocese of Masvingo to become an authentic expression of the mission of the ‘Church as family’ of God.
Christian Spirituality, Church History and Missiology
D. Th. (Missiology)
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Books on the topic "Diocese of Alessandria (Italy)"

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Lanzavecchia, Renato. Storia della diocesi di Alessandria. [S.l.]: Alessandria, 1999.

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Istituto per la storia della resistenza in provincia di Alessandria., ed. Il Partito d'azione in Alessandria. Alessandria: Edizioni dell'orso, 1986.

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Maconi, Giovanni. Storia dell'Ospedale dei Santi Antonio e Biagio di Alessandria. Genova: Le mani, 2003.

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Lera, Riccardo. L'Uspidalët: L'opedale infantile "Cesare Arrigo" di Alessandria dalle origini alla seconda guerra mondiale. Recco, Genova: Le mani, 2001.

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L'ultima carica: Dolnij Poloj 17 ottobre 1942. Acireale: Bonanno, 2008.

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Arcella, Raffaele. L'ultima carica: Dolnij Poloj 17 ottobre 1942. Acireale: Bonanno, 2008.

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Tomasi, Giovanni. La Diocesi di Ceneda: Chiese e uomini dalle origini al 1586. Vittorio Veneto (Treviso): Diocesi di Vittorio Veneto, 1998.

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Aiazzi, Rita Laura, Lucia Cecchi, and Nadia Pardini. Gli archivi storici ecclesiastici delle diocesi di Pistoia e Pescia. Ospedaletto (Pisa): Pacini, 2000.

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Massola, Giovanni. Venti anni di arte alla Sala comunale d'arte contemporanea e a Palazzo Cuttica (1972-1992). Alessandria: Edizioni dell'Orso, 1996.

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Catholic Church. Diocese of Arezzo-Cortona-Sansepolcro (Italy), ed. Visita apostolica alle diocesi di Cortona e Sansepolcro 1583 e decreti generali: Visitatore Angelo Peruzzi vescovo di Sarsina. Arezzo: Archivi diocesani, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Diocese of Alessandria (Italy)"

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Luino, Fabio. "A Flood Can Point Out Improper Land-Use Planning: The Case of Alessandria Town (Piedmont, Northern Italy)." In Engineering Geology for Society and Territory - Volume 5, 787–92. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09048-1_153.

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Manarini, Edoardo. "«Per Padum fluvium termino currente usque [...] Civitatem Novam atque Mutinam». Consolidation and affirmation of the Church of Modena and Its bishops in 9th-entury Carolingian Italy." In Reti Medievali E-Book, 131–55. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-623-0.08.

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This paper seeks to trace the developments which led the Church of Modena and its bishops to acquire a pre-eminent position in its diocese in the second half of the ninth century and for much of the following one. The analysis sets out from the highly fragmented post-Roman territorial context and from the efforts made by Lombard kings, which were mostly directed towards the fiscal estate of Cittanova, rather than the ancient Roman civitas of Mutina. Particular attention is paid to the figure of Bishop Leodoin and to the manuscripts attributed to him in the Chapter Library, especially the famous Codex legum (O.I.2), for which a different production context is suggested, prior to its acquisition by the Church of Modena.
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"9. Proprietary Religious Houses in the Diocese of Salerno (1047–92) translated from Latin by Valerie Ramseyer." In Medieval Italy, 37–41. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812206067.37.

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"2. Land, Money, and Grain: Two Customary Leases in the Diocese of Florence (1073, 1115) translated from Latin by George Dameron." In Medieval Italy, 7–9. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.9783/9780812206067.7.

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Manarini, Edoardo. "Ruling on the Border : Landed Possessions from the Po Valley to the Apennines in Bononia’s Diocese." In Struggles for Power in the Kingdom of Italy. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463725828_ch06.

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The sixth chapter deals with the Bolognese territory, an area located at the edges of the Emilia region between the Italian kingdom and the exarchate of Ravenna. After having acquired fiscal lands and thanks to the emphyteutic bond with the Ravenna archbishops, the group established there a broad seigneurial rule between the plain and the Apennines. Although it never touched the city of Bologna, their hegemony extended over the plain to the north towards the course of the Po and the Apennine valleys to the south. Fundamental elements of their power were the many castles and the foundation of the private monastery of S. Bartolomeo di Musiano.
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"6. Ruling on the Border : Landed Possessions from the Po Valley to the Apennines in Bononia’s Diocese." In Struggles for Power in the Kingdom of Italy, 217–62. Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789048550586-012.

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Canonico, Massimo, Stefania Montani, Diego Gazzolo, Mariachiara Strozzi, and Manuel Striani. "TEEM." In Improving the Safety and Efficiency of Emergency Services, 67–87. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-2535-7.ch004.

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In this article, the authors describe a client-server architecture, designed for supporting data recording and transmission during emergency patient transportation by ambulance. The clients are a set of mobile apps, interfaced to the monitoring devices in the ambulance, that automatically send all the recorded data to a server at the destination center. One additional app enables the travelling personnel to input and transmit further significant patient data, or comments. At the destination center, the specialist physician logs onto the server, receives the data in real time, and is allowed to plot/analyze them, assessing the patient's situation, and possibly sending immediate feedback to the operators in the ambulance. The system is currently under evaluation at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) of Alessandria Children Hospital, Italy. The system, by allowing real time data communication, is able to provide clear advantages from the organizational and economical viewpoint.
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Blanchard, Shaun. "Radical Reform in Tuscany." In The Synod of Pistoia and Vatican II, 83–109. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190947798.003.0004.

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This chapter examines the early life, education, and theological foundations of Scipione de’ Ricci (1741–1810) up to the eve of the Synod of Pistoia, in 1786. It explains the reformist milieu Ricci experienced as a young student in Rome and in his early career in Florence. The importance of the late eighteenth-century convergence of Habsburg Erastian reform, international Jansenism with its focal point in Utrecht, philo-Jansenism and anti-Jesuitism in Italy, and the legacy of Muratori is profiled. Then, the reform agenda Ricci sought to implement as the bishop of Pistoia-Prato (1780–91) is described: an anti-ultramontane and synodal ecclesiology (buttressed by Erastianism and, particularly, Grand Duke Peter Leopold’s fifty-seven Punti ecclesiastici), the importance of Ricci’s international (especially Francophone) Jansenist contacts, his propaganda campaign, and the Riccian drive to reform the liturgy and devotional life in his diocese, including an encouragement of vernacular Bible reading.
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