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Journal articles on the topic 'Flavio Biondo'

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1

Muecke, Frances. "BIONDO FLAVIO ON THE ROMAN ELECTIONS." Papers of the British School at Rome 84 (September 20, 2016): 275–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068246216000088.

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Elections and voting were of great importance in the constitution and the politics of the Roman Republic. They also presented challenges to a Renaissance reader who wanted to know where, when and exactly how they took place, challenges that appealed deeply to Biondo Flavio, the mid fifteenth-century historian of Roman institutions. In book III ofRoma triumphans, the first on the government of Rome, he devotes considerable attention to them. This paper is an analysis of this first early-modern attempt to understand the Roman voting assemblies(comitia). In it I compare Biondo's approach inRoma triumphanswith his earlier statement on the importance of thecomitiain his topographical treatise on the city of Rome,Roma instaurata. After surveying Biondo's treatment as a whole I focus on his understanding of the Comitium, thecomitiaand the century chosen to vote first(centuria praerogativa).
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2

Muecke, Frances. "Biondo Flavio on the Roman Theatre: Topography and Terminology." Erudition and the Republic of Letters 3, no. 3 (2018): 241–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24055069-00303001.

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In mid-fifteenth century Rome, when interest in the Roman theatre began to revive, Pompey’s theatre, Rome’s most famous, had long vanished from view. Gradually evidence came to light that eventually enabled humanists to locate the site of this great construction. A pioneer in this process of rediscovery, Biondo Flavio in his Roma instaurata and Roma triumphans reported his own and others’ investigations and discoveries, in what amounts to the first early modern attempt to give the theatre at Rome a history. The account in Roma instaurata fed not only into later topography, but also into subsequent lexicographical and architectural works. This paper teases out its interwoven strands of topography, architectural design, and cultural history; it discusses parallel accounts from Biondo’s topographical successors to show how he was understood and how he set the agenda; and it traces Biondo’s terms for the parts of the theatre building through Tortelli to Perotti, suggesting that he may have received help from Alberti.
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3

Muecke, Frances. "ANTE OCULOS PONERE:VISION AND IMAGINATION IN FLAVIO BIONDO'SROMA TRIUMPHANS." Papers of the British School at Rome 79 (October 31, 2011): 275–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068246211000079.

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This article examines two ekphrastic digressions from book 2 of Flavio Biondo'sRoma Triumphans(1459), both occurring in the section on the festivals of ancient Rome. The first is an eye-witness account of a celebration mounted in Piazza Navona in Rome to mark the defeat of the Turks at Belgrade in 1456; the second is an imaginative recreation of the horse race at the Equirria, as Biondo envisions it taking place in the streetscape of ancient Rome. Both digressions serve one of Biondo's most important purposes, the linking of ancient and modern Rome. The aim of the discussion is to demonstrate the importance of visualization in Biondo's framing ofRoma Triumphansas a whole. In this aspect he was a powerful model for later antiquarian writing.
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4

Tissoni Benvenuti, Antonia. "Appunti per il Ricobaldo di Boiardo: Ammiano Marcellino e Biondo Flavio." Colloquium 9788879168946 (October 2019): 47–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.7359/894-2019-tiss.

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5

Ianziti, Gary. "Bruni on Writing History." Renaissance Quarterly 51, no. 2 (1998): 367–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2901571.

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AbstractThis article examines Leonardo Bruni's ideas on history writing, tracing their evolution from 1404 down to the latter half of 1443. It establishes that Bruni saw history writing as a textual activity closely related to, if not identical with, translation. The various implications of this discovery are explored in relation to several of Bruni's major historical works, including the Cicero novus (1415), the Commentarii de primo bello punico (1419), and the De bello italico (1441). The article concludes by showing how Bruni's views - in their final, extreme formulation - were challenged by his younger rival, Biondo Flavio, in the early 1440s.
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6

Moralee, Jason, and Kiel Moe. "WHAT FRANCESCO DI GIORGIO SAW ON THE CAPITOLINE HILL C. 1470." Papers of the British School at Rome 83 (September 16, 2015): 149–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068246215000070.

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Francesco di Giorgio, the Sienese architect and artist, visited Rome c. 1470. By looking at his plan of the ‘porticho del Champitolio’, it is possible to reconstruct not only what Francesco di Giorgio saw on the Monte Tarpeo, but also what Poggio Bracciolini, Flavio Biondo, Pietro del Massaio and others saw there. It was apparently a notable site, an evocative ruin worthy of commentary, artistic representation and imaginative reconstruction. Whatever temple remains continued to be visible, however, these were insufficient to suggest that they were originally part of the temple. By the end of the fifteenth century, the temple had been lost. None the less, Francesco di Giorgio unwittingly documented the last standing columns of the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus.
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7

Schöntag, Roger. "Il dibattito intorno alvolgare anticotra Leonardo Bruni e Flavio Biondo sullo sfondo della cognizione linguistica di Dante." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 51, no. 3 (2017): 553–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0014585817711685.

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8

Ianziti, Gary. "Rome in Triumph, Volume 1: Books I–II. Biondo Flavio. Ed. Maria Agata Pincelli. Trans. Frances Muecke. The I Tatti Renaissance Library 74. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016. xxviii + 412 pp. $29.95. - Italy Illuminated, Volume 2: Books V–VIII. Biondo Flavio. Ed. and trans. Jeffrey A. White. The I Tatti Renaissance Library 75. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016. 628 pp. $29.95. - A New Sense of the Past: The Scholarship of Biondo Flavio (1392–1463). Angelo Mazzocco and Marc Laureys, eds. Supplementa Humanistica Lovaniensia 39. Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2016. 288 pp. €59.50." Renaissance Quarterly 70, no. 3 (2017): 1024–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/695145.

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9

Fane-Saunders, Peter. "Angelo Mazzocco and Marc Laureys, eds., A New Sense of the Past: The Scholarship of Biondo Flavio (1392–1463). Supplementa Humanistica Lovaniensia XXXIX.Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2016. Pp. 288. €59.50." History of Humanities 5, no. 1 (2020): 280–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/707705.

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10

White, Jeffrey A. "Flavio Biondo. Rome Restaurée: Roma Instaurata, Tome II Livres II et III. Ed. and trans. Anne Raffarin. Les classiques de l’humanisme 24. Paris: Les Belles lettres, 2012. xxiii + 313 pp. €45. ISBN: 978–2–251–80025–7." Renaissance Quarterly 65, no. 4 (2012): 1169–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/669350.

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11

Maxson, Brian Jeffrey. "Biondo Flavio. Italy Illuminated. Vol. 5. Books 1–4. The I Tatti Renaissance Library 20. Ed. and trans., Jeffrey A. White. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005. xxvii + 490 pp. index. append. bibl. $29.95. ISBN: 978–0–674–01743–9. - Catherine J. Castner, ed. and trans. Biondo Flavio's Italia Illustrata: Text, Translation, and Commentary. Volume 1: Northern Italy. Binghamton: Global Academic Publishing, 2005. xxxvi + 386 pp. index. illus. map. bibl. $36. ISBN: 978–1–586–84255–0. - Catherine J. Castner, ed. and trans. Biondo Flavio's Italia Illustrata: Text, Translation, and Commentary. Volume 2: Central and Southern Italy. Binghamton: Global Academic Publishing, 2010. xvi + 488 pp. index. illus. map. bibl. $36. ISBN: 1–58684–278–9." Renaissance Quarterly 64, no. 4 (2011): 1194–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/664088.

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12

Enenkel, Karl A. E. "1598." Daphnis 33, no. 3-4 (2004): 583–621. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18796583-90000929.

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Der Beitrag analysiert Justus Lipsius’ bahnbrechendes Werk über die römische Kultur, Admiranda sive de magnitudine Romana (1598), im Rahmen humanistischer Altertumsstudien (etwa Flavio Biondos De roma triumphante oder Johannes Rosinus’ Romanae antiquitates) und vor dem Hintergrund der politischen Situation im letzten Jahrzehnt des 16. Jahrhunderts. Er zeigt auf, auf welche Weise bestimmte Eigenheiten der Abhandlung von Lipsius bestimmt sind von der aktuellen wissenschaftlichen Debatte und andererseits den Geist der spanischen Reconquista in den Niederlanden der neunziger Jahre widerspiegeln. Der Aufsatz sucht darzulegen, daß die der Admiranda zugrundeliegende Konstruktion der römischen Kultur kaum anders denn als ideologische Stütze für den zeitgenössischen spanischen Machtanspruch verstanden werden kann. Dies läßt sich gerade dort aufweisen, wo Lipsius die römische Religion, Staatskunst, Ökonomie und Mentalität beschreibt.
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13

D'hallewin, Guy, Mario Schirra, Enzo Manueddu, Antonio Piga, and Shimshon Ben-Yehoshua. "Scoparone and Scopoletin Accumulation and Ultraviolet-C Induced Resistance to Postharvest Decay in Oranges as Influenced by Harvest Date." Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 124, no. 6 (1999): 702–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/jashs.124.6.702.

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`Washington Navel', `Biondo Comune', `Tarocco', and `Valencia Late' orange [Citrus sinensis (L.) Obsek] fruit, harvested at various periods of time, were subjected to ultraviolet-C (UV-C) irradiation at 0.5, 1.5, or 3.0 kJ·m-2 doses and then stored at 7 °C and 90% to 95% relative humidity (RH) for 4 weeks plus one additional week at 20 °C and 80% RH. Following UV-C treatment, there was varying amounts of rind browning and necrotic peel damage, depending on cultivar, treatment dose, and harvest date. `Tarocco' fruit were damaged more easily by UV-C treatment than the other cultivars. `Valencia L.' were the most resistant to UV-C irradiation, showing no adverse effects at the lowest dosage and having the lowest percentages of damaged fruit at higher dosages. `Washington Navel' and `Biondo Comune' oranges showed an intermediate susceptibility to UV-C treatment, with negligible differences between these cultivars. The percentage of damaged fruit after irradiation at the higher UV-C dosages decreased in most fruit samples as the season progressed. UV-C irradiation at 0.5 kJ·m-2 effectively reduced decay development compared with nontreated fruit. Irradiation with 1.5 kJ·m-2 was more effective compared with 0.5 kJ·m-2 only in early harvested fruit. In `Washington Navel' and `Biondo Comune' oranges in the later harvests, treatment with 3.0 kJ·m-2 improved decay control further, compared with 0.5 kJ·m-2. Following UV-C treatments the phytoalexins, scoparone and scopoletin, accumulated in flavedo tissue depending on the cultivar, fruit age, and UV-C treatment. Both phytoalexins displayed a similar accumulation pattern, however, the levels of scopoletin were very low compared with scoparone. Concentrations of phytoalexins rose as the irradiation dose increased. No scoparone and scopoletin could be detected in nontreated fruit. The highest concentration of phytoalexins among cultivars was recorded in `Valencia Late' oranges, the lowest in `Tarocco', with similar intermediate accumulations in `Washington Navel' and `Biondo Comune'. In `Washington Navel', `Biondo Comune', and `Tarocco' oranges, the rate of scoparone accumulation was significantly higher in fruit harvested earlier in the season while `Valencia late' oranges exhibited an opposite trend.
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14

Abdul Rash, Noor Aini, Giek Far Chan, and Abdull Rahim Mohd Yusof. "In silico Analyses of Flavin Reductase from Citrobacter freundii A1." Insight Bioinformatics 2, no. 1 (2012): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.5567/bioinfo-ik.2012.1.8.

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15

Hechem, Jorge José. "Los primeros geólogos de YPF en Comodoro Rivadavia y sus aportes en la región del Golfo San Jorge." Revista del Museo de La Plata 1 (December 29, 2016): 119–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.24215/25456377e023.

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Entre 1908 y 1922 Stappenbeck, Schiller, Keidel, Wichmann y Windhausen trabajaron en la zona por cuenta de la Dirección de Minas y Geología. En 1922 se creó Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales, YPF, y se nombró al frente de la División Geología al italiano Guido Bonarelli. En 1925 llegó el italiano Egidio Feruglio a la recién creada Sección Geología de Comodoro Rivadavia. En 1926 se incorporó el ruso Vladimiro Vinda, y en 1927 se creó la Comisión Geológica del Golfo San Jorge, a cargo del italiano Enrico FossaMancini. Se integró con un equipo de geólogos italianos, rusos y argentinos. Feruglio, Piatnitzky, Stessin, Serghiescu, Ramaccioni, Chahnazaroff, Franceschi, Tarragona, Conci, Brandmayr, Wellhoefer, Biondi, Casanova, etc, son algunos de los protagonista entre 1927 y 1930. El primer trabajo encarado por la Comisión fue ajustar la estructura del yacimiento a partir de la nivelación de las capas terciarias y generar un modelo estructural de entrampamiento. Siguiendo los lineamientos hacia el oeste se descubrieron los grandes yacimientos del Flanco Norte, como Cañadón Perdido, Diadema, Escalante, Manantiales Behr, El Trébol, Pampa del Castillo y El Tordillo. Paralelamente, se perforaron los anticlinales aflorantes en Pampa María Santísima, Codo del Senguer y Perales. A fines de la década del 30 se encaró la exploración profunda del Chubutiano en el flanco norte y se trasladó el modelo hacia el flanco sur descubriéndose Cañadón Seco, Cañadón León y Meseta Espinosa. El trabajo de los primeros geólogos de YPF tuvo un gran impacto en la incorporación de recursos energéticos y permitió contar con un completo panorama geológico de la Patagonia, dando origen a una escuela de trabajo en la que por décadas se formaron los profesionales de exploración del país.
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16

Gianguzzi, Lorenzo, and Giuseppe Bazan. "The vegetation of a historic road system in the suburban area of Monte Pellegrino (Palermo, Sicily)." Plant Sociology 57, no. 2 (2020): 71–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/pls2020572/02.

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Knowledge of the processes by which plants colonize old structures is a key element for nature-based design both in urban and suburban contexts. This paper analyses the natural vegetation on walls and in other microhabitats of the roadway structures of Monte Pellegrino (606 m a.s.l.) near Palermo (Sicily), built in the first half of the 1900s. The historical road has particular construction and architectural features, and its characteristics have been maintained to this day. The route, approximately 16 kilometers long, is well integrated within a site of high naturalistic value which has been designated as a Special Area of Conservation (ITA020014) of the Natura 2000 network, and it is also a regional natural reserve. The survey was carried out on different homogeneous ecological contexts based on different microhabitats (masonry retaining walls, masonry guardwalls, road margins, and rock cut slopes) which are diversified according to other environmental factors (building materials, inclination, height, and exposure). The phytosociological and statistical analysis has led to the description of six new associations (Crepido bursifoliae-Parietarietum judaicae ass. nov., Athamanto siculae-Parietarietum judaicae ass. nov., Helichryso panormitani-Hypochaeridetum laevigatae ass. nov., Diantho siculi-Helichrysetum panormitani Gianguzzi ass. nov., Olopto miliacei-Pennisetetum setacei Gianguzzi ass. nov., Teucrio flavi-Rhoetum coriariae Gianguzzi ass. nov.) and one sub-association (Rhamno alaterni-Euphorbietum dendroidis Géhu & Biondi 1997 artemisietosum arborescentis subass. nov.). Other chasmophytic formations (Centranthetum rubri Oberd. 1969, Antirrhinetum siculi Bartolo & Brullo 1986) were reported for the first time in this area.
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