Academic literature on the topic 'Guerre – Renaissance'
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Journal articles on the topic "Guerre – Renaissance"
AVILA FIGUEROA, Claudia Carolina. "Assia DJEBAR et la renaissance scripturale des enfants de la guerre." Revue plurilingue : Études des Langues, Littératures et Cultures 1, no. 1 (November 15, 2017): 49–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.46325/ellic.v1i1.6.
Full textFiorato, Corinne Lucas. "L'art et la guerre en Italie à la Renaissance." Littératures classiques N°73, no. 3 (2010): 79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/licla.073.0079.
Full textDeschênes, Dany. "Rupture ou équilibre: les options de la Realpolitik française face à l'Autriche-Hongrie lors de la Première Guerre mondiale." Études internationales 30, no. 3 (April 12, 2005): 521–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/704055ar.
Full textPoulantzas, Nicolas A. "La renaissance du droit naturel en Allemagne après la seconde guerre mondiale." Revue interdisciplinaire d'études juridiques 32, no. 1 (1994): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/riej.032.0007.
Full textWolfe, Michael. ":Les Mots de la guerre dans l’Europe de la Renaissance." Sixteenth Century Journal 48, no. 3 (September 1, 2017): 785–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/scj4803139.
Full textSounac, Frédéric. "L’idéalité musicale du roman : dissolution ou renaissance ?" III. Arts, no. 125-126 (November 12, 2021): 215–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1083873ar.
Full textTabri, Edward. "Le Crépuscule de la Chevalerie: Noblesse et Guerre au Siècle de la Renaissance." French History 29, no. 4 (October 24, 2015): 571–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/fh/crv060.
Full textRichard, Gilles. "La renaissance de la droite modérée à la libération. La fondation du CNIP." Vingtième Siècle. Revue d'histoire 65, no. 1 (January 1, 2000): 59–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ving.p2000.65n1.0059.
Full textWaddell, Éric, and Claire Doran. "Les Franco-Terre-Neuviens : survie et renaissance équivoques." Cahiers de géographie du Québec 23, no. 58 (April 12, 2005): 143–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/021427ar.
Full textVoeltz, Richard. "Return Of Martin Guerre, Teaching History In Images, History In Words." Teaching History: A Journal of Methods 18, no. 2 (September 1, 1993): 68–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.33043/th.18.2.68-72.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Guerre – Renaissance"
Piffanelli, Luciano. ""Contra et adversus dominum ducem Mediolani" : percorsi, pratiche e protagonisti della diplomazia fiorentina all’alba delle guerre antiviscontee del XV secolo." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017TOU20032.
Full textBased on a large corpus of archival sources, and on an extensive bibliography, this research sheds a light on several innovative elements regarding the study of political and diplomatic exchanges in Italy during the first Quattrocento. Through the three parts of the thesis, the analysis of the sources (from the point of view not only of the contents, but also a linguistic one) has clarified the meanings of the war between Florence and Venice against Philippe Marie Visconti.The importance of this work remains first and foremost in the chronological range analyzed: the 1420s are almost absent in the historiography on Italian diplomacy during the Renaissance, a vacuum that can certainly be alleged at a documentary polarization (archives sources become richer from the second half of the century).Secondly, the documentary basin included more than 60 archive collections, which gave the research a solid basis for continuing the historical inquiry, as well as the dialogue established between the different sources.As for the results, beyond the strictly event-oriented plan, from the phenomenon point of view, we have been able to identify the political-territorial evolution of the Italian powers during the first part of the century, long before the crucial moment of the 'Lega Italica' 1455), which is usually the starting point of any diplomatic analysis.It has been possible for us, for example, to go back to the source of the links between Eugene IV and the Medici; or to show the reasons and the issues of the rise of Savoy in Italy; or, finally, to highlight, within Italian political life, the evolution of the papal presence, which shifted from neutrality to the management of diplomatic alliances
Lafille, Pauline. "« Composizioni delle guerre e battaglie » : enquête sur la scène de bataille dans la peinture italienne du XVIe siècle." Thesis, Paris Sciences et Lettres (ComUE), 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PSLEP058.
Full textThis thesis focuses on the political and artistic dimensions of battle scenes in 16th-century Italian monumental painting, at a time when the depiction of war had yet to develop a distinction between two forms of the depiction of history, history painting treating past events and historical painting focused on contemporary events, according to artistic categories established during the 17th century. Thus this work does not offer a history of the battle scene itself, but an enquiry on specific compositions, trying to ascertain the political, ideological, aesthetic and cultural issues that inform them. Although the artistic heterogeneity of the corpus and the political fragmentation of the Italian peninsula have encouraged previous studies to follow a monographical approach, the apparition of historically and thematically similar contexts in which various battle scenes answer analogous ambitions has led us to adopt a comparative methodology, which attempts to develop a dialogue between pairs, series or types of works, linked by common political and formal objectives. Starting from 1500, a series of major orders placed by the main political powers in Italy embued battle scenes with a new monumental dimension within political iconography. In the urgency of the context of the Italian Wars, the depiction of past historical events was invested with the hope of real political efficacy, to which the mimetic and expressive evolution of Italian painting was now able to respond. The battle scenes left unfinished by Leonardo and Michelangelo adopted a rhetorical treatment of history which involved the viewer into a narrative centred around the emotions of the characters during the action. By virtue of their treatment of figures and their complex narrative articulation, Leonardo’s and Michelangelo’s battle scenes, and later Raphaël’s and Titian’s, acquired paradigmatic status, and paved the way for the establishment of the battle scene as a political-aesthetical form, making the nobility and ambition of artistic endeavour subservient to the expression of power. Sporadic compositions of the beginning of the 16th century were followed, during the second half of that century, by an extension of military themes in palace decoration. The political and iconographic objectives of paintings was therefore determined by the orientation of the iconographic programme of the whole room. In dynastic painting cycles, the correlation between genealogy and history led the artist to closely associate the depiction of the event to the actions of the character, so that devices of individual glorification coexisted with devices historicizing the episode. In state ornamentation, the multiplication of battle scenes showcased military might as the basis for the sovereignty of the modern State. In Florence and Venice, the depiction of war received from military humanism an encyclopaedic dimension which illustrated the central role played by the mastery of these forms of knowledge in the administration of the State. The last part of this study, which focuses on the monumental representations of the Battle of Lepanto in Venice and Rome, describes the emergence of problems that are specific to the depiction of contemporary battles. The immediacy of the event demanded from the historical depiction of the unfolding of the event an advanced documentary quality. The artists had to develop new experiments in the aesthetic idiom used to represent the battle, sometimes in dialogue with more descriptive or schematic depictions of warfare. 16th-century Italian battle scenes thus find themselves at a crossroad between the evolution of warfare during the Renaissance, characterised by the beginnings of the « Military Revolution », and the evolution of aesthetic theory, defined by an increasing rationalisation in the way history is depicted
Salm-Salm, Marie-Amélie zu. "Échanges artistiques franco-allemands et renaissance de la peinture abstraite dans les pays germaniques après 1945 /." Paris ; Budapest ; Torino : l'Harmattan, 2004. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb39122394p.
Full textBibliogr. p. 281-314. Webliogr. p. 315-316. Index.
Marion, Annabelle. "Étude d'une « renaissance » d'écrivain. La reconstruction de la figure d'auteur de Jean Giono après la Seconde Guerre mondiale (1945-1957)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Paris Cité, 2022. https://wo.app.u-paris.fr/cgi-bin/WebObjects/TheseWeb.woa/wa/show?t=3675&f=43779.
Full textThis study examines the reconstruction of the author's figure of Jean Giono after the Second World War, assessing its literary and historical foundations. A famous and recognized writer since the end of the 1920s, Giono finds himself in a situation of ostracism at the end of the war: registered on the "black list" of authors accused of collaboration, out of fashion at the time of existentialism, Giono has, at the age of fifty, to start again from scratch. The ordeals of war and prison, the failure of his fight for peace and "true riches", have also strongly shaken his conceptions of literature and human nature. This crisis leads Giono to undertake a profound reinvention of his author's figure, in a quest for identity inseparable from an enterprise of reconquest. Our work questions the processes and the stakes of this reconstruction, which is carried by the writer himself, through the redefining of his work and his posture, but also by the public, witness and active subject of this "rebirth". After the war, Giono reconfigures his being-author in relation to his own pre-war authorial model, but also in relation to the new forces that then dominate the literary field: those stemming from the Resistance, which promote the model of the committed writer; those of the formalist avant-gardes, which seek to invent a "New Novel". Through the case of Giono, we thus aim to bring to light the way in which an author is made, unmade and remade, in a constant interaction with the reactions of the public and the evolutions of a literary field itself crossed by the movements of History
Le, Goïc Pierre. "Brest en reconstruction : mythes,acteurs et rythmes d'une renaissance : antimémoires d'une ville." Brest, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000BRES1004.
Full textAnsani, Fabrizio. "The munitions of the Republic. Production, commerce, and management of materiel in Renaissance Florence." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Padova, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3427167.
Full textQuesta tesi si compone di otto articoli scientifici, tutti dedicati all’analisi della produzione bellica fiorentina durante il periodo rinascimentale. Partendo dalla contabilità delle magistrature militari della Repubblica Fiorentina, verrà rivelata l’esistenza di un mercato degli armamenti vivace e dinamico, caratterizzato dal coinvolgimento di numerosi maestri e di importanti aziende, dal policentrismo di arsenali e di botteghe, nonché dalle innovazioni in diversi ambiti manifatturieri. La ricerca si focalizzerà soprattutto sulle armi da fuoco quattrocentesche, esaminando tanto le prime sperimentazioni sulle gigantesche bombarde in bronzo quanto la rapida adozione delle nuove, letali artiglierie “alla francese”. Alcune osservazioni di carattere comparativo permetteranno di inquadrare questi ed altri sviluppi dell'"arte della guerra" toscana all'interno di un contesto, quale quello italiano, fortemente contraddistinto da numerosi trasferimenti tecnologici, militari e non. Il case-study del conflitto tra Firenze e Pisa permetterà infine di sottolineare aspetti e problemi del munizionamento, ormai divenuto, agli inizi del Cinquecento, una vera e propria "sfida rivoluzionaria” in termini di amministrazione, produzione e credito.
Strub, Philippe. "La renaissance de la marine française sous la quatrième république (1er janvier 1945-novembre 1953)." Paris 1, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA010518.
Full textDeruelle, Benjamin. "De papier, de fer et de sang : chevaliers et chevalerie à l'épreuve du XVIe siècle (ca. 1460-ca. 1620)." Paris 1, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA010640.
Full textSaffroy, Frédéric. "Défendre la Méditerranée (1912-1931) ou Le Bouclier de Neptune : la renaissance de la fortification côtière à l'expérience de la Grande Guerre : le cas méditerranéen." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011IEPP0040.
Full textIn 1912, after over a century of disputes and while, following the Entente cordiale, the Royale concentrates its fleet in the Mediterranean, the French Admiralty and the Ministry of War did not manage to coordinate themselves to ensure coastal defences. The Great War, with the need of heavy artillery - taken over by the Army from coastal fortifications - and the danger of submarine war, lead the Parliament to force the two Ministries to agree with each other: in 1917, the French Navy is put in charge of France and French North-Africa coastal defences. After the Washington treaty (1922), and confronted to a threatening Italy in Libya and in French Tunisia, and with the security of Western Mediterranean as a priority, the French Navy designed a new program of coastal artillery. This program, based on conclusions drawn from the Gallipoli campaign, was one of the four parts of the 1923 Statut naval, presented to the Parliament by the ministre de la Marine Flaminius Raiberti. Supported by active Members of Parliament like Georges Boussenot, Louis Chappedelaine, Emile Goude or Gustave de Kerguézec, the Navy program gained support from the Parliament who provided the requested budgets, and encouraged the rational reorganisation of Navy bases defences. On the eve of the 30’s, the Mediterranean coastal defences program was secured and its implementation well commenced. Confronted to a rival if not hostile Italy, priority is given to the defences of Toulon and Bizerte naval bases, equipped with the most powerful artillery. The irony of fate was that it is against those coastal batteries that the Allied forces, including the French, had to fight during the 1942 and 1944 landings
Slavkova-Montexier, Iveta. "L' homme n'est peut-être pas le centre de l'univers : la crise de l'humanisme et l'Homme nouveau des avant-gardes (1909-1930)." Paris 1, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA010542.
Full textBooks on the topic "Guerre – Renaissance"
Hendler, Sefy. La guerre des arts: Le paragone peinture sculpture en Italie XVe-XVIIe siecle. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider, 2013.
Find full textDuc, Séverin. La guerre de Milan: Conquérir, gouverner, résister dans l'Europe de la Renaissance (1515-1530). Ceyzérieu: Champ Vallon, 2019.
Find full textLeroy, Dominique. Histoire des arts du spectacle en France: Aspects économiques, politiques et esthétiques de la Renaissance à la Première Guerre mondiale. Paris: Editions L'Harmattan, 1990.
Find full textChristiane, Franck, and Colloque "La France de 1945" (1996 : Caen, France), eds. La France de 1945: Résistance, retours, renaissance : actes du colloque de Caen (17-19 mai 1995). Caen: Presses Universitaires de Caen, 1996.
Find full textCheryl, Hendricks, Lushaba Lwazi, and Codesria, eds. From national liberation to democratic renaissance in southern Africa. Dakar: Codesria, 2005.
Find full textCheryl, Hendricks, Lushaba Lwazi, and Codesria, eds. From national liberation to democratic renaissance in southern Africa. Dakar: Codesria, 2005.
Find full textCheryl, Hendricks, Lushaba Lwazi, and Codesria, eds. From national liberation to democratic renaissance in southern Africa. Dakar: Codesria, 2005.
Find full textFara, Amelio. Bernardo Buontalenti: L'architettura, la guerra e l'elemento geometrico. Genova: Sagep, 1988.
Find full textDouglas, Smith Robert, ed. Medieval military technology. 2nd ed. [Toronto]: University of Toronto Press, 2012.
Find full textGrand-Dewyse, Camille. Emaux de Limoges au temps des guerres de religion. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2011.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Guerre – Renaissance"
Létoublon, Françoise. "Anténor et Théano : un complot dans la Guerre de Troie ?" In Suites d’Homère de l’Antiquité à la Renaissance, 95–118. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols Publishers, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1484/m.rra-eb.5.136139.
Full textO’Brien, John. "The Touch of Man on Woman: Dramatizing Identity in The Return of Martin Guerre." In Filming and Performing Renaissance History, 50–64. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230299429_4.
Full textAlazard, Florence. "Des lieux pour dire le conflit autour de la guerre: Je ne sçay qui et Labeur." In Spheres of Conflict and Rivalries in Renaissance Europe, 245–56. Göttingen: V&R unipress, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14220/9783737006279.245.
Full textOcchipinti, Carmelo. "La storia dell'architettura e le guerre di religione nella Francia del Cinquecento." In Études Renaissantes, 55–65. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.er-eb.4.00345.
Full textFelici, Lucia. "Delio Cantimori storico della Riforma radicale nel periodo fra le due guerre: continuità e rotture." In Études Renaissantes, 11–44. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.er-eb.4.00003.
Full textVatin, Nicolas. "Les Patmiotes face à la piraterie entre le début du xvie siècle et la Guerre de Crète." In Études Renaissantes, 199–214. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.er-eb.4.00187.
Full textde Palacio, Jean. "Présence, absence et transposition de Psyché dans deux romans austro-hongrois de l'entre-deux-guerres." In Études Renaissantes, 305–13. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.er-eb.4.00042.
Full textAmalou, Thierry. "Théologiens, écrivains ou saints ?" In Église(s) et grands hommes, entre Renaissance et réformes, 245–82. Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/11uqf.
Full textPoniatowska, Elena, and Elizabeth Coonrod Martínez. "Rosario from “My Dear Beloved Guerra” to the “Little Boy with Corn-Colored Hair”." In The Women of Mexico's Cultural Renaissance, 153–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-11177-8_8.
Full textDiego Pacheco, Cristina. "Un échange musical impossible? Les récits de voyage en Terre Sainte de deux compositeurs espagnols de la Renaissance: Juan del Encina (1521) et Francisco Guerrero (1590)." In Études Renaissantes, 321–36. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.er-eb.4.00193.
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