Academic literature on the topic 'San Vitale (Basilica : Rome, Italy)'

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Journal articles on the topic "San Vitale (Basilica : Rome, Italy)"

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Chiabrando, Filiberto, Dario Piatti, and Fulvio Rinaudo. "Multi-Scale Modeling of the Basilica of San Pietro in Tuscania (Italy). From 3D Data to 2D Representation." Geoinformatics FCE CTU 6 (December 21, 2011): 300–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.14311/gi.6.37.

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The Basilica of San Pietro is a Romanic architecture located in the municipality of Tuscania in the Lazio Region about 100 km far from Rome. In 1971 the apse dome collapsed during the earthquake and the important fresco of a Christ Pantocrator was destroyed. In 1975 the dome was reconstructed using reinforced concrete.In 2010 an integrated survey of the Church has been performed using LiDAR techniques integrated with photogrammetric and topographic methodologies in order to realize a complete 2D documentation of the Basilica of San Pietro. Thanks to the acquired data a complete multi-scale 3D
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Wrana, Bogumił, and Jan Wrana. "Buildings of the John Paul II Center – a challenge for civil engineering and architecture." Budownictwo i Architektura 19, no. 4 (2020): 109–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.35784/bud-arch.2139.

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The buildings of the John Paul II Centre (CJPII) are located in Cracow-Łagiewniki on a heap of limestone sediments from the former "Solvay" Sodium Plant in Cracow. The area is called "White Seas" (Białe Morze) and is located in the natural depression of the Wilga river valley, between Św. Józefa hill in the north and Borkowska Hill (Góra Borkowska) in the south-west. The limestone sediments as a building substrate for CJPII buildings is unprecedented ground in the world and thus a challenge for civil engineering. The height of the heap reaches about 15 m and has retained the consistency of a w
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Marina, Toumpouri. "Basilica of San Vitale." Database of Religious History, June 27, 2024. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12574475.

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The Church of San Vitale, located in northwestern Ravenna, is the nearest known relative of the church of Saints Sergius and Bacchus built by Justinian in Constantinople around the same time, although the latter had not served as a direct model. The basilica was initially the martyrium of Saint Vitalis, the patron of Ravenna. Before the mid-tenth century, but unknown exactly when, the church was acquired by a Benedictine monastery, to which it belonged until 1860, when it was dissolved. The basilica of San Vitale was erected during the reign of Justinian (527-565). Julianus Argentarius, a Gree
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "San Vitale (Basilica : Rome, Italy)"

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Merrill, Aaron Thomas. "The subterranean strata of the basilica San Clemente." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN) Access this title online, 2005. http://www.tren.com.

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Books on the topic "San Vitale (Basilica : Rome, Italy)"

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1942-, Carbonara Giovanni, ed. L'origine dell'umidità nella Basilica di San Vitale a Roma: Analisi degli scambi termoigrometrici tra muratura e ambiente. Gangemi, 2001.

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Ferrua, Antonio. La Basilica e la catacomba di S. Sebastiano. 2nd ed. Pontificia Commissione di archeologia sacra, 1990.

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Cerioni, Anna Maria. The Basilica of Saint Paul outside the Walls. Pontificia Amministrazione della Patriarcale Basilica di San Paolo, 1991.

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Galletti, Maurizio. Basilica di San Paolo fuori le mura: Fede e spazio sacro. Basilica papale di San Paolo fuori le mura, 2011.

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Galloni, Egisto. Le colonne di granito di Montorfano della Basilica di San Paolo fuori le mura. Antiquarium Mergozzo, 1988.

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Luitpold, Frommel Christoph, ed. L'antica Basilica di San Lorenzo in Damaso: Indagini archeologiche nel Palazzo della Cancelleria, 1988-1993. De Luca, 2009.

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Donadono, Laura. La Scala Santa a San Giovanni in Laterano. Quasar, 2000.

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Ferri, Gemma Guerrini. "San Chosm'e Damiano e 'l suo bel monasterio ...": Il complesso monumentale di San Cosimato ieri, oggi, domani. Testoesenso, 2013.

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Palombi, Andreina. La basilica di San Nicola in Carcere: Il complesso architettonico dei tre templi del Foro Olitorio. Istituto nazionale di studi romani, 2006.

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Barbera, Rosanna. Il Codice Epigrafico di Cornelio Margarini e le iscrizioni della Basilica di San Paolo fuori le Mura nel XVIII secolo: Concordanze e inediti. Musei Vaticani, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "San Vitale (Basilica : Rome, Italy)"

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Kateusz, Ally, and Luca Badini Confalonieri. "Women Church Leaders in and around Fifth-century Rome." In Patterns of Women's Leadership in Early Christianity. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198867067.003.0013.

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This chapter considers artistic representations, showing evidence of ‘Women Church Leaders in and around Fifth-century Rome’. It focuses on two artefacts that portrayed women church leaders operating in this broad context. It addresses frescoes of deceased women painted with open gospel books in the San Gennaro Catacombs in Naples; it proposes that the most logical interpretation of the iconographic motifs associated with them is that they were women bishops, perhaps two of the women about whom Pope Gelasius complained to male bishops in southern Italy c.496. For cultural context it next consi
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