The impact of european overseas discoveries on ship design and construction during the sixteenth century

GeoJournal ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 443-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clinton R. Edwards
2005 ◽  
Vol 21 (03) ◽  
pp. 186-194
Author(s):  
Howard Moyst ◽  
Biman Das

This paper reviews a ship design and construction case study in the context of the published literature on the design process and its impact on construction. The objective was to explore the factors that impact design and construction lead time and cost. Design and construction managers constantly experience pressure to accelerate the construction start time in an environment characteristic of frequent design changes and rework. Often the construction of the first ships of a series will aggressively overlap the design phase. This investigation assessed a case study that illustrated that as the degree of overlap between design and construction increases, design changes increased ship construction costs and duration. This negates the advantage of trying to reduce lead time by overlapping phases. Before strategies of overlapping are utilized, shipbuilders need to better understand the details of the design process and its integration with other functions to improve design quality and reduce the impact of design changes on manufacturing and construction. It is recommended that when overlapping strategies are considered, design changes and their impact on construction be factored into the decision. A better strategy would be to eliminate design quality issues and design and construction rework.


1981 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 265-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas Orme

During the last hundred years our knowledge of the educational institutions of medieval England has steadily increased, both of schools and universities. We know a good deal about what they taught, how they were organised and where they were sited. The next stage is to identify their relationship with the society which they existed to serve. Whom did they train, to what standards and for what ends? These questions pose problems. They cannot be answered from the constitutional and curricular records which tell us about the structure of educational institutions. Instead, they require a knowledge of the people—the pupils and scholars—who went to the medieval schools and universities. We need to recover their names, to compile their biographies and thereby to establish their origins, careers and attainments. If this can be done on a large enough scale, the impact of education on society will become clearer. In the case of the universities, the materials for this task are available and well known. Thanks to the late Dr A. B. Emden, most of the surviving names of the alumni of Oxford and Cambridge have been collected and published, together with a great many biographical records about them. For the schools, on the other hand, where most boys had their literary education if they had one at all, such data are not available. Except for Winchester and Eton, we do not possess lists of the pupils of schools until the middle of the sixteenth century, and there is no way to remedy the deficiency.


2019 ◽  
pp. 40-61
Author(s):  
Martin Pugh

This chapter focuses on the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth century. Following Henry VIII's break with Rome in 1531, the English Reformation led Britain into a protracted struggle with the two great Catholic powers, Spain and France, for the next 300 years. The long-term effect was to define Britain as the leading Protestant power; but more immediately, it posed a far greater threat to England than Islam, and effectively destroyed the rationale for crusading activities. In this situation, the Islamic empires actually became a valuable balancing factor in European diplomacy. Henry's readiness to deal with the Muslim powers was far from eccentric during the sixteenth century. Both King Francis I of France and Queen Elizabeth I of England took the policy of collaboration much further.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-199
Author(s):  
Khaled Zaidan Abdul Hadi ◽  
Rawia Mohamed Wajih Jarges

The research aims to demonstrate the impact of knowledge management infrastructure in intellectual capital through a exploratory study of the views of a sample of individuals in the Institute of Management / Rusafa. The interest in the knowledge management infrastructure contributes to increasing the effectiveness of the intellectual capital of the research sample. The research problem focused on the following questions: Is there a clear perception in the researched organization about the knowledge management infrastructure? Is there a clear perception in the researched organization about intellectual capital? What is the nature of the correlation and influence relationships between the knowledge management infrastructure and the intellectual capital? In order to answer the above questions, the analytical descriptive method was adopted through the design and construction of a scale that has the ability to measure the main dimensions of the research. The questionnaire (35) was distributed by means of an objective sample for a number of teachers as the research sample. In order to analyze the data, a set of statistical methods was used. The research found a significant correlation between the infrastructure of knowledge management and intellectual capital. A number of suggestions were made, including the need to pay attention to the knowledge management infrastructure, which would positively affect the intellectual capital of individuals and the overall performance of the researched organization.


Author(s):  
Gabriel Gherasim

In the troubling sixteenth century political and religious turmoil in Europe - and particularly in France - the cosmopolitan personality of Michel de Montaigne is not only indicative for acknowledging the more and more meddling resources of culture within the realm of politics, but is also explanatory for reforming and expanding the instruments of traditional diplomacy. Specifically, the consequential insights of Montaigne's post-Renaissance humanist stance highly impacted upon certain salient developments in the field of cultural diplomacy that could be analytically framed as i) a personal imprint on reforming political culture(s) tantamount to a conspicuous signature in the field of cultural pedagogy, and ii) a commendable approach to cultural pluralism, and an influential modus operandi in the practice of cultural relations. The present study purports to reflect upon the rise of modern cultural diplomacy through highlighting the impact of the above-mentioned traits on further developments of the field in one of the most characteristic figures of early modernity, Michel de Montaigne.


1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (01) ◽  
pp. 65-76
Author(s):  
George C. Steinman ◽  
Walter B. Chappel

This paper has been condensed from the original Section paper and retitled as above. The complete paper, titled simply, "The MarAd Pollution Abatement Program," included a comprehensive description of the program along with national and international regulations, treaties, agreements and conventions, and a description of the economic and environmental impact of the 1973 IMCO Marine Pollution Convention. This condensed version briefly summarizes the MarAd Pollution Abatement Program and the economic and environmental impact of two of the major ship design and construction features adopted by the 1973 IMCO Marine Pollution Convention: segregated ballast and improved load-on-top. The paper also includes recommendations for future action at national and international levels.


Author(s):  
Tanya Pollard

When Hamlet reflects on the charged power of the tragic theater, the figure who haunts his imagination is Hecuba, Queen of Troy, whose tragedy came to define the genre in sixteenth-century Europe. As a bereaved mourner who seeks revenge, Hecuba offers a female version of Hamlet. Yet even while underscoring her tragic power, Shakespeare simultaneously establishes a new model of tragic protagonist, challenging the period’s longstanding identification of tragedy with women. In exploring why both Hamlet and Shakespeare are preoccupied with Hecuba, this chapter argues that ignoring the impact of Greek plays in sixteenth-century England has left a gap in our understanding of early modern tragedy. Attending to Hecuba highlights Shakespeare’s innovations to a genre conventionally centered on female grief. In invoking Hecuba as an icon of tragedy, Shakespeare both reflects on and transforms women’s place in the genre.


Author(s):  
Helena Sanson

This chapter begins with a brief review of various personifications of grammar. It suggests that whichever personification Grammar is given, the underlying point — that she holds a central position in the system of education of the liberal arts — remains. She is the cradle of knowledge and the point of entry to a whole range of disciplines, skills, and methods that in turn lead to further literary and textual knowledge. This is followed by discussions of how teaching and learning grammar was considered unsuitable for women; the impact of the invention of printing on the form, content, and transmission of knowledge; and the emergence of the literary vernacular alongside Latin in the sixteenth century. An overview of the subsequent chapters is also presented.


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