House and Home

Author(s):  
Abigail Brundin ◽  
Deborah Howard ◽  
Mary Laven

Households in Renaissance Italy varied greatly in size and composition. This chapter introduces the idea of home as a social unit and considers this in relation to its physical characteristics, size, and the layout of rooms. Private chapels were rare except in elite families, but in every home, however modest, it was possible to designate a special corner or small table (altarino) for family prayers. The life of the Holy Family, as narrated in popular texts, provided a model for the pious home. The camera or bedroom, which was also a living room, seems to have been the usual site of domestic worship, and household inventories of the period suggest that devotional objects were often located around the bed. Practices varied between town and country.

1971 ◽  
Vol 26 (02) ◽  
pp. 211-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ch R. Muirhead ◽  
D. C Triantaphyllopoulos

SummaryChromatographed thrombin in the presence of both 50 Kallikrein inhibitor units of Trasylol per ml and 0.1 M E-ACA solubilized fibrin and the products of lysis possessed anticoagulant properties. The peak of the antithrombic activity coincided with the time of complete lysis of the fibrin clot, plasmin lysed fibrin exhibited the peak of its antithrombic activity much earlier. The effect of thrombin lysed fibrin on the prothrombin consumption of shed blood was found to be inhibitory.The products of the digestion of fibrin by thrombin and by plasmin, isolated at an advanced stage of proteolysis were compared by gel filtration, disc electrophoresis and DEAE cellulose chromatography. Differences in physical characteristics of these fibrin breakdown products offer evidence that they were produced by two different enzymes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document