scholarly journals El Colegio de la Paz y su papel en la educación de las mujeres en el Madrid del Antiguo Régimen (1740-1780)

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 287
Author(s):  
Nuria González Barrero

This paper aims to offer an approximation of the real situation at Madrid School of La Paz in the 18th century. It focuses on the role of the school in women’s education and instruction. We analysed the features and goals which drove the development of the School, its entrance system, the profile of the candidates, and the evolution of the tasks they were set from entering the School at an early age until they went out to get married or pursue a religious life. In addition, we analysed the jobs they did and how much they earned, the type of education they received, and the responsibility of the chaplain in girls’ education. We also explored the girls’ daily routines.

Author(s):  
Yuan Lo

The character and status are presented together. Others have to play the role. The real situation is to be presented in a simple way. It can be understood how to adapt yourself to the real field. The role of the actress is to be revealed. Students get real-life education in the artificial environment. Performances of speech and expression are improved.


Author(s):  
Nadezhda Grin

This article discusses the communicative nature and the communicative principle of learning. Special attention is paid to the role of the video film as an effective means of teaching intercultural communi-cation in a foreign language. The communicative approach allows you to model a language situation that is close to the real situation of communication, without using your native language.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-21
Author(s):  
Chanh Tin Tang ◽  
Nguyen Huy Chinh Phan

The Maritime Silk Road is considered the beginning of all international maritime trade routes, not only in terms of trade; the Maritime Silk Road is also the foundation for human discoveries and understanding about geography, nature, politics and society of many parts of the world. Thanks to its significantly geopolitical and geo-cultural position; from a very early age, Hoi An trading port (Vietnam) has participated and played an important role on this arterial route. This article will focus on clarifying the birth as well as the role of Hoi An to the Maritime Silk Road from) early 16th century to the end of 18th century.


Author(s):  
Michael Mawson

This chapter examines the role of Bonhoeffer’s Christian concept of person in Sanctorum Communio. Many of Bonhoeffer’s readers identify this concept as the cornerstone and foundation of Sanctorum Communio, and sometimes of Bonhoeffer’s theology more broadly. Against this view, this chapter argues that this concept of the person plays a much more delimited (albeit still crucial) role in Sanctorum Communio’s argument. Rather than providing a foundation, this concept clarifies at the outset how God encounters and judges the individual human being through a concrete other following the fall. With this concept, Bonhoeffer is clarifying the real situation or standing of the human being before God and others.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 46-59
Author(s):  
Mykola Kuhutiak

The paper presents the results of the first extensive national research into thehandwritten legacy of the Great Skete (Maniava Skete); it deals with historical and archeologicalaspects of Патерик Скитський (the Skete Patericon) and Синодик (the Synodyk, or memorialbook); the latter manuscript was discovered by the author of this paper in the Romanian AcademyLibrary. The Skete Patericon comprises ‘Житіє Іова’ (‘The Life of Job’), ‘Завіт Духовний’(‘Spiritual Testament’) and ‘Регула’ (‘Regula’). The paper highlights a unique role of the Skete inthe life of the Orthodox Church, in the religious life of the 17th-18th century Ukraine, in reviving andpreserving national spiritual traditions.


Author(s):  
Marietta Horster

This chapter focuses upon the literary representations of the importance of rituals, religious offices, and cult traditions in the time of the Second Sophistic. The “real-life” sophists’ involvement in cult organization, their euergetism in favor of sanctuaries and festivals, and their holding of priesthoods of the imperial cult and of other gods and deities is examined, as well as the imperial measures concerning cult and religion. Both the more “sophistic” matters of the role of cult and religion in the sophists’ texts addressing epiphanies, mystery cults, oracles, and spiritual experiences and the role sophists attribute to themselves in the cultic and religious life of the cities of the eastern provinces are treated.


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