scholarly journals Structural-spatial scheme of the Tree of Life in the topographical iconicity of the city–temple–icon–human

Author(s):  
O. Osadcha

The article reveals regularities between the spatial structure of the city-temple-icons and the similar structural principle, which, in the context of Hesychast anthropology, acts in the topography of the human soul. The spatial structure of the Tree of Life, a universal symbol contained in the topographical icons of the level and of the city, temple, icon, and human, is developed and proposed. It is proved that the spatial framework of the Tree of Life is the Golgotha ​​Cross. Considerable attention is paid to the analysis of the main spatial zones of the temple-icons, which have a hierarchical construction. It is assumed that the topographical icon of the city-temple-icon-human is arranged in such a way that it is possible to overcome the ontological gap that was created as a result of original sin. Particularly with the help of distinct geometric constants that determine the structure of the Tree of Life, ancient iconographs tried to restrain/seal the gaping hole, which seemed to be an insurmountable Rubicon, at the moment of the fall between the Spirit and the soul, the mind and heart of man, earthly and divine, profane and sacred worlds. Consequently, the use of sacred numbers was deliberately incorporated into sacred texts, icons, and in the architecture and iconographic programs of the temples. It was analyzed that the internal structure/main sacral energy framework of the icon-temple contains compositional nodes associated with the disclosure of the main semantic load in the iconographic program/plot, and are always constructed on the lines of the golden section. Some regularities in the placement of the central figure in the composition of the temple icon are traced. In the temple, as in the icon, the semantic center of the sacred space is the image of Christ the Almighty, who is placed in a top of an equilateral triangle with a side size corresponding to the width of the temple. The center of the Nimbus passes through the golden section. In the context of the relationship between the topography of the icon-temple and the proposed scheme for determining the topography of the human soul. According to the analogy principle, the structural-spatial scheme of the Tree of Life in the anthropological aspect is associated with the stages of the spiritual perfection of the human soul.

2017 ◽  
pp. 221-249
Author(s):  
Małgorzata Wrześniak

The hereby text is a short study on the relationship between architecture and jewellery. In the first part, it presents the history of occurrence of architectural forms in jewellery from antiquity to present day in the European culture. The second part delivers the examples of contemporary artefacts, particularly rings with microarchitecture. The analysis of the collected examples proves that architecture – its form, construction and detail − is a motive of decoration willingly used in jewellery design, often of a symbolic meaning related to the household or the temple (wedding rings, ritual rings). Nowadays, especially in the 21st century, microarchitecture in jewellery often emerges with reference to the place of origin, i.e. the famous building being, most frequently, the commemoration of a journey, able to bring back the memory of a visited city. The architectural jewellery, whose meanings and functions are the subject of the hereby study, has undergone many transformations throughout history. Even though it has transitioned from simple to complicated and decorative forms, from precious and rare to cheap and popular objects of mass production presenting the miniature replicas of buildings, the jewellery nearly always symbolises the city. Much less often the jewellery design occurs with reference to the metaphorical meanings of buildings as a representation of permanency (the tower in Alessandro Dari’s jewellery) or marital union (the house and the temple in Jewish rings).


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 235
Author(s):  
Sayid Anshar

<p><em>The concept of state in Islam only regulates principles or principles, among others, about leaders who must be honest, trustworthy, fair, transparent, and protect human rights (fitrah). Islam teaches and gives guidance in the life of the state. This means that the State must be built as a home to uphold justice in accordance with the rights that are basically owned by every citizen. The success of the Prophet Muhammad. Building a Muslim community in Medina by some Muslim intellectuals is called the City State.  The problem in this research is how the concept of the rule of law in the perspective of Islamic law. The method used in this research is descriptive research, descriptive research is intended to provide data as thorough as possible about an effort, symptoms, events and events that occur at the moment, and is deductive based on general theories applied to explain about a set of data, the relationship of a set of data with another set of data. In this study the method used is a normative juridical approach. The activities carried out are the inventory of legal materials, identification of legal materials, classification of legal materials, systematization of legal materials, and interpretation and construction of legal materials.  Based on the results of the study shows the concept of the State of Islamic Law Perspective with various scopes between the idea of state, Religion, State and law according to </em><em>Al-Quran</em> <em>and Hadith as well as the contribution of Islamic Law to the development of National Law.  </em></p>


Author(s):  
Susana Villaluenga de Gracia ◽  
Francisco Javier Quesada Sánchez

La Obra y Fábrica de la catedral de Toledo afrontaba las obras, acondicionamiento y ornamentación del templo desde el momento de su ubicación definitiva en el emplazamiento que antes de la Reconquista ocupaba la antigua mezquita de la ciudad. A esta organismo dirigido por el prelado y que crecía auspiciado por el cabildo, le correspondía para financiar su actividad la recaudación de un cúmulo importante de rentas de diferente naturaleza: rentas de los inmuebles adscritos a su patrimonio, excusados de Obra, aliceres, mandas y demandas e ingresos extraordinarios. La envergadura de estas rentas y una sabia gestión apoyada en un sólido aparato administrativo, forjado en base a la experiencia, venía a garantizar un sabio empleo de estos recursos financieros. La aplicación de los mismos se materializaba, no sólo en atender los afanes de la vida cotidiana, sino en acometer imponentes obras artísticas que hoy en día invaden todos los rincones del templo catedral. De hecho en la primera mitad del siglo XVI, asistimos a uno de los períodos de mayor esplendor artístico en la catedral de Toledo, coinicidendo con una importante bonanza económica.<br /><br />The Work an Factory of the cathedral of Toledo confronted the works, the arrangement and ornamentation of the temple from the moment of its definitive location in the site that before the Reconquest of Spain it had occupied the old mosque of the city. To this organism directed by the prelate and that grew favoured by the chapter, it corresponded to finance its activity, the collection of an important heap of rents of several nature: rents of the properites attached to its patrimony, excusado of Work, aliceres, executrix bequests and demands and extraordinary revenue. The span of its rents and a wise administration supported in a solid administrative apparatus, wrought based on the experience, it came to guarantee sa sage employment of these financial resources. Its application was materialized, not only in assisting the daily chores, but in carrying out imposing artistic works that today invades all the corners of the temple cathedral. In fact in the first thalf of the XVI century, we attended one of the periods of better artistic splendour in the cathedral of Toledo, coinciding with an important economic prosperity


TRANSPORTES ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Erika Cristine Kneib ◽  
Paulo Cesar Marques da Silva ◽  
Licinio Da Silva Portugal

<p><strong>Resumo:</strong>Em meio às alterações que ocorrem nas cidades, com ênfase no uso e ocupação do solo e nos deslocamentos, este trabalho tem por objetivo avaliar os possíveis impactos decorrentes da implantação de Polos Geradores de Viagens (PGVs) na estrutura espacial das cidades, conformada pelo conjunto de centros e subcentros urbanos. Como conclusão, a partir do método desenvolvido, corroborase a relação entre os PGVs e os impactos decorrentes destes na estrutura espacial da cidade objeto do estudo. Assim como, identificamse as atividades que mais contribuem para tal relação.</p><p><strong>Abstract:</strong> Among the changes that take place in the cities, especially those related to trips and to land use and occupation, this paper aims at assessing the possible impacts caused by the implantation of trip generating developments in their spatial structure, shaped by urban centres and subcentres. In conclusion, from the method developed in the work, the relationship is confirmed between trip generating developments and their impacts on the spatial structure of the city studied, as well as the activities that most contribute to that relationship are identified.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (30) ◽  
pp. 56
Author(s):  
Daniel Attianesi ◽  
Guilherme Rodrigues Passamani

A ideia do artigo proposto aqui está no questionamento sobre a possibilidade da cidade de Campo Grande se adequar aos moldes clássicos do pensado pela antropologia urbana. Ao pensar sobre a cidade de Campo Grande, estamos pensando em nexos constitutivos da própria realidade de diversas cidades brasileiras e do próprio Estado do Mato Grosso do Sul, cuja capital política e administrativa possui como sede o município de Campo Grande. Município esse que possuía uma população de 49.629 mil habitantes em 1940, que em 1970 já possuía 140.233 mil habitantes e nos últimos anos conta com uma população de 863.982 mil residentes, um crescimento de aproximadamente 1640% em 75 anos. Este artigo realizará uma análise da história de Campo Grande de forma a pensar a questão da relação entre rural e urbano. Para isso focaremos a partir da visão dos primeiros pensadores sociais, que pensavam a relação entra a vida na cidade e a vida no campo, autores como Weber, Simmel, Park, Wirth. Dessa forma, buscamos três momentos específicos dessa história: o primeiro sendo a formação de uma identidade cultural sul-mato-grossense entre os anos de 1932 a 1934, o segundo será pensar o momento de urbanização da cidade nos anos de 1960-1970 e o último iremos pensar a relação que a cidade possui atualmente com seus habitantes. Abstract: The idea of the proposed article is in questioning the possibility that the City of Campo Grande fits the classic models proposed by urban anthropology. When thinking about the City of Campo Grande, we are thinking in constitutive links with the reality of many Brazilian cities and with the very State of Mato Grosso do Sul, whose political and administrative capital is based in the City of Campo Grande. This city had a population of 49,629 in 1940, which in 1970 was already 140,233 and recent years count showed a population of 863,982 -- an increase of approximately 1640% in 75 years. This paper will analyze the history of Campo Grande in order to think about the relationship between rural and urban. For this, we will focus on the vision of the first social thinkers, who sought to think the relationship between life in the city and life in the countryside, authors like Weber, Simmel, Park, and Wirth. In this way, we look for three specific moments of this history: the first one being the formation of a cultural identity of the people of Mato Grosso do Sul from 1932 to 1934, the second is to think about the moment of the city’s urbanization in the years 1960-1970 and the latter we’ll think about the relationship that the city currently has with its inhabitants.


1993 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-116
Author(s):  
Boudewijn Bakker

AbstractJosua Bruyn's article 'Towards a Scriptural Reading of Seventeenth-Century Dutch Landscape Paintings' (1987) elicited a great deal of criticism for both its method and its occasionally sweeping conclusions. To a certain extent this criticism is understandable. It does not however mean that recently initiated, cautious attempts to peer below the surface of the painted landscape should be aborted. It is still highly unlikely that the landscape was the only Dutch 'genre' without any intentions other than to beguile the eye. Following Wiegand and Falkenburg, each of whom has researched and interpreted the work of a single artist (Ruisdael and Patinir respectively), the author, too, focuses on one artist. Claes Jansz. Visscher is generally regarded as the publisher and artist who decisively influenced the acceptance of the landscape as an autonomous work of art without a narrative or moral tenor. One of his first publications of his own work was the series Plaisante Plaetsen of about 1611, consisting of an allegorical title print, a view ofZandvoort with the list of contents, followed by ten small landscapes in the environs of Haarlem. The author offers an iconographic analysis of the first two sheets, comparing them with Visscher's religious views, as far as these can be deduced from his life and work. Visscher was an orthodox Calvinist, and his ideas about the place of art and the artist in society were presumably formed by John Calvin's dogma. There are two ways of looking at this. In the first place Calvin, obedient to the Second Commandment in Mosaic Law, purged public worship of Divine or human representations. He did see a task for art outside the church, but only if it had a didactic, edifying character. However, another aspect of Calvin's teachings suggests that art and religion are compatible. His dogma hinges on a view of earthly reality which, unlike that of mediaeval theology, is not negative but positive: a visible reflection of the invisible divine presence. Accordingly, instead of shunning the world and nature, man should enjoy and indeed investigate them in order to gain knowledge of God's creation and thus of God Himself. This idea of creation and the concomitant mission to investigate were of great significance for the development of empirical science. The same now applied to art, inasmuch as it pursues the visual examination of nature and its registration on the flat surface. This implies works of art done 'from life' rather than 'from the mind', and generated the tradition of the empirical, 'topographical' landscape art which flourished in seventeenth-century Holland alongside the landscape which was a mental invention composed of separate elements. Seen against that background, Visscher's two representations may be interpreted as follows: 'This series is intended as a monument to Haarlem. The city boasts not only a glorious and devout past but also most pleasant surroundings. They can compare with Classical landscape, but have a character of their own, and may therefore be praised both in Latin and Dutch. The city may bask in the knowledge that God directs the radiant light of his mercy on her, as the sun shines upon Haarlem's dunes. But Haarlem's glory does not render her haughty: the thorntree in her coat of arms is a reminder that all earthly things are transient. Let the sight of this city and the knowledge of her history thus incite the beholder to sobriety and diligence. Should this mean that you have no time to visit the pleasant spots in the surroundings of Haarlem, these pictures offer you a walk on paper. Be mindful that your own conduct in life match the tenor of this print. 'I, Claes Janszoon Visschcr, the printer of these views, am an educated and versatile artist and a God-fearing man. My work as an artist may be seen as the portrayal of what 1 have read in the book of creation. With my art I open a window on God's nature as it were, not only in the form of these lifelike memories of my walks around Haarlem, but on God's creation as a whole, as its chief elements are condensed in this panorama which also contains a reference to my own name and emblem.' The moment at which these two representations were published suggests that they were intended as a visual programme, not only for this modest series of prints but for Visscher's entire activities as an artist and publisher of prints. His approach to nature, incidentally, is wholly in keeping with that of the poets of his day, who presented their pastoral verses as paeans to creation and the Creator. The notion of a pious walk on paper stayed alive throughout the seventeenth century. In 1685, for instance, a book of meditations on God's nature was published, and reprinted many times; it took the form of walks around Haarlem, illustrated with six landscapes done 'from life', including a view of Haarlem in the manner of Vermeer's celebrated panorama. The above interpretation does not preclude a particular didactic or other associative value in individual landscape motifs. Even then, however, and perhaps first and foremost, they are depicted as the object of (pious) enjoyment. In all these cases a message is conveyed. It is the artistic formulation of the message that determines the work's quality. Seen in this light, the painted landscape in the seventeenth century was not intended primarily for artistic enjoyment but was meant to inspire personal meditation, even if for art-lovers the latter tended to recede into the background in practice.


Author(s):  
Marshall Brown

Lyric poems have often been treated as expressions of pure or immediate feeling. “Amaze,” by Adelaide Crapsey, exemplifies the pervasiveness of thought even in a seemingly innocuous trifle. Philosophers and aestheticians have wrestled with the relationship between thought and feeling in poetry. Notable formulations come from Kant, Hegel, and Heidegger, but the most persuasive is from an essay by Herder, “On Knowledge and Sensation in the Human Soul.” The opening of Dante’s Divine Comedy and Mallarmé’s sonnet “Le Cygne” illustrate how poems struggle to confront feelings, with the smallest words—connectives, deictics, pronouns—bearing the burden of capturing the movement of the mind in thought. The apodictic language of de Manian deconstruction misses the subtleties, as do quasi-mystical theories of the power of imagery and New Critical faith in the formalized rhetoric of “the poem itself.” “Loving in truth” are the opening words of Sir Philip Sidney’s Astrophel and Stella; this first sonnet and the entire cycle instantiate poetic discourse as the unending search amid the byways of truth. In a study of Wallace Stevens, Charles Altieri calls the thinking of poetry “aspectual,” and Stevens’s poem “Metaphors of a Magnifico” presents the basic task of poetic cognition through its satire of the magnifico’s failure to think. “Lyric poetry’s exemption from rationalism,” as one new study puts it, is really an exemption from preemptive assertion in the service of exploring and representing the mind’s coursing.


2018 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuela Chiavoni

Any analysis performed to gather data about architectural and urban heritage always begins with the observation of reality and the involvement established between the observer and the space around them. A spectator inevitably interprets what they see in a personal manner so as to give objects a specific meaning. The ability to understand the data and the relationship between the parts and then assign it a value varies from person to person. That the mind can mediate the mental processes of perception-action-thought means that any direct analysis to understand a cultural asset is scientifically extremely important. The critical process sparked by an on-site study exploits the concise graphic transcription of what is visible, including the graphics tool used to achieve that representation. This contribution will present a study performed by the author to gather data using the drawings of several domes in the historical centre of the city of Rome.


2018 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 310-322
Author(s):  
Massimo Osanna

A monumental tomb has been discovered at Pompeii in the Stabian Gate area during renovation work on a public building, constructed in the early 19th c., that currently houses the offices of the Archaeological Park. The tomb is part of a necropolis that developed alongside an important gate in the S sector of the city walls. In this area, 19th-c. investigations brought to light the gate as well as a section of paved road and two schola tombs in grey tuff, set directly on the left side of those leaving the city, on public ground and therefore authorised by the ordo decurionum (fig, 1). The first of the tombs is that of Marcus Tullius, a prominent figure in Pompeian society known for the dedication of the Temple of Fortuna Augusta; the second belongs to the duumvir Marcus Alleius Minius. Research was first conducted here by A. Maiuri, then again in the period 2001-2 when an additional stretch of paved road and two tombs on its right side were brought to light. The new, ongoing excavation, launched in 2016 to consolidate the foundations of the 19th-c. building but complicated by that building's looming presence, led to the rediscovery of a monumental tomb which had actually been found, partially excavated and robbed at the moment of the construction of the 19th-c. building.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document