Inscribed in the City: : How Did Women Enter ‘Written Space’?This chapter is based on a chapter of my forthcoming book Hidden Lives – Public Personae. Women and Civic Life in Italy and the Latin West during the Roman Principate. I thank the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) for their financial support of this research project.

2009 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-52
Author(s):  
Jan van Ginkel ◽  
Naures Atto ◽  
Bas Snelders ◽  
Mat Immerzeel ◽  
Bas ter Haar Romeny

AbstractAmong those who opposed the Council of Chalcedon in 451, the West Syrian (or Syriac Orthodox) Christians were probably least likely to form a national or ethnic community. Yet a group emerged with its own distinctive literature and art, its own network, and historical consciousness. In an intricate process of adoption and rejection, the West Syrians selected elements from the cultures to which they were heirs, and from those with which they came into contact, thus defining a position of their own. In order to study this phenomenon, scholars from various disciplines, and affiliated to two different faculties, were brought together in a programme financed by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO. This essay introduces their research project and methodology, and presents their results and conclusions.


European Procedures on Debt Collection: Nothing or Noting? Experiences and Future ProspectsThis publication has been made possible with the financial support of the Dutch Organisation for Scientific Research within its innovative research scheme (Vidi). This chapter results from a presentation at the conference ‘Civil Justice in the EU—Growing and Teething?’ co-organised by the Swedish Network for European Legal Studies in collaboration with the Faculty of Law at Uppsala University and the Max Planck Institute Luxembourg, Uppsala, October 2013. Part of the research and data on the Netherlands presented in section 3 relies heavily on earlier work, in particular XE Kramer, ML Tuil and I Tillema et al, ‘Verkrijging van een executoriale titel in incassozaken’, report for Research and Documentation Centre of the Ministry of Security and Justice, 2012, in particular 112–18, available at: www.wodc.nl/onderzoeksdatabase/executoriale-titel.aspx, English summary, available at: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2259557; and XE Kramer and EA Ontanu, ‘The Functioning of the European Small Claims Procedure in the Netherlands: Normative and Empirical Reflections’ (2013) 3 Nederlands Internationaal Privaatrecht 319. The empirical research has been solely (European order for payment) or primarily (European small claims) conducted by the present author; the co-authors have granted permission to reproduce some of the data. See also for a consolidating paper in Dutch, XE Kramer, ‘Ervaringen met Europese civiele procedures in Nederland: een terugblik en wenkend toekomstperspectief’ (2014) 2 Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Europees Recht 99–108.


Author(s):  
Michael Koortbojian

The ancient Romans famously distinguished between civic life in Rome and military matters outside the city—a division marked by the pomerium, an abstract religious and legal boundary that was central to the myth of the city's foundation. This book explores, by means of images and texts, how the Romans used social practices and public monuments to assert their capital's distinction from its growing empire, to delimit the proper realms of religion and law from those of war and conquest, and to establish and disseminate so many fundamental Roman institutions across three centuries of imperial rule. The book probes such topics as the appearance in the city of Romans in armor, whether in representation or in life, the role of religious rites on the battlefield, and the military image of Constantine on the arch built in his name. Throughout, the book reveals how, in these instances and others, the ancient ideology of crossing the pomerium reflects the efforts of Romans not only to live up to the ideals they had inherited, but also to reconceive their past and to validate contemporary practices during a time when Rome enjoyed growing dominance in the Mediterranean world. The book explores a problem faced by generations of Romans—how to leave and return to hallowed city ground in the course of building an empire.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 19-24
Author(s):  
A. S. Povzun ◽  
V. I. Mazurov

The purpose of the work was to study the nosological structure of rheumatologic patients hospitalized  in emergency hospitals. The analysis of the obtained distribution and its comparison with the structure  of patients at the Scientific Research Institute of emergency care named after I. I. Djanelidze and the City  Rheumatology Center were done. Determination of the current structure of hospitalization of rheumatologic  patients can serve as a basis of its forecasting for the subsequent periods.


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