scholarly journals Cmentarz na bośniacko-hercegowińskim pograniczu kulturowym. Analiza struktury tuzlańskiego cmentarza Trnovac

Adeptus ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Iga Bolewska

The Cemetery on the Cultural Borderland of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Analysis of the Structure of Trnovac Cemetery in TuzlaThis article presents an analysis of the tombstones in the Trnovac cemetery of Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The studied area was characterized with an emphasis on the features of the local cultural borderland and the history of the city. The text also includes the description of the study and its results. The aim of the presented analysis was to indicate departures from the expected state which result from the characteristics of this borderland, and to attempt to explain them. The importance of the cemetery as a source of information was also emphasized. Cmentarz na bośniacko-hercegowińskim pograniczu kulturowym. Analiza struktury tuzlańskiego cmentarza TrnovacW niniejszym artykule zaprezentowano analizę nagrobków znajdujących się na tuzlańskim cmentarzu Trnovac w Bośni i Hercegowinie. Scharakteryzowano badany obszar, kładąc nacisk na cechy lokalnego pogranicza kulturowego i historii miasta, przedstawiono opis badania i jego wyniki. Celem analizy było ukazanie odstępstw od oczekiwanego stanu, wynikających ze specyfiki pogranicza, oraz podjęcie próby ich wyjaśnienia. Podkreślono także wagę cmentarza jako źródła informacji.

2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 91
Author(s):  
Gde Indra Bhaskara ◽  
Nyoman Ega Ismana

The development of tourism in Bali to date has had a positive impact on the economy of the community. In addition, tourism can increase foreign exchange and provide employment.This study contains what motivation and how the characteristics of visitors Krisna Funtastic Land and how appropriate utilization in Krisna Funtastic Land in Leisure and Recreation activities. The data used in this study are qualitative data in the form of Krisna Funtastic Land, the state of facilities and infrastructure, the history of Krishna Funtastic Land and the utilization of visitors. The result-show that the characteristics of visitors who come to Krisna Funtastic Land based on age are the majority> 20 years old, based on the area of origin originating from the Regency of Buleleng, especially the City of Singaraja, based on female sex. Based on the level of education having a high school / vocational education level, based on the type of occupation the majority are still students, based on the source of information getting information comes from friends / relations. For the appropriate utilization in Krisna Funtastic Land based on the motivation and characteristics of visitors Krisna Funtastic Land which is one of the tourist attractions in Krisna Funtastic Land, so the manager should add the game rides not only focus for children, but also for adults, The type of game rides should more be reproduced to increase the interest of tourists to visit. Keywords: Utilization, motivation and characteristics


2021 ◽  
pp. 153-172
Author(s):  
Ionã Carqueijo Scarante

Anísio Melhor was born in the city of Nazaré, located in the Recôncavo da Bahia, on May 7, 1885. From reading his work, the most important source of information found about the writer, it is clear that journalism is one with his life. Self-taught, it was in the newspapers that he directed and collaborated that he became a poet, novelist, short-story writer, literary critic, folklorist and chronicler. Among the literary genres he published in periodicals, chronicles are the texts that most show his modus scribendi, as well as pointing out clues to his intellectual path and his evolution as a writer. In some of his texts, he discusses the journalist's solitary work, combining his experiences as a reader of the most varied newspapers and, especially, as a journalist in his small town. According to the writer, the provincial newspaper values every reader in its small town, knows its audience very closely, writes down the events day by day: now it is the chronicle of social nature, now it is the commentary on the deaths, now it is telluric poetry, now it is the birth of another child, now it is the chapter of another novel or novella. Thus, in the newspaper he founded and directed for a few decades, O Conservador (1912-1945), Melhor every day (re)constructed the history of his people, recording their traditions, stories and memories. The researches carried out in literary archives for the composition of this article contributed to revive the memory of this writer and to divulge his literary production and his work as a journalist.


Urban History ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 84-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey Green

Title deeds are an invaluable source of information on the evolution of local housing markets. They are also a key to three other data sources. First, they complement plans registered with a local authority before a house was built. Second, by recording the deaths of most rentier landlords they give an entry point into the Probate Registry. Third, they check property ownership as listed in rate books. Finally, they are complementary in a more general sense. They are reliable (because solicitors take special care to see that the facts are correct) and each event in the history of a house is made intelligible by being recorded as part of a time sequence. But information is limited to one house or at most a block. Only by painstaking accumulation of a large number of deeds is it possible to discern economic patterns. Even then a sample of deeds drawn from a whole city might be insensitive to the finely balanced economic equations of, for example, landlords' rental income and their offsetting payments to mortgagees, agents, and ground landlords. Confined to a more manageable suburb, a sample of deeds may be atypical of the city. On the other hand, complementary data from the other registers is comprehensive, covering big geographic areas and large numbers of houses or people. But it comes as snapshots, aggregated appearances which are difficult to make socially or economically intelligible: the atomised names of otherwise anonymous builders on a building plan, landlords in a rate book, and property owners in the Probate Registry.


2020 ◽  
pp. 412-422
Author(s):  
Evgeniia V. Shatko

The scene of the novel written by M. Jergović “Sarajevo. Plan grada” (2015) — the writer’s hometown, the key space for all his writing. It’s some sort of a fl uid romanized map. The novel describes several cultural and historical Sarajevoes at the same time, such as an Ottoman city, and Austro-Hungarian, and Sarajevo during the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and a city of the Tito era, and then Sarajevo before and after the war of the 1990s. in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The space of the city in the novel is the past of the today’s city, marked for the author by political and ideological attempts to recode and even erase the historical memory. The fragmented text of the novel consists of personal memories, literary plots, the history of the city, refl ections on memory and obliteration — it is a monument dedicated to the old, disappearing or even already dis-appeared Sarajevo. According to E. Kazas, Jergović created the most voluminous, comprehensive and most reliable image of Sarajevo in Bos-nian literature.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-114
Author(s):  
A. V. Akhtyamova

Urban Muslim culture with large seats of public education has long been attracting the minds of researchers. In the 19th–20th centuries the city of Ufa became one of the centers of Tatar education and culture. From 1865 to 1908, the percentage of Muslims in the provincial centre increased from 4,33% to 18,03%. In 1906 the “Galiya”, the third madrasah, was founded in Ufa. During the 1913–1914 academic year, 10,7% of all shakirds studied exactly in this madrasah. At that time the main source of information for the Tatar-speaking population of Ufa was the “Tormysh” (“Life”) newspaper, the pages of which often highlighted the topics concerning the history of the “Galiya” madrasah. The article provides some information about the editors and publishers of the newspaper. Some facts help us to conclude that the pages of the national newspaper often refl ected the spiritual and educational work conducted by teachers and shakirds of the madrassah for the sake of the local population. In general, the analysis of the publications reveals the great infl uence of the madrasah on the social and cultural environment of the Urban Muslim community.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferdinand Gregorovius ◽  
Annie Hamilton

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferdinand Gregorovius ◽  
Annie Hamilton

Antiquity ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 50 (200) ◽  
pp. 216-222
Author(s):  
Beatrice De Cardi

Ras a1 Khaimah is the most northerly of the seven states comprising the United Arab Emirates and its Ruler, H. H. Sheikh Saqr bin Mohammad al-Qasimi, is keenly interested in the history of the state and its people. Survey carried out there jointly with Dr D. B. Doe in 1968 had focused attention on the site of JuIfar which lies just north of the present town of Ras a1 Khaimah (de Cardi, 1971, 230-2). Julfar was in existence in Abbasid times and its importance as an entrep6t during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries-the Portuguese Period-is reflected by the quantity and variety of imported wares to be found among the ruins of the city. Most of the sites discovered during the survey dated from that period but a group of cairns near Ghalilah and some long gabled graves in the Shimal area to the north-east of the date-groves behind Ras a1 Khaimah (map, FIG. I) clearly represented a more distant past.


2002 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-336
Author(s):  
PIOTR DASZKIEWICZ ◽  
MICHEL JEGU

ABSTRACT: This paper discusses some correspondence between Robert Schomburgk (1804–1865) and Adolphe Brongniart (1801–1876). Four letters survive, containing information about the history of Schomburgk's collection of fishes and plants from British Guiana, and his herbarium specimens from Dominican Republic and southeast Asia. A study of these letters has enabled us to confirm that Schomburgk supplied the collection of fishes from Guiana now in the Laboratoire d'Ichtyologie, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris. The letters of the German naturalist are an interesting source of information concerning the practice of sale and exchange of natural history collections in the nineteenth century in return for honours.


1999 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-128
Author(s):  
Catherine S. Ramirez

Throughout the twentieth century (and now the twenty-first), the specter of a Latina/o past, present, and future has haunted the myth of Los Angeles as a sunny, bucolic paradise. At the same time it has loomed behind narratives of the city as a dystopic, urban nightmare. In the 1940s Carey McWilliams pointed to the fabrication of a “Spanish fantasy heritage” that made Los Angeles the bygone home of fair señoritas, genteel caballeros and benevolent mission padres. Meanwhile, the dominant Angeleno press invented a “zoot” (read Mexican-American) crime wave. Unlike the aristocratic, European Californias/os of lore, the Mexican/American “gangsters” of the 1940s were described as racial mongrels. What's more, the newspapers explicitly identified them as the sons and daughters of immigrants-thus eliding any link they may have had to the Californias/os of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries or to the history of Los Angeles in general.


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