The term Women’s Studies refers to research covering female existence, with women being studied both as acting subjects and described objects. Using bio-social femaleness as the main analytical category, Women
- The seven canonical hours of the church were called tides, and tide—from an Indo-European root meaning "to divide"—is used with other words to denote a definite interval of time: noontide, Eastertide, eventide, summertide, etc. See also related terms for tides. Farlex Trivia Dictionary...
Explore this Subject How to publish with us This chapter is in the book Antike Mythologie in christlichen Kontexten der Spätantike Cite this chapter MLA APA Harvard Chicago Vancouver Bassett, Sarah. "“Curious Art”: Myth, Sculpture, and Christian Response in the World of Late Ant...
Jean-Baptist Isabey, Miniaturist, with his Daughter Homage to Diana Still-Life with Pheasant Portraits of Martin Luther and Catherine Bore The Madonna with Canon van der Paele (details) Swiss Guard and Wounded Veteran Pentecost Self-Portrait St Ursula St John Altarpiece Tabernacle ...
In this museum you can see, amongst other masterpieces, The Virgin and Child with Canon Van der Paele by Jan van Eyck and the Moreel Triptych by Hans Memling. You will also marvel at the top 18th and 19th-century neoclassical pieces, masterpieces of Flemish Expressionism and post-...
In this museum you can see, amongst other masterpieces, The Virgin and Child with Canon Van der Paele by Jan van Eyck and the Moreel Triptych by Hans Memling. You will also marvel at the top 18th and 19th-century neoclassical pieces, masterpieces of Flemish Expressionism and post-...
In this museum you can see, amongst other masterpieces, The Virgin and Child with Canon Van der Paele by Jan van Eyck and the Moreel Triptych by Hans Memling. You will also marvel at the top 18th and 19th-century neoclassical pieces, masterpieces of Flemish Expressionism and post-war ...
In this museum you can see, amongst other masterpieces, The Virgin and Child with Canon Van der Paele by Jan van Eyck and the Moreel Triptych by Hans Memling. You will also marvel at the top 18th and 19th-century neoclassical pieces, masterpieces of Flemish Expressioni...
, with their network of orphanages and foster parents, take care of the child, thus became a relatively frequent outcome, generating political worries about public costs" (Sollors 2014, p. 222), but at least the stigma was no longer focused on the mother, but rather the living child. ...
Catherine more as a "picture" than as an item of devotion and, in any case, he seems not to have been an eager champion of the Orthodox rite with its priesthood, liturgy, iconostasis, holy water, prayers and so on, but rather to have cultivated his own system of religious belief ...