category CippusPerusinus http etp.classics.umass.edu The Etruscan Texts Project A searchable database ... la CippusPerusinus nl CippusPerusinus pl CippusPerusinus ... . clel . lu? Supplamentry for the word naper ,from a cippus found at Volterra. l titesi cale s i cina ... more details
Unreferenced date March 2007 Taxobox name Peacock Royal image CippufDSC 3046.jpg image width 250px image caption Tajuria cippus upperside, female. regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Lycaenidae subfamilia genus Tajuria species T. cippus binomial Tajuria cippus binomial authority Fabricius, 1798 synonyms The Peacock Royal , Tajuria cippus is a species of Lycaenidae lycaenid or blue butterfly found in Asia . Gallery gallery Image CippusmDSC 3045.jpg Tajuria cippus Male Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus on Santalum album Chandan W IMG 9957.jpg on Santalum album Chandan in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus on Santalum album Chandan W IMG 9956.jpg on Santalum album Chandan in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus at Chilkur near Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7402.jpg in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus at Chilkur near Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7391.jpg in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus on Cassia fistula Amaltas at Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7201.jpg on Cassia fistula Amaltas in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus on Cassia fistula Amaltas at Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7193 .jpg on Cassia fistula Amaltas in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus on Cassia fistula Amaltas at Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7156.jpg on Cassia fistula Amaltas in Hyderabad, India . Image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus on Ziziphus species in Hyderabad, AP W IMG 9418.jpg on Ziziphus species in Hyderabad, India . gallery DEFAULTSORT Tajuria Cippus Category Iolaini Theclinae stub Category Butterflies of India it Tajuria cippus ... more details
Image Nuremberg chronicles Matheolus, Schedel s Teacher CCLIIv .jpg thumb 200px right Matheolus, from the Nuremberg Chronicles 1493 Matheolus Perusinus Mattheolus de Perusio, Mattiolo Mattioli, Matthiolus de Matthiolis, Matthiolus de Matthiolis died 1480 was a professor of philosophy and medicine . http www.unisi.it docentes perugia docenti m n.html He was a native of Perugia hence his name , and died at Padua . He was the tutor of Hartmann Schedel and the author of a work on human memory Tractatus Artis Mememorativ . External links http edit16.iccu.sbn.it scripts iccu ext.dll?fn 11&res 9633 Mattioli, Mattiolo Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Perusinus, Matheolus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION professor of philosophy and medicine DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1480 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Perusinus, Matheolus Category Medieval Italian physicians Category People from Perugia Category 1480 deaths Category Italian Renaissance humanists Category Year of birth unknown Italy med bio stub br Matheolus Perusinus nl Matheolus Perusinus ... more details
Matheolus may refer to Mathieu of Boulogne , French poet Matheolus Perusinus , aka Matheolus of Perugia hndis Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ... more details
italictitle Taxobox name BASEPAGENAME image Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus at Chilkur near Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7402.jpg image caption Peacock Royal Tajuria cippus regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Lycaenidae genus Tajuria Tajuria is a genus of butterfly in the family Lycaenidae . Category Lycaenidae Category Theclinae Lycaenidae stub no Tajuria vi Tajuria ... more details
little star fulum va Cippusperusinus , lateral, lines 29 30 pulunza ipal sacnina tinia tei a emei .... Tabula Cortonensis An Etruscan inscription. Cippusperusinus An Etruscan inscription. Etruscan ... more details
Infobox language family name Tyrsenian altname Tyrrhenian familycolor Isolate region Southern Europe family Tyrrhenian languages Tyrrhenian child1 Etruscan language Etruscan child2 Raetic language Raetic child3 Lemnian language Lemnian map Tyrsenian languages.png mapcaption Approximate area of Tyrsenian languages Tyrsenian Tyrsenisch , also Tyrrhenian , named after the Tyrrhenians Ancient Greek Turs noi , Turs noi , Turrh noi , is a closely related ancient language family proposed by Helmut Rix 1998 , that consists of the extinct Etruscan language of central Italy, the extinct Raetic language of the Alps , and the extinct Lemnian language of the Aegean Sea . The evidence Rix assumes a date for Proto Tyrsenian of roughly 1000 BC. Cognates common to Raetic and Etruscan are Etr. zal , Raet. zal , two Etr. a cvil , Raet. akvil , gift Etr. zinace , Raet. t ina e , he made . a genitive case genitive suffix s in all three languages a second genitive suffix a in Raetic, i a in Etruscan the past active participle ce in Etruscan, ku in Raetic. Cognates common to Lemnian and Etruscan are dative case dative case suffixes si, and ale, attested on the Lemnos stele Lemnos Stele Hulaie i for Hulaie , ukiasi ale for the Phocaean and in Etruscan inscriptions e.g. aule si To Aule on the Cippus Perusinus . a past tense suffix a i Etruscan e as in ame was amai Lemnian ai as in ivai lived . Strabo s Geography V, 2 , citation from Anticlides attributes to Pelasgians of Lemnos and Imbros a share in the foundation of Etruria. ref Myres JL. A history of the Pelasgian theory. Journal of Hellenic Studies 1907 169 225 http www.archive.org stream journalofhelleni27sociuoft page 214 mode 1up s. 16 Pelasgians and Tyrrhenians Strabo And again, Anticleides says that they the Pelasgians were the first to settle the regions round about Lemnos and Imbros, and indeed that some of these sailed away to Italy with Tyrrhenus the son of Atys public domain translation by H.L. Jones at http penelope.uchicag ... more details
Paulus Perusinus or Pusinus was an Italian mytographer of the 14th century. He is extensively quoted in Giovanni Boccaccio s Genealogia Deorum Gentilium XVI, 6 , but otherwise almost unknown. He was Head Librarian at the service of Robert of Naples King Robert of Sicily and Jerusalem Robert the Wise , a thorough investigator on foreign books and a close friend of Barlaam of Seminara , Boccaccio s own master. He attributes Paul an extensive treatise entitled Collections which was lost after his death. Boccaccio praises Paul s work, particularly when he quotes a certain Theodontius . References Giovanni Boccaccio , Genealogia Deorum Gentilium Venice, 1472 , Book XVI, chapter VI. Category Mythographers Category 14th century Italian people ... more details
words having to do with ritual formulae. Dated to about 500 BC. The CippusPerusinus , a stone slab cippus found at Perugia . Contains 46 lines, 130 words. The Tabula Cortonensis , a bronze tablet from ... Cortonensis An Etruscan inscription. Cippusperusinus An Etruscan inscription. Pyrgi Tablets Bilingual ... more details
Image AndreasPerusinus.jpg thumb Copy of the tombstone of Andrew of Perugia at the Quanzhou Museum of Maritime History the original is in Beijing . Andrew of Perugia Latin name Andreas Perusinus was a Franciscan friar and Bishop born in Perugia , Italy , and active in China in the 14th century. He was Bishop of Quanzhou ancient Zaiton in Fujian from 1322. He was initially sent to China in 1307 by Pope Clement V as a member of a group of seven Franciscan bishop s who were to act as suffragan s to consecrate John of Montecorvino Archbishop of Peking and summus archiepiscopus chief archbishop . Only three of these envoys arrived safely Gerardus, Peregrinus and Andrew of Perugia 1308 . The three suffragans consecrated John in 1308 and succeeded each other in the episcopal see of Zaiton , established by Montecorvino. In 1322, Andrew of Perugia was nominated bishop of the see of Zaiton by John of Montecorvino. ref name Hasting, p.711 http books.google.com books?id ao4qMWcx50oC&pg PA711&dq Letter Pope John Abu 1322&as brr 3&hl en Hasting, p.711 ref A 1326 letter by Andrew to Friar Warden of the Convent of Perugia is known, mentionning the archbishop. ref name Hasting, p.711 quotation Friar Andrew of Perugia, of the Order of Minor Friars, by Divine permission called to be Bishop, to the reverend father the Friar Warden of the Convent of Perugia, health and peace in the Lord for ever ... Opening lines of the letter from Andrew Bishop of Zayton in Manzi or Southern China, 1326 http dsr.nii.ac.jp toyobunko III 2 F b 2 V 1 page 0496.html.en Full text Andrew died around 1332 in Quanzhou. His tombstone has been discovered in 1946, and has been transferred to Beijing, with a copy left in the Quanzhou Maritime Museum. Remarkably, the tomstone displays Nestorian Christian Nestorian Christian iconography. ref http www.busstop.usfca.edu ricci exhibits lotus cross exhibit 053Z32 29 500 .html Ricci Institute for Chinese Western Cultural Studies ref quotation Hic...sepultus est Andreas P ... more details
wiktionarypar Perugia Perugia is a city in central Italy, the capital of Umbria. Perugia may also refer to Province of Perugia , Umbria, Italy Perugia Calcio , an Italian football soccer club based in Perugia History Cippus of Perugia , a stone tablet bearing an Etruscan inscription Battle of Perugia , an ancient Roman battle Polyptych of Perugia , a Renaissance painting by Piero della Francesca 151 Infantry Division Perugia , an Italian infantry division of World War II People Albert Perugia , Italian ichthyologist Andre Perugia , a French shoe designer Constantius of Perugia , a Christian martyr of the Roman era, bishop and saint Giannicolo da Perugia , an Italian painter of the Renaissance Herculanus of Perugia , a Christian martyr of the Medieval era, bishop and saint Matteo da Perugia , a Medieval Italian composer Niccol da Perugia , an Italian composer of the ars nova Vincenzo Perugia , the man who stole the Mona Lisa Other From Perugia, a poetry by John Greenleaf Whittier Perugia s limia , a small fish of the family Poeciliidae disambig Category Surnames fr Perugia he nl Perugia pt Per gia desambigua o uk ... more details
Infobox Painting image file Pietro Perugino cat59.jpg title Madonna in Glory with Saints artist Pietro Perugino year c. 1500 1501 type Oil on panel height 330 width 265 image size 300px museum Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna city The Madonna in Glory with Saints is a painting by the Italy Italian Renaissance painter Pietro Perugino , dating to c. 1500 1501. It is housed in the Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna Pinacoteca Nazionale of Bologna , Italy . It was originally located in the Scarani Chapel of the church of San Giovanni in Monte. Description The scheme of the composition, typical of Perugino s mature works based on the lost Assumpion of the Sistine Chapel and used in numerous works of the period, such as the San Francesco al Prato Resurrection and the Vallombrosa Altarpiece , includes two different levels. The Madonna with Child, depicted within an almond in the upper part and a group of four saints above a hilly landscape in the lower one. The saints are, from the left the Archangel Michael with a decorated armor , Catherine of Alexandria with her traditional attributed of the torture wheel , Apollonia with the pincer tool pincer of her martyrdom and John the Evangelist, who has the Tetramorph eagle . Perugino s signature PETRUS PERUSINUS PINXIT can be seen on Catherine s wheel. Sources cite book first Vittoria last Garibaldi chapter Perugino title Pittori del Rinascimento publisher Scala location Florence year 2004 isbn 888117099 Category 1500s paintings Category Paintings by Pietro Perugino fr La Vierge en gloire et saints Le P rugin it Madonna in gloria e santi ... more details
Citations missing date January 2007 The Aqua Julia or Aqua Iulia is a Rome Roman aqueduct built in 33 BC by Agrippa . It was repaired and expanded by Augustus from 11 BC 11 &ndash 4 BC . The springs of the Aqua Iulia are situated approximately a half mile north of the abbey of Grottaferrata . Frontinus stated that the springs were two miles to the right of the twelfth mile of the via Latina . The length of the Aqua Iulia was reported as 15,426 1 2 paces. The water supply was estimated to be 1206 quinaria e, or 50,043 cubic metres during a 24 hour period. Several cippus cippi are known, all dated from the time of Augustus. No. 302 has been found near the springs, and 281 not far south of the abbey others 157, 156, 154, 153 have come to light at Capannelle near the seventh mile of the via Latina, before the channel begins to run above ground upon the arches of the Aqua Marcia . The aforementioned group has been dated back to the 14&ndash 11 BC restoration. However, another cippus has been located, north of the abbey, bearing the number 2. It dates from 14 BC , and is, it is presumed, the result of another restoration by Augustus , of which there is no record. The Aqua Iulia flows above the Aqua Tepula, upon the arches of the Aqua Marcia . The main channel leads to its terminal castellum. In addition to this, some arches still remain in the Piazza Guglielmo Pepe, which suggests that a branch ran to the Nymphaeum Alexandri . The identification of this branch as being part of the Aqua Iulia is dependent on the specus that runs upon it being only 0.289m below the bottom of the specus of the aqueduct at Porta Maggiore , which is at 63.739 m above sea level. However, in Livellazione cited under Anio Novus , the level of the bottom of the Aqua Iulia is located just outside Porta Maggiore , and its height is given as 57.38 above sea level. If this is accurate, the branch must have originated from the Aqua Claudia or the Anio Novus . Frontinus states that, prior to the constru ... more details
window on the culture as far back as the late Roman Kingdom . Most are stele stelai or cippus .... ref harvnb Stuart Smith 2004 p 65 ref A complete inventory is as follows the Cippus of Castignano ... 7th to 6th centuries BCE spiral bracelet of Chietino in Valle del Pescara 5th century BCE the Cippus ... of Acquaviva the Stele of Belmonte jointed sandstone the Cippus of Falerone the Stele of Servigliano sandstone a fragment of inscribed sandstone at Belmonte the Cippus of Sant Omero sandstone two stelai ... more details
The Puteal Scribonianum Scribonian Puteal or Puteal Libonis Puteal of Libo was a structure in the Forum Romanum in Ancient Rome . A puteal was a classical wellhead , round or sometimes square, placed atop a well opening to keep people from falling in. The Scribonian Puteal was dedicated or restored by Lucius Scribonius Libo a member of the Libo family , perhaps the praetor of 204 BC, or the tribune of the people in 149 BC. The praetor s tribunal was convened nearby, having been removed from the comitium in the 2nd century BC. It thus became a place where litigants, money lenders and business people congregated. According to ancient sources, ref Horace , Sat. ii.6.35, Epp. i.19.8 Cicero , Pro Sestio , 8 ref the Scribonian Puteal was a bidental that is, a spot which had been struck by lightning . It took its name from its resemblance to the stone curb or low enclosure around a well puteus that was between the Temple of Castor and Pollux and the Temple of Vesta , near the Porticus Julia and the Arcus Fabiorum arch of the Fabii . No remains of this puteal, however, have been discovered. It was once thought that an irregular circle of travertine blocks found near the Temple of Castor formed part of the puteal, but this idea was abandoned in the early 20th century. A coin issued in 62 BC by Lucius Scribonius Libo Roman consul consul 34 BC depicts this puteal, which he had renovated. It resembles a cippus sepulchral monument or an Glossary of ancient Roman religion ara altar , with laurel wreath s, two lyre s and a pair of blacksmith pincers or tongs below the wreaths. The tongs may be those of Vulcan god Vulcan , emblematic of him as a forger of lightning. ref C. Hulsen, The Roman Forum Eng. trans. by J. B. Carter, 1906 , p. 150, where a marble imitation found at Ubii is also given. ref References 1911 Reflist External links Denarius of L. Scribonius Libo issued 62 BC , at http www.coinarchives.com a lotviewer.php?LotID 338590&AucID 607&Lot 139&Val 47f64cc5d3200dd7c7f6b39 ... more details
Infobox Painting image file Et in Arcadia ego.jpg title Et in Arcadia ego artist Guercino year 1618 1622 type Oil on canvas height 81 width 91 city Rome museum Galleria Nazionale d Arte Antica Et in Arcadia ego also known as The Arcadian Shepherds is a painting by the Italian Baroque artist Giovanni Francesco Barbieri Guercino , from c. 1618 1622. It is now on display in the Galleria Nazionale d Arte Antica of Rome . The painting shows two young shepherds staring at a skull, with a mouse and a blowfly, placed onto a cippus with the words Et in Arcadia ego I too was in Arcadia . The latter is a moral reference to Death . The phrase appears for the first time in art and architecture in this work. The iconography of the memento mori theme symbolised in art by the skull was rather popular in Rome and Venice since Renaissance times. Elias L. Rivers suggested the phrase Et In Arcadia Ego is derived from a line from Daphnis funeral in Virgil s Fifth Eclogues Eclogue Daphnis ego in silvis Daphnis was I amid the woods , and that it referred to the dead shepherd within the tomb, rather than Death itself. ref Elias L. Rivers, Foreword , to Bruno Mario Damiani, B rbara Louise Mujica, Et In Arcadia Ego Essays on Death in the Pastoral Novel Lanham and New York University Press of America, 1990 . ISBN 0819177725 ref Mentioned for the first time in the collection of Antonio Barberini in 1644, the painting was later acquired by Colonna family Colonna of Sciarra 1812 , being attributed to Bartolomeo Schedoni until 1911. The painting is connected with Guercino s The Flaying of Marsyas by Apollo Flaying of Marsyas by Apollo in Palazzo Pitti 1618 , where the same group of shepherds is present. See also Allegory Baroque painting Et in Arcadia ego Memento mori References reflist External links http www.galleriaborghese.it barberini it arcadia.htm Official Galleria Nazionale d Arte Antica website DEFAULTSORT Et In Arcadia Ego Guercino Category 1622 paintings Category Paintings by Guercino ... more details
Petrus Maufer , also known as Pierre Maufer, Pietro Maufer, or Petrus Maufer de Maliferis, was a 15th century printer of incunable s, who learned the trade together with Martin Morin when the family Lallemant from Rouen sent them to the Rhine region to learn about book printing. Instead of returning to Rouen with Morin, he travelled to Italy and became one of the earliest known printers in Padua , Verona , Venice and Modena . ref cite book last Fr re first douard title Manuel du bibliographe normand ou, Dictionnaire bibliographique et historique contenant l indication des ouvrages relatifs la Normandie, depuis l origine de l imprimerie jusqu nos jours des notes biographiques, critiques et litt raires sur les crivains normands, sur les auteurs ..., Volume 2 year 1860 url http books.google.com books?id IqAQAAIAAJ&pg PA292&dq 22pierre maufer 22&hl en&ei O34UTaaPLsGAOoiZxO8I&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 1&ved 0CCMQ6AEwAA v onepage&q 22pierre 20maufer 22&f false ref Known publications Padua 1474 Pietro d Abano . Liber Compilationis Phisonomiae 1474 Mondino de Liuzzi . Anatomia 1474 Simon de la Porte Clavis sanationis Before 1475 Matheolus Perusinus . De memoria 1476 Albertus Magnus . De mineralibus . Corr Nicolaus de Pigaciis 1476 1477 Ovid . Fabularum Breviatio 1477 Gentile da Foligno . Commentary on Avicenna. 1478 Giles of Rome . Expositio super libros Analyticorum posteriorum Aristotelis 1479 Justinianus . Digestum novum 1480 Muhammad ibn Zakariya al Razi . Liber nonus ad Almansorem Verona 1480 Flavius Josephus e.a. De Bello Judaico and De Antiquitate Judaeorum Contra Apionem Venice 1482 Bartolus de Saxoferrato . Codex 1486 Avicenna . Canon medicinae Modena 1491 Bartholomaeus Socinus . Repetitio legis Gallus ff. de liberis et posthumis 1492 Johannes Lichtenberger . Pronosticatione in vulgare Johannes Baptista de Caccialupis . De debitoribus susceptis et fugitivis. De pactis. De Transactionibus Further reading Giovanni Mardersteig, translated by H. Schmol ... more details
Geographically, the Ager Romanus Italian Agro Romano is the name given to the immense rural area part plains, part hilly around the city of Rome . Politically and historically, it has represented the area of influence of Rome s municipal government. It is delimited to the south by Monti Prenestini , by the Alban hills and the Pontine Marshes pianura pontina to the west by the Tyrrhenian Sea to the north by the hills surrounding Lake Bracciano and to the east by the Monti Tiburtini . History Ancient Rome The Rome of Romulus at his immediate successors possessed a very restricted territory, as did the other neighbouring Latium Latin cities such as Praeneste and this territory was delimited by boundary stones, or cippus cippi , delimiting the area of influence of a city or a private citizen. The legend holds that a question of confines and of expanding beyond them led to Tullus Hostilius declaring war on Alba Longa , destroying this Latin city and incorporating its territory in that of Rome, around 635 BC . With the proclamation of the Roman Republic in 510 BC , all the territory occupied by Romans in Latium vetus came to be proclaimed ager publicus , equivalent to state lands today, which were held by the state and could be granted to private citizens. The Roman municipal authorities of this era were the consul s. In effect, Rome was a gigantic city territory continuously expanding across Europe. Augustus Octavian Augustus founded the office of praefectus urbis and other offices which divided the administration of the city of Rome from that of the Roman Empire. Thus was solved the problem of delimiting the territory of the municipium of Rome from the territory of the rest of the empire besides the Regio I Latii et Campaniae administered by a specific governor, the confines of the municipal authority of Rome came to be fixed at the centesimum lapidem ie one hundred miles on each of the Category Roman roads in Italy via consularis converging on Rome. So, de jure , the R ... more details