Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 3

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  skeleton
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
EN
In 2017, 3 Maja Street in Rzeszów underwent reconstruction. This work resulted in archaeological research carried out by the Foundation for Archaeological Centre in Rzeszów. Considering conducted discoveries, the skeleton cemetery at the parish church takes an important place. On its edge, 39 graves were discovered, with remains of individuals of different age, adults and children. What is more, numerous loose bones, randomly distributed among the skeletons were also found. At the church of the Holy Cross, three human burials sex uncovered. The bones underwent anthropological analysis, including the determination of number of buried individuals, their age, sex, and their general biological condition.
EN
The purpose of this article is to outline Portuguese syllable structure. The shape of the syllable in European Portuguese (the standard southern and central dialect) is suggested to be identical in slow and fast speech (Mateus – d’Andrade 2002). This view is challenged in this article by an analysis of Vowel Deletion and Vowel Nasalisation. It is argued that within the skeletal theory of the syllable, it is impossible to maintain the same syllabic structure for slow speech and fast speech.
EN
The human skull and the skeleton are symbols unmistakably associated with death; one would even call them ‘universal’. However, their true meaning may differ depending on cultural and religious trends that shaped them. In Christian Western Europe and Japan, the dry naked human bones were not to lie lifelessly in graves; people imagined them to move and dance. The Europeans interpreted the skeleton as an actual person. It became a personification of death, the Death. On the other hand, the Japanese treated the skeleton as a graphic representation of a vengeful soul that came back to the world of living to execute revenge on their enemies. The analysis of similarities and differences in the interpretations of the skeleton as a symbolrelated to death are based on historic, literary and artistic sources.
PL
Ludzka czaszka oraz szkielet są symbolami, które jednoznacznie kojarzą się ze śmiercią i można by je uznać za uniwersalne, jednakże ich prawdziwe znaczenie może się różnić w zależności od prądów kulturalno-religijnych, które je ukształtowały. W cywilizacji chrześcijańskiej zachodniejEuropy i w Japonii suche ludzkie kości nie tylko leżały w grobie, ale poruszały się w wyobraźniludzi i w sztuce. W europejskiej interpretacji szkielet stał się konkretną osobą, personifikacjąśmierci. Natomiast w japońskiej kulturze przedstawiał on mściwego ducha dokonującego zemstyna wybranych osobach. Podobieństwa i różnice w znaczeniu symbolu szkieletu zanalizowanow oparciu o źródła historyczno-literackie i artystyczne.
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.