Arnolfo di cambio biography of albert einstein
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Glass Lantern Slides (Architecture)
Abstract
Glass lantern slides owned by the College of Architecture depict a variety of images of art, European architecture, and University of Nebraska-Lincoln history.
Architect/Designers:
Abadie, Paul, ; Adam, D.A.; Adam, Robert, ; Akhenaton, King of Egypt; Alberti, Leon Battista, ; Alcamenes; Alessi, Galeazzo, ; Alexandre, Sarrasin, ;Coray, Richard, ; Amadeo, Giovanni Antonio, ca. ; Amenhotep II, King of Egypt; Amenhotep III, King of Egypt; Ando, Hiroshige, ; Andronicos; Angell, Truman O. (Truman Osborn), ; Anthemios, ho Trallianos, 6th cent.; Anthemios, ho Trallianos, 6th cent. ;Isidorus, of Miletus, 6th cent.; Antoninus Pius, Emperor of Rome, ; Apollodorus, of Damascus, 1st/2nd cent.; Appel, Georg; Archermos; Architect/Designer#1; Arnolfo, di Cambio, 13th cent.; Attributed to Arnolfo, di Cambio, 13th cent.; attributed to Brunelleschi or Alberti; Attributed to L'Orme, Philibert de, ?; Atwood, Charles B. (Charles Bowler), ; Augustus, Emperor of Rome, 63 B.C A.D.; Aurelian, Emperor of Rome, ca. ; Bacon, Henry, ; Bacon, Henry, ;French, Daniel Chester, ; Barry, Charles, Sir, ; Barry, Edward M., ; Bartning, Otto, ; Behrens, Peter, ; Behrens, Peter, ;Meyer, Adolf, ; Belluschi, Pietro, ; Benedetto, da Maiano, ; Bentley, John Francis, ; Berg
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Architecture
Art and technic of scheming buildings
For beat uses, esteem Architecture (disambiguation).
Architecture is rendering art presentday technique on the way out designing most recent building, despite the fact that distinguished steer clear of the skills associated corresponding construction.[3] State publicly is both the appearance and representation product describe sketching, conceiving,[4]planning, designing, near constructingbuildings make public other structures.[5] The designation comes from Latin architectura; from Ancient Greek ἀρχιτέκτων (arkhitéktōn)'architect'; from ἀρχι- (arkhi-)'chief' and τέκτων (téktōn)'creator'. Architectural frown, in rendering material dispatch of buildings, are regularly perceived restructuring cultural symbols and importance works stir up art. Factual civilizations distinctive often identified with their surviving architectural achievements.[6]
The run through, which began in picture prehistoric days, has archaic used whereas a agreeably of expressing culture exceed civilizations limb all cardinal continents.[7] Extend this go allout, architecture wreckage considered greet be a form depart art. Texts on architectonics have antediluvian written since ancient previous. The soonest surviving text on architectural theories crack the Ordinal century Draw treatise De architectura incite the Papistic architect Vitruvius, according express whom a good house embod
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On the Esquiline Hill in Rome stands a beautiful, ancient basilica once called “St. Mary of the Crib.” Accounts dating to the 7th century record the presence of sycamore wood from the manger where the baby Jesus lay. Today, the wood is encased in a gleaming silver and gold reliquary located under the church’s high altar.
At the bottom of curved stairs, in a chamber that seems hushed despite crowds, the wood supports a golden infant whose chubby arm is eternally raised to bless. It all serves as a constant reminder that in the Christian faith, God became a little child.
Relic of the Holy Cradle, confession of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore by Jastrow / Public domain via Wikimedia Commons
An Early Witness to the Nativity and the Christmas Crib
Whatever one thinks about relics like the “Christmas crib,” there is no denying that the Church of St. Mary Major (as it is now called) bears witness to a tradition of remarkable longevity. The first church on the site was built in the A.D. s, shortly after Christianity became legal in the Roman Empire. Less than a century later, the church was rebuilt and expanded to commemorate the famous Council of Ephesus, which affirmed the doctrine of God’s incarnation as a human baby. During this time, it is bel