Citations:Nachleben

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English citations of nachleben and Nachleben

  • 1992, Francia, volume 19, part 1, page 214:
    The "Nachleben" of this war reached all the way to late medieval Scandinavia as indicated by : The Saga of King Heidrek The Wise, []
  • 1992, Robert J. Daly, Origeniana ...: Boston College, 14 - 18 August 1989 / ed. by Robert J. Daly. 5. page 531:
    In fact, he discounts the two points most central to Guillaumont's picture of his Origenism : his Nachleben and his cosmology. The Nachleben is discounted on the grounds of later distortion, the cosmology on the grounds that this is mere ...
  • 2001, Maurice F. Wiles, Edward Yarnold, Paul M. Parvis, Papers Presented at the Thirteenth International Conference on Patristic Studies Held in Oxford, 1999: Historica, Biblica Theologica et Philosophica, Peeters Publishers (→ISBN), page 51:
    The reception and 'Nachleben' of this imperial pair is therefore from a historical point of view worth studying, possibly as worthwhile as the study of the 'historical' Constantine and Helena themselves.
  • 2004, Jeroen Bons, The Statesman in Plutarch's Works, BRILL (→ISBN), page 2:
    The last section of this first volume concentrates on Plutarch's influence on the Latin West and on his “Nachleben” in later western culture.
  • 2008, Hava Tirosh-Samuelson, Christian Wiese, The Legacy of Hans Jonas: Judaism and the Phenomenon of Life, BRILL (→ISBN), page 48:
    In “Das Erbe der Antike im Orient und Okzident”—written expressly with Schaeder's “Der Orient und das griechische Erbe” in mind—Becker championed Kulturgeschichte as indexed to the Nachleben of Hellenism, a formulation closely reminiscent of Warburg's parallel commitment to recovering the Nachleben of antiquity.
  • 2011, Hendrik W. Dey, The Aurelian Wall and the Refashioning of Imperial Rome, AD 271–855, Cambridge University Press (→ISBN), page 199:
    4.6 The topographical Nachleben of the Aurelian Wall
    As it was by way of the roads that connected it with remaining clusters of population that the Wall still “touched” even the areas most remote from it, issues of transport and communications ...
  • 2014, Seth L. Sanders, Ancient Jewish Sciences and the History of Knowledge in Second Temple Literature, NYU Press (→ISBN), page 217:
    Recent insights into the Nachleben of cuneiform culture, Akkadian sciences, and their scribal pedagogies and curricula, however, have demonstrated the continued vitality and development of Babylonian sciences under Seleucid rule []