Composition Operations of Generalized Entropies Applied to the Study of Numbers
In: International Journal of Sciences, Band 8(04), Heft DOI: 10.18483/ijSci.2044
73 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: International Journal of Sciences, Band 8(04), Heft DOI: 10.18483/ijSci.2044
SSRN
Questo articolo propone una discussione di quanto scritto nel De Bello Gallico sulla campagna militare di Cesare contro i Germani, in particolare contro Usipeti e Tencteri. Si analizzerà anche quanto detto da Plutarco a proposito dell'accusa, fatta a Cesare da Catone il Minore, di aver violato la tregua con questi Germani. Infine, si confronteranno i testi di Cesare e Plutarco con quanto scritto nei libri di Luciano Canfora e Jérôme Carcopino. ; See please the last version at the link https://zenodo.org/record/1856194#.XASzp3CZ3IU
BASE
Questo articolo propone una discussione di quanto scritto nel De Bello Gallico sulla campagna militare di Cesare contro i Germani, in particolare contro Usipeti e Tencteri. Si analizzerà anche quanto detto da Plutarco a proposito dell'accusa, fatta a Cesare da Catone il Minore, di aver violato la tregua con questi Germani. Infine, si confronteranno i testi di Cesare e Plutarco con quanto scritto nei libri di Luciano Canfora e Jérôme Carcopino.
BASE
This article is proposing a discussion of what was written in De Bello Gallico on Caesar's military campaign against the Germans, in particular against Usipetes and Tencteri. It will also be analyzed what was said by Plutarch about the accusation, made to Caesar by Cato the Younger, of having violated the truce with these Germans. Finally, the texts of Caesar and Plutarch will be compared with what is written in the books by Luciano Canfora and Jérôme Carcopino. ; See please the last version at the link https://zenodo.org/record/1870892#.XAS0YHCZ3IU
BASE
Questo articolo propone una discussione di quanto scritto nel De Bello Gallico sulla campagna militare di Cesare contro i Germani, in particolare contro Usipeti e Tencteri. Si analizzerà anche quanto detto da Plutarco a proposito dell'accusa, fatta a Cesare da Catone il Minore, di aver violato la tregua con questi Germani. Infine, si confronteranno i testi di Cesare e Plutarco con quanto scritto nei libri di Luciano Canfora e Jérôme Carcopino. [Questa è la prima versione del lavoro. Si prega di vedere l'ultima versione, dove sono state aggiunte ulteriori fondamentali osservazioni, che trovate al link https://zenodo.org/record/1856194#.XASzp3CZ3IU ] ; Si prega di vedere l'ultima versione, dove sono state aggiunte ulteriori fondamentali osservazioni, che trovate al seguente link https://zenodo.org/record/1752396#.XAJW9nCZ3IU
BASE
This article is proposing a discussion of what was written in De Bello Gallico on Caesar's military campaign against the Germans, in particular against Usipetes and Tencteri. It will also be analyzed what was said by Plutarch about the accusation, made to Caesar by Cato the Younger, of having violated the truce with these Germans. Finally, the texts of Caesar and Plutarch will be compared with what is written in the books by Luciano Canfora and Jérôme Carcopino. ; See please the last version at the link https://zenodo.org/record/1870892#.XAS0YHCZ3IU
BASE
Questo articolo propone una discussione di quanto scritto nel De Bello Gallico sulla campagna militare di Cesare contro i Germani, in particolare contro Usipeti e Tencteri. Si analizzerà anche quanto detto da Plutarco a proposito dell'accusa, fatta a Cesare da Catone il Minore, di aver violato la tregua con questi Germani. Infine, si confronteranno i testi di Cesare e Plutarco con quanto scritto nei libri di Luciano Canfora e Jérôme Carcopino. ; See please the last version at the link https://zenodo.org/record/1856194#.XASzp3CZ3IU
BASE
This article is proposing a discussion of what was written in De Bello Gallico on Caesar's military campaign against the Germans, in particular against Usipetes and Tencteri. It will also be analyzed what was said by Plutarch about the accusation, made to Caesar by Cato the Younger, of having violated the truce with these Germans. Finally, the texts of Caesar and Plutarch will be compared with what is written in the books by Luciano Canfora and Jérôme Carcopino.
BASE
Many of the Roman fortifications, built for the defense of the Empire, are still existing. We can find them distributed across the vast empire, in concentration on the borders, in the locations where it was required more authority and military control. Here we discuss the fortifications of the Kharga Oasis in Egypt. In particular, we will discuss the Qasr el-Baramoudy fort, threatened by the motion of the sand dunes.
BASE
International audience ; Many of the Roman fortifications, built for the defense of the Empire, are still existing. We can find them distributed across the vast empire, in concentration on the borders, in the locations where it was required more authority and military control. Here we discuss the fortifications of the Kharga Oasis in Egypt. In particular, we will discuss the Qasr el-Baramoudy fort, threatened by the motion of the sand dunes.
BASE
International audience ; Here we discuss the orientation of the urban planning of two Roman towns in Germany, Kastell Kesselstadt and Mogontiacum, the Roman Mainz. As all the Roman military camps and coloniae, these towns were planned according to an ideal pattern, based on a grid of parallel and perpendicular streets. Using a software giving the sunrise azimuths on satellite maps, we show that Kastell Kesselstadt and Mogontiacum have the main axis of the grid oriented along the direction of the sunrise on the summer solstice, that is, that the towns have a solstitial orientation.
BASE
In: PHILICA, ISSN 1751-3030. Article number 1094
SSRN
In: PHILICA, Article n. 942
SSRN
Many of the Roman fortifications, built for the defense of the Empire, are still existing. We can find them distributed across the vast empire, in concentration on the borders, in the locations where it was required more authority and military control. Here we discuss the fortifications of the Kharga Oasis in Egypt. In particular, we will discuss the Qasr el-Baramoudy fort, threatened by the motion of the sand dunes.
BASE
International audience Here we discuss the orientation of Segontium, the Roman fort of Caernarfon, North Wales. As all the Roman military camps, this fort was planned according to an ideal pattern that was also applied to the coloniae, the outposts established in the territories conquered by Rome. The planning of military camps and colonies was based on a grid of parallel and perpendicular streets, where the main of them, the Decumanus, was specifically aligned. Some scholars are arguing that the Decumani were oriented according to the opportunity and environmental conditions of the place, some others are proposing the possibility of an astronomical orientation, to confer a symbolic meaning to the place too. Here we show that Segontium, besides having a very good defensive position and related orientation, had also astronomical alignments along the directions of sunrise/sunset on solstices. In fact, it had the same distinctive layout of another military camp of Roman Britannia, the Hardknott Fort, the orientation of which along sunrise/sunset on solstices we have already proposed.
BASE