3 research outputs found

    The medieval pilgrims routes in the Apulian settlements and their relationship with Rome and Santiago de Compostela

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    The medieval pilgrims routes in the Apulian settlements and their relationship with Rome and Santiago de Compostela The Medieval cave settlements and cave churches in the Apulia region, in southern Itlay, created with their frescoes, along the pilgrims roads and the Ancient Appia route, a connection with the grave of Saint James in Santiago de Compostela. Indeed during the Middle Age the Church and the local nobles and feudatories used the Apulian medieval pilgrimsā€™ routes for religious and marketing purposes linking Apulian Cave frescoes churches with Santiago de Compostela, therefore one of the aim of the research is to retrace the pilgrims routes basing on the images of the Saints painted in some frescoes and to create a veritable virtual link of the Apulian medieval cave churches with Saint Jamesā€™ tomb in Santiago de Compostela thanks to the representation of the Saint bringing the pecten iacobeus (shell of St. James) and the Pilgrimā€™s bagshow. Aim of the research, applied to the proposed study area of the ravines and cave churches of Apulia, is to analyse, plan and restructure the ancient routes and livestock trail paths of the area by means of the files found in the archives in order to ā€œredrawā€ the historical, social and environmental landscape and present it as paths with strong touristic interest with reference to the Apulian ravines area, the agricultural and forest landscapes and the traditional farmhouses

    Proceedings of the Fifth Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics CLiC-it 2018

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    On behalf of the Program Committee, a very warm welcome to the Fifth Italian Conference on Computational Linguistics (CLiC-Ā­ā€it 2018). This edition of the conference is held in Torino. The conference is locally organised by the University of Torino and hosted into its prestigious main lecture hall ā€œCavallerizza Realeā€. The CLiC-Ā­ā€it conference series is an initiative of the Italian Association for Computational Linguistics (AILC) which, after five years of activity, has clearly established itself as the premier national forum for research and development in the fields of Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing, where leading researchers and practitioners from academia and industry meet to share their research results, experiences, and challenges

    Giustizia e letteratura I

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    The book explores and links different cultures, disciplines and perspectives, with a much more original and broad approach to the relations between \u201cJustice\u201d and \u201cLiterature\u201d than more traditional works focused on \u201cLaw\u201d and \u201cLiterature\u201d topics. The many contributions from writers, literary critics, and criminal law scholars, build a complex and interdisciplinary path through primary works of Italian and international literature, with the aim of prompting readers\u2019 reflections about core issues related to law, crime, and responsibility. Through the analysis of masterpieces of literature, theatre, music and cinema, this book aims at stimulating a dialogue and debate, as well as the critical ability and the sense of justice, amongst both law professionals and citizens at large. Literature and the other narrative arts are presented here as the key to approach long-standing questions about (amongst other) juridical formalism and equity; law and ethics; responsibility, culpability and forgiveness; rules, legality and how people relate to these concepts; the value of narration as a strategy to resist injustice and to seek justice; and so on. Through this quest for justice in literature and arts, the book proposes a wider cultural and research project which defies traditional formalistic and retributive approaches to criminal law, in order to open new perspectives for restorative and reintegrative strategies
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