event comment: Estonia; Setomaa
Estonia; Võru
comment on the object involved in the event: maker: Rumvolt, Aivar
event comment: Estonia; Setomaa
sündmuse kommentaar: Eesti; Võru linn
sündmuse ...kommentaar: Eesti; Setomaa
Eesti; Võru
sündmuses osalenud objekti kommentaar: valmistaja: Rumvolt, Aivar
sündmuse kommentaar: Eesti; Setomaa
sündmuse kommentaar: Valmistamise aeg teadmata.
sündmuse kommentaar: Kuulunud üleandjale.
event comment: Time of manufacture unknown.
event comment: Belonged to the transferor.
sündmuse kommentaar: Valmistamise aeg teadmata.
sündmuse kommentaar: Kuulunud üleandjale.
event comment: Time of manufacture unknown.
event comment: Belonged to the transferor.
event comment: Judge’s whistle 1950-60.years. Metal.
sündmuse kommentaar: Kohtuniku vile 1950-60.aastad. Metall.
sündmuses osalenud objekti kommentaar: Kohtuniku vile 1950-60.aastad. Metall.
comment on object involved in the event: Judge’s whistle. Wood, metal.? 1950-1960. years.
event comment: Judge’s whistle. Wood, metal.? 1950-1960. years.
sündmuses osalenud objekti kommentaar: ...Kohtuniku vile. Puit, metall.? 1950-1960. aastad.
sündmuse kommentaar: Kohtuniku vile. Puit, metall.? 1950-1960. aastad.
This article suggests that A Midsummer Night's Dream shows us a continuum of animal identity rather than a world with a clear distinction between Man and Animal. The play classifies its workmen as ...closer to grounded nonhuman animals than to aristocrats and singing birds. The play also classifies children, Jews, and Africans as lower on the animal continuum than some nonhuman animals. The article challenges the notion that the ability to speak distinguished people from animals in the Renaissance; rather, placement on the animal continuum may have depended on degree of rhetorical and musical ability. The article shows how the editing of the play and its critical history have helped to obscure this animal continuum. (Author abstract)
>Based largely upon the archival documents left behind by the lay and ecclesiastical leaders who organized the celebrations of Champlain and Laval, Ronald Rudin's study describes the complicated ...process of staging these spectacles.