About: Coronation is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 705 publications have been published within this topic receiving 4487 citations. The topic is also known as: crowning.
TL;DR: The persistence of empire in metropolitan culture is explored in this paper, with a focus on the last decades of the 20th century and the post-imperial era of the UK.
Abstract: Acknowledgements General editor's introduction Introduction 1. The persistence of empire in metropolitan culture - John M. Mackenzie 2. Empire loyalists and 'Commonwealth men': The round table and the end of empire - Alex May 3. Coronation Everest: empire and commonwealth in the 'second Elizabethan age' - Peter H. Hansen 4. Look back at empire: British theatre and imperial decline - Dan Rebellato 5. 'No nation could be broker': The satire boom and the demise of Britain's world role - Stuart Ward 6. The imperial game in crisis: English cricket and decolonisation - Mike Cronin and Richard Holt 7. Imperial heroes for a post-imperial age: Films and the end of empire - Jeffrey Richards 8. Imperial legacies, new frontiers: Children's popular literature and the demise of empire - Cathryn Castle 9. Wandering in the wake of empire: British travel and tourism in the post-imperial world - Hsu-Ming Teo 10. Communities of Britishness: Migration in the last gasp of empire - Kathleen Paul 11. South Asians in post-imperial Britain: Decolonisation and the imperial legacy - Shompa Lahiri 12. India, Inc.?: Nostalgia, memory and the empire of things - Antoinette Burton Notes on contributors
TL;DR: The history of Spain according to De rebus Hispaniae D. Rodrigo and D. Lucas is described in the Epilogue Bibliography Index as discussed by the authors, with references to the author and its author.
Abstract: Abbreviations Philip II and Hermenegild III Toledo and its legacy King Wamba and XII Toledo The chronicle of Alfonso III The reign of Ordono II: from Oviedo to Leon Leon and Castile in the eleventh century The reconquest of Toledo 1085 1147 Toledo and the political fragmentation of the peninsula Toledo after 1182 The history of Spain according to De rebus Hispaniae D. Rodrigo and D. Lucas The later thirteenth century Yet again the coronation of 1135 Toledo after 1295 Alvarus Pelagius his Speculum regum The chronicle of Alfonso XI and its author Epilogue Bibliography Index.
TL;DR: Peristiany and Pitt-Rivers as mentioned in this paper discuss the relationship between the Greek hero and the wise in a Cypriot community, and the Sophron -a secular saint.
Abstract: List of illustrations Notes on contributors 1. Introduction J. G. Peristiany and Julian Pitt-Rivers 2. Royalty and ritual in the Middle Ages: coronation and funerary rites in France Catherine Lafages 3. The court surrounds the King: Louis XIV, the Palatine Princess, and Saint-Simon Emmanuel Leroy Ladurie 4. Rites as acts of institution Pierre Bourdieu 5. Religion, world views, social classes, and honor during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in Spain Julio Caro Baroja 6. The Sophron - a secular saint? Wisdom and the wise in a Cypriot community J. G. Peristiany 7. The Greek hero J. K. Campbell 8. Name, blood, and miracles: the claims to renown in traditional Sicily Maria Pia Di Bella 9. From the death of men to the peace of God: violence and peace-making in the Rif Raymond Jamous 10. Indarra: some reflections on a Basque concept Sandra Ott 11. Postscript: the place of grace in anthropology Julian Pitt-Rivers Index.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a collection of illustrations of the woman of the Apocalypse, the last resort, and the coronation of Juan Diego in the Mexican National Museum of Anthropology.
Abstract: List of illustrations Preface Introduction 1. Image and typology 2. Myth and history 3. The woman of the Apocalypse 4. Indian seer 5. Presence and tradition 6. Patron of Mexico 7. Divine idea 8. Heavenly painting 9. Myth and scepticism 10. The last resort 11. History and infallibility 12. The coronation 13. Juan Diego 14. Nican mopohua 15. Epiphany and revelation Notes Bibliography Index.
TL;DR: The Romance of Manliness: The Romance of Men and the Men's War as mentioned in this paper is a collection of essays about men and women in the British Empire, including the women's role in the war.
Abstract: 1. Introduction 2. The People's Empire and the People's War 3. The Post-War People's Empire 4. Coronation Britain 5. Colonial Wars 6. Immigration 7. Elegies for Empire: The Romance of Manliness Epilogue Bibliography