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| Dimarts |
DimartsEl dimarts és el segon dia de la setmana. El nom « dimarts » prové del llatí dies Martis, o « dia de Mart ». S'abreuja com « dt ».
Tradicionalment, la mitologia catalana sempre ha vist el dimarts com un dia de mal averany. Hom evita de casar-se, fer-se a la mar o batejar el seu nen en aquest dia.
Aquests són alguns dels noms que rep el dimarts en diferents idiomes:
| Idioma |
Nom |
Significat |
| Alemany |
Dienstag |
Dia del servidor |
| Castellà, català, francès, italià |
Dimarts (català) |
Dia de Mart |
| Anglès |
Tuesday |
Dia de Tyr |
| Japonès |
火曜日 / Kayôbi |
Dia del foc |
| Portuguès |
Terça-feira |
Tercer dia |
| Basc |
Astearte |
Entre setmana |
Categoria:Setmana
als:Dienstag
ja:火曜日
ko:화요일
ms:Selasa
simple:Tuesday
th:วันอังคาร
SetmanaLa setmana és un període de temps de set dies consecutius.
Els noms dels set dies de la setmana són:
- Dilluns
- Dimarts
- Dimecres
- Dijous
- Divendres
- Dissabte
- Diumenge
Com podeu veure, el fet que tots els dies de la setmana portin el nom del dia d'un déu romà al que se li feia glòria, ha fet que tots els dies comencin amb la mateixa síl·laba.
En alguns països, como els anglosaxons, la setmana comença el diumenge, mentre que en d'altres comença en dilluns.
En els països tradicionalment cristians es paractica el descans laboral el diumenge, en els musulmans el divendres i els jueus (i per tant Israel) el dissabte. El fet que una setmana tingui set dies es deu a què és un dels números cabalístics per excelència.
Vegeu també
- Cap de setmana
Categoria:Unitats de temps
ja:週
ko:주 (시간)
simple:Week
Mitologia catalanaEntenem com a Mitologia catalana el llegendari que s'ha explicat durant generacions a Catalunya o als Països Catalans.
Criatures mitològiques catalanes
- Aloja
- Bruixa
- Dip
- Dona d'aigua
- Donyet
- Drac
- Encantaria
- Fada
- Follet
- Gambutzí
- Goja
- Home del sac
- Home dels nassos
- Marraco
- Martinet
- Minairó
- Negret
- Paitida
- Papu
- Pesanta
- Tió de Nadal
- Tres Reis Mags d'Orient
- Patge Gregori
- Vella Quaresma
- Víbria
Pàgines que s'hi relacionen
- Cultura popular
- Espantamainades
Enllaços externs
- [http://members.fortunecity.es/mitcat/ Portal de mitologia catalana]
- [http://rondalles.uib.es/infoBiblioteca.php Rondalles Mallorquines d'en Jordi des Racó]
Categoria:Mitologia catalana
Brunei Gallery at the School of Oriental and African Studies
School of Oriental and African Studies
| Motto and Crest |
"Knowledge is Power."
|
| Established |
1916 |
| Location |
Bloomsbury, London, United Kingdom |
| Students |
3,500 total |
| Member of |
University of London |
| Organisations with special links with SOAS |
The Royal Society for Asian Affairs, The Royal Asiatic Society, The Royal African Society, The Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Department for International Development, and the British Museum |
Top Employer Destinations |
Banks, NGO's, Government Departments (specifically, GCHQ, MI5, DFID, and the FCO), and International Organisations (UN Agencies and Progammes, IMF, World Bank and the ADB) |
| Homepage |
http://www.soas.ac.uk |
The School of Oriental and African Studies (often abbreviated to SOAS) was founded in 1916 as the School of Oriental Studies at 2, Finsbury Circus, the then premises of the London Institution. Africa was added to the school's name and remit in 1938 and the school shifted to Malet Street , Russell Square in 1941. (Now, however, in all communication and correspondence Thornhaugh Street is employed.) The institution's founding mission was primarily to train British administrators for overseas postings across the empire. Since then the school has grown into the world's foremost centre for the exclusive study of Asia and Africa. A college of the University of London, SOAS fields include Law, Social Sciences, Humanities and Languages with special reference to Asia and Africa. SOAS today is a source of some of the most influential and innovative thinking in many fields of the social sciences and humanities, principally, but not exclusively in relation to Asia and Africa. The SOAS Library, housed in a building designed at the beginning of the 1970s by Sir Denys Lasdun, is the UK's national resource for materials relating to Asia and Africa and is the largest of its kind in Europe.
The school has grown considerably over the past thirty years, from under 1,000 students in the 1970s to over 3,000 students today, approximately half of them postgraduates.
The school also houses two galleries: the Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art, one of the foremost collections of Chinese ceramics in Europe, and the Brunei Gallery, completed in 1995, which stages temporary exhibitions of both historical and contemporary materials which reflect subjects and regions studied at SOAS.
The main campus was moved to a new, purpose-built home, just off Russell Square in Bloomsbury in 1938, and has much expanded since then. The present library building was added in 1977, the Brunei Gallery in 1995, and an extension to the library building opened in 2004 (the second phase of this expansion is due to be completed in 2006).
A new campus at Vernon Square in Islington was opened in 2001.
SOAS is consistently rated as one of the United Kingdom's top ten higher education institutions in national League tables. In the most recent Guardian League Table (2005) SOAS was ranked 4th nationally out of 122 UK Higher Education institutions. This is the third year in a row that the School has achieved 4th place in the Guardian Newspaper rankings. Internationally, in November 2004 SOAS was ranked the 44th best university in the world by the THES world league table of universities (the 7th UK university, and 11th European university in the table).
Patron: HM The Queen;
President: Baroness Helena Kennedy QC;
Director and Principal: Prof. Colin Bundy;
Pro-Director: Prof. Peter Robb;
Visitor: The Rt Hon. Sir Anthony Evans QC
Faculties at SOAS
The Faculty of Arts and Humanities
The Faculty of Arts and Humanities contains five Departments
- Anthropology and Sociology
- Art and Archaeology
- History
- Music
- Study of Religions
The Faculty also administers the Centre for Media and Film Studies and MA in Gender Studies
Faculty of Languages and Cultures
The Faculty of Languages and Cultures consists of seven academic departments:
- Department of Linguistics
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of China and Inner Asia
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of Japan and Korea
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of Near and Middle East
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of South Asia
- Department of the Languages and Cultures of South East Asia
- The Language Centre
OpenAir Radio
SOAS runs its own radio station, OpenAir Radio, based on the 5th floor of the Russell Square Building. The initial Restricted Service Licence ran from November until 16th December 2005, and broadcast on 101.4FM over a three mile radius in the Camden/Central London area. The remit of the station is world music, culture and current affairs, with programmes focusing on Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America. OpenAir programmes include everthing from local news to international media analysis, and cookery programmes to DJ sets.
OpenAir Radio broadcasts on 101.4fm, and can also be accessed online at [http://www.openair.org.uk www.openair.org.uk].
Notable alumni
- Aung San Suu Kyi: Nobel Peace Prize laureate and dissident Burmese opposition leader.
- Paul Robeson: Musician, writer and civil rights activist.
- Enoch Powell: British statesman
- Bernard Lewis: "The neo-cons' favourite historian", recently chosen by Time magazine as the world's most influential academic.
- Luisa Diogo: Current Prime Minister of Mozambique
- David Lammy: The 'black Blair'. MP for Tottenham, youngest MP in the Commons, Minister of Culture. (He read law.)
- Dom Joly: Comedian.
- Walter Rodney: Guyanese historian and political activist.
- Jemima Khan: Society figure and campaigner, daughter of Sir James Goldsmith and former wife of Imran Khan.
- Sultan Salahuddin: Sultan of Selangor and King of Malaysia
- Mette-Marit:Crown Princess of Norway
- Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas: Prominent Islamic thinker
- Akbar S. Ahmed: Anthropologist, former Pakistani High Commissioner
- Michael Jay: Permanent Secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, formerly British Ambassador to France.
- Zeinab Badawi: Newsreader
- Fred Halliday: Middle East expert at LSE
Notable members of staff
- Sir Harold Bailey
- Sir E. Denison Ross
- Sir Hamilton Gibb
- Sir Ralph Turner
- Sir Cyril Philips
- T. Grahame Bailey
- T. N. Dave
- Arthur Llewelyn Basham
- Vladimir Minorsky
- Bernard Lewis
- Edward Ullendorff
- Arthur Waley
- D. Neil MacKenzie
- David Marshall Lang
- John Brough
- Malcolm Yapp
- R. B. Serjeant
- P. M. Holt
- A. D. H. Bivar
- Ronald Emmerick
- Arthur Arberry
- W. B. Henning
- N. E. Mary Boyce
- Ann K. S. Lambton
- Nicholas Sims-Williams
- A. S. Tritton
- Alfred Guillaume
- Ralph Russell
- John Wansbrough
- Xiao Qian
- Lao She
- K. N. Chaudhary
- Reginald Johnston
- William Radice
- Dr. David Dalby
- Patricia Crone
- Gerald Hawting
- Lucy Durán: [http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/presenters/lucy_duran.shtml]
External links
- [http://www.soas.ac.uk/ School of Oriental and African Studies website]
- [http://education.guardian.co.uk/universityguide2005/ Guardian 2005 League Table]
- [http://www.soasunion.org/ SOAS Student Union website ]
- [http://www.bisa.ac.uk/bisanews/0302/p.7.pdf "The origins of SOAS as a colonial institution, training district" by John Game]
-
Category:University of London
Category:Camden
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