1,563 research outputs found

    Le cursus honorum de São Miguel d’Odrinhas

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    Un monument en calcaire a été trouvé avec deux autres en 1505, non loin du Cap da Roca, près de l’embouchure de Colares. Il se trouve à prèsent dans le musée de São Miguel d’Odrinhas. Son texte a été publié successivement par F. Alves Pereira, S. Lambrino et, enfin, par H.-G. Pflaum, qui y a reconnu la carrière de C. Iulius Celsus, sans avoir, pourtant, vu la pièce. Les commentaires portent surtout sur le nom de la divinité de la l. 1 et sur la charge (l. 5) exercée par Celsus en Lusitanie. Pour la divinité, on exprime des doutes sur la lecture Soli aeterno. Quant a Celsus, il se trouvait en Lusitanie au début du règne d’Antonin le Pieux en tant que legatus missus in Lusitaniam ad census.A limestone monument has been discovered, with two others, in 1505, not far from the Cap da Roca, near the mouth of the river Colares. It is now located in the museum of São Miguel d’Odrinhas. Its text has been successively published by F. Alves Pereira, S. Lambrino and, at last, by H.-G. Pflaum, who recognized the career of C. Iulius Celsus, without however having seen the inscription. The commentaries refer especially to the divinity in l. 1 and to the charge (l. 5) fulfilled by Celsus in Lusitania. As for the divinity, the restitution Soli aeterno doesn’t seem convenient. As for Celsus, his presence in Lusitania at the beginning of the reign of Antoninus Pius is justified by the title of a legatus missus in Lusitaniam ad census

    Migrant Labour in Rural Tourism: Continuity and Change

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    This paper considers the impact of the recession on the availability of migrant labour in the Yorkshire Dales and reassesses how the practice of employing migrant workers, previously explored by the author, has influenced current sources of recruitment. Findings suggest constantly evolving and altering patterns of migration not only shaped by economic and spatial factors but also socially constructed by the interactions of employers and migrants. In particular, results indicate how subjective experiences and judgements made around the use of social networks can recreate as well as transform the specific use of migrant labour in each establishment. © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

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