| Search number: | 000339842 (since the site opened, on Yom Kippur eve, Oct 12 2005) |
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| Given search string: | <EB11> vol. XXIII, |
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| Collection last updated: | Aug 27 2010 |
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| Finnegans Wake lines: | 11 |
| Elucidations found: | 11 |
[Note: An electronic edition of this book is available on the Sources page] | |
| –386.13+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Roman Law', 530a: 'children born in lawful marriage followed the family of their father, while those who were illegitimate ranked from the moment of birth as patresfamilias and matresfamilias' |
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| –386.25+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Roman Law': repeatedly mentions 'emancipation' and 'mancipation' (e.g. 530a, 540c, 532c, 541d)) |
| –390.11+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Roman Law', 530d: (of solemn ancient Roman marriage) 'The ceremony was a religious one, conducted by the chief pontiff and the flamen of Jupiter, in presence of ten witenesses... and was known as farreum or confarreatio' |
| –392.23+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Roman Law', 529d: 'if his wife had not passed in manum... she did not become a member of his family: she remained a member of the family in which she was born, or, if its head were decseased or she had been emancipated, she constituted a family in her own person' |
| –536.01+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 356b: 'The discovery of the Bay of Rio de Janeiro is attributed... to André Gonçalves, who entered its waters on the 1st of January 1502, and believed that it was the mouth of a great river, hence the name Rio de Janeiro (River of January)... The first settlement in the bay was made by an expedition of French Huguenots... In 1560 their fort was captured and destroyed by a Portuguese expedition... and in 1567 another expedition... again destroyed the French settlements... The victory was won on the 20th of January, the feast-day of St Sebastian the Martyr, who became the patron saint of the new settlement and gave it his name - Sāo Sebastiāo do Rio de Janeiro' |
| –538.08+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 354d: 'The new Praça do Commercio (Merchants' Exchange)' |
| –540.17+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 353d: 'Considerably beyond the limits of the city on its S.W. side... The sky-line... forms the rough outline of a huge reclining figure called "the sleeping giant"' |
| –541.36+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 354d: 'for the five years 1900-1905... Among the deaths 2789 were from tuberculosis' |
| –542.01+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 354d: 'for the five years 1900-1905... Among the deaths... 106 from beri-beri' |
| –545.24+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 354a: 'The oldest part of the city... lies between... Sāo Bento, Conceicāo and Livramento hills on the N.' |
| –553.31+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Rio de Janeiro', 354a: 'a grand boulevard' |
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