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Searched all Perseus collections for "wreath" 4405 results in 8 categories
Included alternate terms: Crown
Results summary (items)
Art objects (2402)
Atlas sites (178)
Images (360)
London sites (9)
Reference articles (7)
Text sections (21)
Source citations (1)
Texts (1421)
2402 Art objects
  1. Geneva, Market, Christie: CUP SIANA; MALIBU P*; HIPPALEKTRYON, SYMPOSIUM, MEN AND YOUTHS, DRAPED MEN, ONE WITH IVY LEAF, ONE WITH WREATH, SYMPOSIUM, MEN, YOUTHS WITH PHIALE AND WREATH, WOMAN WITH WREATH [Beazley Archive Vase] (13.59)

  2. London, Market, Bonhams: OINOCHOE; DOMESTIC, WOMEN, ONE WITH BASKET, ONE WITH WREATH [Beazley Archive Vase] (10.77)

  3. Athens, National Museum, CC1067: LEKYTHOS; BELDAM PAINTER; FUNERARY, WOMEN, ONE WITH ALABASTRON AND BASKET WITH WREATH, FILLETS AND LEKYTHOS, ONE WITH WREATH, BASKET ON TABLE WITH WREATH AND LEKYTHOS, STELE, LYRE SUSPENDED [Beazley Archive Vase] (10.28)

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178 Atlas sites
  1. Crown: Texas, United States [Atlas site] (7.73)

  2. Crown: West Virginia, United States [Atlas site] (7.73)

  3. Crown: Arkansas, United States [Atlas site] (7.73)

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360 Images
  1. Louvre S 3853: Detail of side B, top: head of a youth, wearing a red wreath and holding a red branch in his left hand, and a red frond (wreath?) in his left hand [Image] (8.10)

  2. Louvre K 240: Detail of side B, right: Eros stands profile to the left; he wears a gilded wreath in his hair, and holds a disc in his left hand and another gilded wreath in his right hand [Image] (6.30)

  3. Old Crown [Image] (6.01)

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9 London sites
  1. Crown Place: United Kingdom [London site] (6.35)

  2. Crown row: United Kingdom [London site] (6.01)

  3. Crown Office Row: United Kingdom [London site] (6.01)

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7 Reference articles
  1. Close-crowned [Reference article in USGS Biological Resources Glossary] (5.37)

  2. Crown fires [Reference article in USGS Biological Resources Glossary] (4.81)

  3. Crown [Reference article in Perseus Encyclopedia] (4.42)

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21 Text sections
  1. The Crowning. [Section in Thomas Allen, The City and Antiquities of London, Westminster, Southwark and Parts Adjacent: Volume 4] (6.35)

  2. A REMONSTRANCE FOR THE RIGHT OF KINGS, AND THE INDEPENDANCE OF THEIR CROWNES, AGAINST AN ORATION OR THE MOST ILLVSTRIOVS CARD. OF PERRON, PRONOVNCED IN THE CHAMBER OF THE THIRD ESTATE. IAN. 15. 1615. [Section in James I, The Political Works of James I (ed. Charles Howard McIlwain)] (6.18)

  3. Aeschines and Demosthenes--the Speeches on the Crown. [Section in Sir Richard C. Jebb, The Attic Orators from Antiphon to Isaeos] (5.84)

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1 Source citation
  1. Deborah Steiner; The Crown of Song: Metaphor in Pindar: D. Steiner 1986 [Source citation] (1.76)

1421 Texts
  1. Ceramic Fragment: embossed decorationin stylaised floral. Underneath has brown on white transfer printed manufacturers mark. Mark has lion and unicorn on either side of an oval with a crown on top and an inscription inside, underneath has a scroll with manufacturers name printed. Pattern name printed above the crown. [Text] (8.59)

  2. Bryant, William Stephen; Self-Assembly: Synthesis and Complexation of Crown Ethers and Cryptands with R2-NH2 Ions: James Tanko, James E. McGrath, Joseph Merola, Herve Marand, Harry W. Gibson; (in English) The focus of the following research was to use the self-assembly process to create rotaxanes between several large bisphenylene crown ethers (> 22 atoms) with secondary ammonium salts. Also of great interest was to understand the complexation behavior of the crown ethers with the salts, with emphasis on determining the stoichiometries and association constants of the complexations in solution using NMR spectroscopy. The stoichiometry of the complexes was determined by the mole ratio method and the association constants were calculated graphically. Bis-(m-phenylene)-26-crown-8 did not form a complex in solution with several secondary ammonium salts even though the cavity size is large enough to allow the formation of pseudorotaxanes. However, the larger crown ether, bis-(m-phenylene)-32-crown-10 (BMP32C10), did form a complex. The complex stoichiometry varied between 1:1 (crown:salt) in solution and 1:2 in the solid state as evidenced by NMR and X-ray crystallography, respectively. The solid state complexes were pseudorotaxanes. Also, an interesting "exo" complex was formed in the solid state between BMP32C10 and a secondary diammonium salt. The major binding force for the complexes in the X-ray structures was hydrogen bonding. Weaker secondary stabilization was achieved via aryl-aryl aromatic interactions. The difference between the stoichiometries in the two phases and the observance of an "exo" complex demonstrates that one must be careful in describing the complexes in each phase. Also investigated was the complexation formed between dibenzo-24-crown-8 (DB24C8) and secondary diammonium salts. The association constants for the complexes were found to be relatively higher. Due to the weaker association constants and the different stoichiometries of complexation the meta-susbtituted bisphenylene crown ethers were not recommended for the formation of larger complexes, i.e. polyrotaxanes. However, it is suggested that the DB24C8 moiety be used in components of supramolecular assemblies. The functionalization of poly(propylene imine) dendrimers with two different crown ethers as peripheral moieties was attempted. The 1st, 3rd, and 5th generation poly(propylene imine) dendrimers were functionalized with 1,3-phenylene-16-crown-5 moieties by reacting the surface primary amines with the corresponding succinimide ester of the crown ether. The larger DB24C8 succinimide ester was not as reactive and full functionalization was not achieved. [Text] [View with Perseus links] (7.10)

  3. Epaulettes [Crown]: A pair of brass epaulettes in the shape of a crown. The detail on the crown is embossed on the front, the back is hollowed out. At the back are two small metal rings attached to the upper, outer edges of the crown, to enable it to be sewn on to a uniform. [Text] (6.29)

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