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Amiens

  • 1 Amiens

    A fine worsted fabric originally made in Amiens. It is woven in a fine reed from hard twisted worsted yarns and dyed in dark colours. At times was made in stripes. Always woven in twill designs.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Amiens

  • 2 Amiens

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Amiens

  • 3 Amiens

    [aemiæŋ]
    proper name
    franc. mesto; [éimjənz] v Dublinu; [aemjənz] oseba iz Shakespeara

    English-Slovenian dictionary > Amiens

  • 4 Amiens

    Англо-русский географический словарь > Amiens

  • 5 Amiens

    (n) Амьен

    Новый англо-русский словарь > Amiens

  • 6 Amiens

    Амьен Город во Франции, на р. Сомма, административный центр департамента Сомма и главный город исторической области Пикардия. 136 тыс. жителей (1990). Машиностроение, легкая, химическая промышленность. Самый большой во Франции готический собор (Нотр-Дам, 13-15 вв.).

    Англо-русский словарь географических названий > Amiens

  • 7 Amiens, France

    s.
    Amiens, Francia.

    Nuevo Diccionario Inglés-Español > Amiens, France

  • 8 Quentin of Amiens

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Quentin of Amiens

  • 9 Dauphine

    A pure silk, or half-silk material with bright colours used for dresses. A light-weight droguet used as upholstery fabric in the 18th century - made mostly at Rheims and Amiens, all wool in plain weave in multicolour effects and dyed in the wool. The name is believed to have come from the place of origin or the name of its inventor.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Dauphine

  • 10 Marguerite

    A French term for a dress fabric made of wool, silk and linen, not fulled. Woven on the high warp loom at Amiens during the 18th century.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Marguerite

  • 11 Saggathy Twills

    SAGGATHY TWILLS, or SAGATHEE
    A fabric, originally used for curtains in the 18th century and made with a white warp and dyed weft at Amiens, and also in England in the 2 & 2 twill weave. Now the fabric is made from grey warp and dyed weft, worsted yarns, about 60 ends and 72 picks per inch, 62's yarns.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Saggathy Twills

  • 12 Sagathee

    SAGGATHY TWILLS, or SAGATHEE
    A fabric, originally used for curtains in the 18th century and made with a white warp and dyed weft at Amiens, and also in England in the 2 & 2 twill weave. Now the fabric is made from grey warp and dyed weft, worsted yarns, about 60 ends and 72 picks per inch, 62's yarns.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Sagathee

  • 13 Sayette

    A French term which includes many plain and twill fabrics made with yarns in which some silk is used with wool. The fabrics have many uses, dresses, linings, furniture covers, etc., according to quality and design. Originally made at Amiens. Also a light silk fabric formerly made in Italy.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Sayette

  • 14 Serge Imperiale

    A French serge, made of wool at Amiens and of silk at Lyons, during the 18th century for drapery and furniture.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Serge Imperiale

  • 15 Velventine

    French velveteen made at Amiens about the first half of the 19th century, in two grades. Both were made with six shafts, and had two wefts, one for pile and one for ground. One grade had eight and the other nine picks to a repeat.

    Dictionary of the English textile terms > Velventine

  • 16 Branly, Edouard Eugène

    [br]
    b. 23 October 1844 Amiens, France
    d. 24 March 1940 Paris, France
    [br]
    French electrical engineer, who c.1890 invented the coherer for detecting radio waves.
    [br]
    Branly received his education at the Lycée de Saint Quentin in the Département de l'Aisne and at the Henri IV College of Paris University, where he became a Fellow of the University, graduating as a Doctor of Physics in 1873. That year he was appointed a professor at the College of Bourges and Director of Physics Instruction at the Sorbonne. Three years later he moved to the Free School in Paris as Professor of Advanced Studies. In addition to these responsibilities, he qualified as an MD in 1882 and practised medicine from 1896 to 1916. Whilst carrying out experiments with Hertzian (radio) waves in 1890, Branly discovered that a tube of iron filings connected to a source of direct voltage only became conductive when the radio waves were present. This early form of rectifier, which he called a coherer and which needed regular tapping to maintain its response, was used to operate a relay when the waves were turned on and off by Morse signals, thus providing the first practical radio communication.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Papal Order of Commander of St George 1899. Légion d'honneur, Chevalier 1900, Commandeur 1925. Osiris Prize (jointly with Marie Curie) 1903. Argenteuil Prize and Associate of the Royal Belgian Academy 1910. Member of the Academy of Science 1911. State Funeral at Notre Dame Cathedral.
    Bibliography
    Amongst his publications in Comptes rendus were "Conductivity of mediocre conductors", "Conductivity of gases", "Telegraphic conduction without wires" and "Conductivity of imperfect conductors realised at a distance by wireless by spark discharge of a capacitor".
    Further Reading
    E.Hawkes, 1927, Pioneers of Wireless, London: Methuen. E.Larien, 1971, A History of Invention, London: Victor Gollancz.
    V.J.Phillips: 1980, Early Radio Wave Detectors, London: Peter Peregrinus.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Branly, Edouard Eugène

  • 17 Cubitt, William

    [br]
    b. 1785 Dilham, Norfolk, England
    d. 13 October 1861 Clapham Common, Surrey, England
    [br]
    English civil engineer and contractor.
    [br]
    The son of a miller, he received a rudimentary education in the village school. At an early age he was helping his father in the mill, and in 1800 he was apprenticed to a cabinet maker. After four years he returned to work with his father, but, preferring to leave the parental home, he not long afterwards joined a firm of agricultural-machinery makers in Swanton in Norfolk. There he acquired a reputation for making accurate patterns for the iron caster and demonstrated a talent for mechanical invention, patenting a self-regulating windmill sail in 1807. He then set up on his own as a millwright, but he found he could better himself by joining the engineering works of Ransomes of Ipswich in 1812. He was soon appointed their Chief Engineer, and after nine years he became a partner in the firm until he moved to London in 1826. Around 1818 he invented the treadmill, with the aim of putting prisoners to useful work in grinding corn and other applications. It was rapidly adopted by the principal prisons, more as a means of punishment than an instrument of useful work.
    From 1814 Cubitt had been gaining experience in civil engineering, and upon his removal to London his career in this field began to take off. He was engaged on many canal-building projects, including the Oxford and Liverpool Junction canals. He accomplished some notable dock works, such as the Bute docks at Cardiff, the Middlesborough docks and the coal drops on the river Tees. He improved navigation on the river Severn and compiled valuable reports on a number of other leading rivers.
    The railway construction boom of the 1840s provided him with fresh opportunities. He engineered the South Eastern Railway (SER) with its daringly constructed line below the cliffs between Folkestone and Dover; the railway was completed in 1843, using massive charges of explosive to blast a way through the cliffs. Cubitt was Consulting Engineer to the Great Northern Railway and tried, with less than his usual success, to get the atmospheric system to work on the Croydon Railway.
    When the SER began a steamer service between Folkestone and Boulogne, Cubitt was engaged to improve the port facilities there and went on to act as Consulting Engineer to the Boulogne and Amiens Railway. Other commissions on the European continent included surveying the line between Paris and Lyons, advising the Hanoverian government on the harbour and docks at Hamburg and directing the water-supply works for Berlin.
    Cubitt was actively involved in the erection of the Crystal Palace for the Great Exhibition of 1851; in recognition of this work Queen Victoria knighted him at Windsor Castle on 23 December 1851.
    Cubitt's son Joseph (1811–72) was also a notable civil engineer, with many railway and harbour works to his credit.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1851. FRS 1830. President, Institution of Civil Engineers 1850 and 1851.
    Further Reading
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Cubitt, William

  • 18 Perret, Auguste

    [br]
    b. 12 February 1874 Ixelles, near Brussels, Belgium
    d. 26 February 1954 Le Havre (?), France
    [br]
    French architect who pioneered and established building design in reinforced concrete in a style suited to the modern movement.
    [br]
    Auguste Perret belonged to the family contracting firm of A. \& G.Perret, which early specialized in the use of reinforced concrete. His eight-storey building at 25 bis Rue Franklin in Paris, built in 1902–3, was the first example of frame construction in this material and established its viability for structural design. Both ground plan and façade are uncompromisingly modern, the simplicity of the latter being relieved by unobtrusive faience decoration. The two upper floors, which are set back, and the open terrace roof garden set a pattern for future schemes. All of Perret's buildings had reinforced-concrete structures and this was clearly delineated on the façade designs. The concept was uncommon in Europe at the time, when eclecticism still largely ruled, but was derived from the late nineteenth-century skyscraper façades built by Louis Sullivan in America. In 1905–6 came Perret's Garage Ponthieu in Paris; a striking example of exposed concrete, it had a central façade window glazed in modern design in rich colours. By the 1920s ferroconcrete was in more common use, but Perret still led the field in France with his imaginative, bold use of the material. His most original structure is the Church of Notre Dame at Le Raincy on the outskirts of Paris (1922–3). The imposing exterior with its tall tower in diminishing stages is finely designed, but the interior has magnificence. It is a wide, light church, the segmented vaulted roof supported on slender columns. The whole structure is in concrete apart from the glass window panels, which extend the full height of the walls all around the church. They provide a symphony of colour culminating in deep blue behind the altar. Because of the slenderness of the columns and the richness of the glass, this church possesses a spiritual atmosphere and unimpeded sight and sound of and from the altar for everyone. It became the prototype for churches all over Europe for decades, from Moser in prewar Switzerland to Spence's postwar Coventry Cathedral.
    In a long working life Perret designed buildings for a wide range of purposes, adhering to his preference for ferroconcrete and adapting its use according to each building's needs. In the 1940s he was responsible for the railway station at Amiens, the Atomic Centre at Saclay and, one of his last important works, the redevelopment after wartime damage of the town centre of Le Havre. For the latter, he laid out large open squares enclosed by prefabricated units, which display a certain monotony, despite the imposing town hall and Church of St Joseph in the Place de L'Hôtel de Ville.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    President des Réunions Internationales des Architectes. American Society of the French Legion of Honour Gold Medal 1950. Elected after the Second World War to the Institut de France. First President of the International Union of Architects on its creation in 1948. RIBA Royal Gold Medal 1948.
    Further Reading
    P.Blater, 1939, "Work of the architect A.Perret", Architektura SSSR (Moscow) 7:57 (illustrated article).
    1848 "Auguste Perret: a pioneer in reinforced concrete", Civil Engineers' Review, pp.
    296–300.
    Peter Collins, 1959, Concrete: The Vision of a New Architecture: A Study of Auguste Perret and his Precursors, Faber \& Faber.
    Marcel Zahar, 1959, D'Une Doctrine d'Architecture: Auguste Perret, Paris: Vincent Fréal.
    DY

    Biographical history of technology > Perret, Auguste

См. также в других словарях:

  • Amiens SC — Amiens Sporting Club Football Amiens SC Généralités Nom complet Amiens Sport …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Amiens — Amiens …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Amiens — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Amiens Amiens Escudo …   Wikipedia Español

  • Amiens SC — Voller Name Amiens Sporting Club Gegründet 6. Oktober 1901 Stadion Stade de la Licorne …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • AMIENS — Au recensement de 1990, Amiens, chef lieu du département de la Somme et de la région de Picardie, formait une agglomération de 156 120 habitants, dont 84 p. 100 en ville même. La ville regroupe 24 p. 100 de la population départementale. Gardant… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Amiens —   [a mjɛ̃], Stadt in Nordfrankreich, Verwaltungssitz der Region Picardie und des Départements Somme, 131 800 Einwohner. Die größte Bedeutung von Amiens liegt in seiner Funktion als Verwaltungs und Handelsstadt;   katholischer Bischofssitz,… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Amiens AC — Club fondé en 1977 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Amiēns [2] — Amiēns, Peter von A., s. Peter von Amiens …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Amiens — (spr. amiäng), Hauptstadt des franz. Depart. Somme, an der schiffbaren, mehrfach geteilten Somme, die hier die Celle aufnimmt, Knotenpunkt der Nordbahn, hat eine von Heinrich IV. herrührende Zitadelle und von hervorragenden Gebäuden eine 1220–88… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Amiens — Amiens, Stadt in Frankreich, an der Somme mit 6090 Häusern und 45,000 Einwohnern, Sitz eines Bischof s, einer Akademie und einer Handelskammer, wichtig durch ihre Manufakturen in Baumwollen Sammt, Leder, Hüten, Leinwand etc. Bekannt und… …   Damen Conversations Lexikon

  • Amiens — Amiens, feste Stadt an der schiffbaren Somme und der Eisenbahn von Paris nach Brüssel, im franz. Depart. der Somme, alte Hptstdt. der Picardie 14 M. von Paris, 50000 E. A. ist sehr gewerbsam, hat Seiden , Baumwolle , Wolle , Leder , Maschinen ,… …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

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