Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Parterre_(theater_audience)> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) abstract "The word parterre comes from the French par and terre and literally translated means “on the ground.” Originally, the term was used in the 16th century to refer to a formal ornamental garden, but by the mid-17th century, it was increasingly used to refer both to the ground level of a theatre where spectators stood to watch performances and to the group of spectators who occupied that space.Although the word parterre originated in France, historians use the term interchangeably with its English equivalent, “the pit,” to designate the same part of the audience in England, present-day Italy, and Austria. While parterre audiences differed in social status, size, inclusion of women, and seating arrangements, they shared the characteristic of being noisy, often boisterous, interactive audiences.Today, historians are divided over whether or not parterre audiences deliberately challenged political authority, what role they played in constructing public opinion, and if they contributed to the formation of a public sphere in early modern Europe.".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) thumbnail Foyer_du_Théâtre_Montansier.jpg?width=300.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageID "26401254".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageLength "24028".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageOutDegree "40".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageRevisionID "692260916".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Antoine-François_Riccoboni.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Austria.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_theatre.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Christoph_Willibald_Gluck.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Claude_Nicolas_Ledoux.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Coffeehouse.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Comédie-Française.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Comédie-Italienne.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Denis_Diderot.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Drury_Lane.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Early_modern_Europe.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopédie.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink House_of_Bourbon.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Jean-François_Marmontel.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Jean-François_de_La_Harpe.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Jacques_Rousseau.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Jean_le_Rond_dAlembert.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Addison.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Jürgen_Habermas.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink London.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Ludwig_van_Beethoven.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Parma.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Philosophes.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Public_sphere.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Querelle_des_Bouffons.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Steele.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Rome.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Tattler.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink The_Spectator.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink The_Structural_Transformation_of_the_Public_Sphere.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Theater_(building).
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Theater_am_Kärntnertor.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink Vienna.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink File:Foyer_du_Théâtre_Montansier.jpg.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink File:Kärntnertortheater_1830.jpg.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink File:Paris_Comedie-Francaise.jpg.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLink File:The_Laughing_Audience_(or_A_Pleased_Audience)_by_William_Hogarth.jpg.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageWikiLinkText "theater audience".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) subject Category:History_of_theatre.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) comment "The word parterre comes from the French par and terre and literally translated means “on the ground.” Originally, the term was used in the 16th century to refer to a formal ornamental garden, but by the mid-17th century, it was increasingly used to refer both to the ground level of a theatre where spectators stood to watch performances and to the group of spectators who occupied that space.Although the word parterre originated in France, historians use the term interchangeably with its English equivalent, “the pit,” to designate the same part of the audience in England, present-day Italy, and Austria. ".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) label "Parterre (theater audience)".
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Q2035357.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Parterre_(théâtre).
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Պարտեր.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Parteris.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Parterre_(teatro).
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs m.0bmdxcv.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Партер_(театр).
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Партер_(театр).
- Parterre_(theater_audience) sameAs Q2035357.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) wasDerivedFrom Parterre_(theater_audience)?oldid=692260916.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) depiction Foyer_du_Théâtre_Montansier.jpg.
- Parterre_(theater_audience) isPrimaryTopicOf Parterre_(theater_audience).