Esteban Terreros y Pando

Esteban Terreros y Pando nació el día 12 de Julio del año 1707 en Trucios. Curso sus primeros estudios en su pueblo natal y después se marcho a Madrid donde fue acogido por un tío suyo. Éste le enseño latín y retórica y al cumplir los veinte años entró en la Compañía de Jesús. Al finalizar el noviciado y los estudios clásicos, estudió tres anos de filosofía en Oropesa y otros cuatro de teología en Alcalán. Trabajó como profesor de latín, matemáticas, filosofía y retórica en el Real Seminario de Nobles y en el Colegio Imperial.

En 1767, como consecuencia del decreto de expulsión de la Compañía de

Jesús, pasó a Forlí Italia. Aparte de dedicarse a la docencia como bien he dicho antes, también destaco en otras facetas como por ejemplo lexicógrafo, paleógrafo, traductor, y didacta de la lengua.

Entre las múltiples facetas de este polifacético vizcaíno hemos de destacar dos que están relacionadas entre sí: la de traductor y la de lexicógrafo. Su labor de traducción le demandó la elaboración de un trabajo lexicográfico, que es considerado por los expertos “como el más importante diccionario del siglo

XVIII, tanto por recoger el léxico general y el científico y técnico, como por el carácter marcadamente enciclopédico que dan las minuciosas descripciones hechas por su autor en cada artículo”.

Finalmente Esteban Terreros y Pando falleció en Forlí el día 3 de enero del 1782 a sus 75 años de edad.

He aquí la lista de unos trabajos, muy preciados por la gente, que hizo durante su vida:

- Paleografía española (Madrid, 1758).

- Reglas de la lengua toscana o italiana (Forlí, 1771).

- Diccionario castellano con las voces de ciencias y       artes y sus correspondientes en las tres lenguas francesa, latina é italiana (Madrid, 1786-1793), 4 v.

- Espectáculo de la Naturaleza, o conversaciones acerca de las particularidades de la Historia Natura (Madrid, 1753-1755), 16 v.

- Carta de un padre de familias, en orden de la educación de la juventud, de uno y otro sexo (Madrid, 1754).

http://www.blogak.com/cantuariense/esteban-terreros-y-pando

ARCHIVO HISTÓRICO ECLESIÁSTICO DE BIZKAIA

Este impresionante edificio fue pensado en los años 30 para albergar un manicomio. Aunque las obras estaban muy avanzadas, el proyecto elaborado por Diego de Basterra murió definitivamente con la guerra civil. Después fue reutilizado para usos diversos como talleres, secadero de tabaco e incluso alguna vaquería. En 1951, el arquitecto Vega lo readaptó para Seminario Diocesano, terminándose las obras del Seminario Mayor en 1960. El archivo, desde su creación, ha pasado de la segunda a la tercera planta y desde el año 2000 se sitúa en la quinta planta de lo que fue Seminario Mayor y que ahora se conoce como edificio A de Arteaga Centrum.

http://www.aheb-beha.org/6.html

BibTeX

BibTeX is a tool for formatting lists of references. The BibTeX tool is typically used together with the LaTeX document preparation system. Within the typesetting system, its name is styled as {\mathrm{B{\scriptstyle{IB}} \! T\!_{\displaystyle E} \! X}}.

BibTeX was created by Oren Patashnik and Leslie Lamport in 1985. BibTeX makes it easy to cite sources in a consistent manner, by separating bibliographic information from the presentation of this information. This same principle of separation of content and presentation/style is used by LaTeX itself.

Contents

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[edit] Syntax

In order to make use of BibTeX, a LaTeX file must contain the following:

  • The \bibliography{} command
  • The \bibliographystyle{} command

The \bibliography{} command tells LaTeX which file or files to use as its source for bibliography entries. \bibliography{linguistics} will cause LaTeX to look for a file named linguistics.bib. \bibliography{linguistics,math} will cause LaTeX to look for the two files linguistics.bib and math.bib.

[edit] Bibliographic information file

BibTeX uses a style-independent text-based file format for lists of bibliography items, such as articles, books, theses. BibTeX bibliography files usually end in .bib.

Bibliography entries each contain some subset of standard data entries:

  • address: Publisher’s address (usually just the city, but can be the full address for lesser-known publishers)
  • annote: An annotation for annotated bibliography styles (not typical)
  • author: The name(s) of the author(s) (in the case of more than one author, separated by and)
  • booktitle: The title of the book, if only part of it is being cited
  • chapter: The chapter number
  • crossref: The key of the cross-referenced entry
  • edition: The edition of a book, long form (such as “first” or “second”)
  • editor: The name(s) of the editor(s)
  • eprint: A specification of an electronic publication, often a preprint or a technical report
  • howpublished: How it was published, if the publishing method is nonstandard
  • institution: The institution that was involved in the publishing, but not necessarily the publisher
  • journal: The journal or magazine the work was published in
  • key: A hidden field used for specifying or overriding the alphabetical order of entries (when the “author” and “editor” fields are missing). Note that this is very different from the key (mentioned just after this list) that is used to cite or cross-reference the entry.
  • month: The month of publication (or, if unpublished, the month of creation)
  • note: Miscellaneous extra information
  • number: The “number” of a journal, magazine, or tech-report, if applicable. (Most publications have a “volume”, but no “number” field.)
  • organization: The conference sponsor
  • pages: Page numbers, separated either by commas or double-hyphens
  • publisher: The publisher’s name
  • school: The school where the thesis was written
  • series: The series of books the book was published in (e.g. “The Hardy Boys“)
  • title: The title of the work
  • type: The type of tech-report, for example, “Research Note”
  • url: The WWW address
  • volume: The volume of a journal or multi-volume book
  • year: The year of publication (or, if unpublished, the year of creation)

In addition, each entry contains a key that is used to cite or cross-reference the entry. This key is the first item in a BibTeX entry, and is not part of any field.

[edit] Entry Types

Bibliography entries included in a .bib are split by types. The following types are understood by virtually all BibTeX styles:

article
An article from a journal or magazine.
Required fields: author, title, journal, year
Optional fields: volume, number, pages, month, note, key
book
A book with an explicit publisher.
Required fields: author/editor, title, publisher, year
Optional fields: volume, series, address, edition, month, note, key
booklet
A work that is printed and bound, but without a named publisher or sponsoring institution.
Required fields: title
Optional fields: author, howpublished, address, month, year, note, key
conference
The same as inproceedings, included for Scribe (markup language) compatibility.
Required fields: author, title, booktitle, year
Optional fields: editor, pages, organization, publisher, address, month, note, key
inbook
A part of a book, which may be a chapter (or section or whatever) and/or a range of pages.
Required fields: author/editor, title, chapter/pages, publisher, year
Optional fields: volume, series, address, edition, month, note, key
incollection
A part of a book having its own title.
Required fields: author, title, booktitle, year
Optional fields: editor, pages, organization, publisher, address, month, note, key
inproceedings
An article in a conference proceedings.
Required fields: author, title, booktitle, year
Optional fields: editor, pages, organization, publisher, address, month, note, key
manual
Technical documentation.
Required fields: title
Optional fields: author, organization, address, edition, month, year, note, key
mastersthesis
A Master’s thesis.
Required fields: author, title, school, year
Optional fields: address, month, note, key
misc
For use when nothing else fits.
Required fields: none
Optional fields: author, title, howpublished, month, year, note, key
phdthesis
A Ph.D. thesis.
Required fields: author, title, school, year
Optional fields: address, month, note, key
proceedings
The proceedings of a conference.
Required fields: title, year
Optional fields: editor, publisher, organization, address, month, note, key
techreport
A report published by a school or other institution, usually numbered within a series.
Required fields: author, title, institution, year
Optional fields: type, number, address, month, note, key
unpublished
A document having an author and title, but not formally published.
Required fields: author, title, note
Optional fields: month, year, key

[edit] Style files

BibTeX formats bibliographic items according to a style file, typically by generating TeX or LaTeX formatting commands. However, style files for generating HTML output also exist. BibTeX style files, for which the suffix .bst is common, are written in a simple, stack-based programming language that describes how bibliography items should be formatted.

Most journals or publishers that support LaTeX often have a customized bibliographic style file for the convenience of the authors. This ensures that the bibliographic style meets the guidelines of the publisher with minimal effort.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BibTeX