Shalva iashvili biography definition
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Archil
Kereselidze
(1912 – 1971)
Archil Kereselidze is a Georgian composer, an outstanding representative of the Georgian school of composition. His music includes various genres, among which are: Georgian variety, operetta, dramatic theater, film music. People’s Artist of Georgia (1961).
Date of birth – December 24, 1912
Place of birth – Ghunib, Dagestan, Russia
Date of death – December 21, 1971
Place of death – Tbilisi, Georgia
He is buried in Didube Pantheon of Writers and Public Figures – Tbilisi
BIOGRAPHICAL DATA
1934 – Graduated from Vano Sarajishvili Tbilisi State Conservatory, faculties of composition (class of S. Barkhurdariani) and piano (class of Anastasia Virsaladze);
1939 – P. Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory in composition (teachers: G. Litinsky, D. Kabalevsky, N. Myaskovsky);
1940 – 1944 – Teacher (polyphony) at Vano Sarajishvili Tbilisi State Conservatory;
1940 – 1946 – Director of the musical part of the K. Marjanishvili Drama T
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Music of Georgia (country)
This article is about the music of the country Georgia (in Georgian "Sakartvelo"). For music in the US state, see Music of Georgia (U.S. state).
Georgia has rich and still vibrant traditional music, primarily known for arguably the earliest polyphonic tradition of the Christian world. Situated on the border of europe and Asia, Georgia fryst vatten also the home of a variety of urban singing styles with a mixture of native polyphony, Middle Eastern monophony and late europeisk harmonic languages. Georgian performers are well represented in the world's leading musikdrama troupes and concert stages.
Folk music
[edit]The folk music of Georgia consists of at least fifteen regional styles, known in Georgian musicology and ethnomusicology as "musical dialects". According to Edisher Garaqanidze, there are sixteen regional styles in Georgia.[1] These sixteen regions are traditionally grouped into two, eastern and western Georgian groups.
The Eastern Georgian g
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Distinct subsets of multi-lymphoid progenitors support ontogeny-related changes in human lymphopoiesis
Seydou Keita (1, 2, 3) , Samuel Diop (1, 4, 3) , Shalva Lekiashvili (1, 2, 3) , Emna Chabaane (1, 2, 3) , Elisabeth Nelson (1, 2, 3) , Marion Strullu (5, 6) , Chloé Arfeuille (5, 6) , Fabien Guimiot (7, 6) , Thomas Domet (1, 8) , Sophie Duchez (3) , Bertrand Evrard (9) , Thomas Darde (10) , Jerome Larghero (1, 8) , Els Verhoeyen (11, 12) , Ana Cumano (13) , Elizabeth Macintyre (14, 15) , Zeinab Kasraian (14, 15) , François Jouen (4) , Michele Goodhardt (1, 2) , David Garrick (1, 2) , Frederic Chalmel (9) , Kutaiba Alhaj Hussen (1, 2, 16, 3, 17) , Bruno Canque (1, 2, 3)
Changes in lymphocyte production patterns occurring across human ontogeny remain poorly defined. In this study, we demonstrate that human lymphopoiesis is supported by three waves of embryonic, fetal, and postnatal multi-lymphoid progenitors (MLPs) differing in CD7 and CD10 expression and their output of