Overview
- Editors:
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Markus Leyck Dieken
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Novo Nordisk Pharma GmbH, Mainz, Germany
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Matthias Federwisch
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Institut für Biochemie, RWTH, Aachen, Germany
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Pierre Meyts
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Hagedorn Research Laboratory, Gentofte, Denmark
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Table of contents (18 chapters)
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- G. G. Dodson, J. L. Whittingham
Pages 29-39
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- U. Hassiepen, J. Stahl, B. Motzka, M. Federwisch
Pages 41-51
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- M. A. Weiss, Q. -X. Hua, W. Jia, S. H. Nakagawa, Y. -C. Chu, P. G. Katsoyannis
Pages 103-119
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- R. H. Jones, F. Shojaee-Moradie
Pages 121-130
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- P. De Meyts, J. Whittaker
Pages 131-149
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- C. W. Ward, T. P. J. Garrett, N. M. McKern, L. G. Sparrow, M. J. Frenkel
Pages 151-164
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- C. Kristensen, A. S. Andersen
Pages 165-176
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- L. Plum, K. Giesen, R. Kluge, H. -G. Joost
Pages 177-188
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- L. Pellegrini, D. F. Burke, T. L. Blundell
Pages 189-200
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- F. Bost, Y. -M. Yang, C. Liu, W. Charbono, N. Dean, R. Mckay et al.
Pages 213-231
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- R. W. Woody, C. Kiefl, N. Sreerama, Y. Lu, Y. Qiu, J. A. Shelnutt
Pages 233-248
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Back Matter
Pages 249-252
About this book
This book contains contributions presented at the last of the Alcuin Symposia, held in April 2000, as a Festschrift to honour Prof. Axel Wollmer on the occasion of his retirement from the Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule (RWTH) Aachen. The Alcuin Symposia were initially held alternatively in York and Aachen, in recent years in Aachen only, as joint workshops on insulin between the groups of Prof. Guy Dodson in York and the groups of Profs Dietrich Brandenburg and Axel Wollmer in Aachen. The Symposium was named after Alcuin, an Anglo-Latin poet, educator and cleric from York, who was invited to join the court of Charlemagne at Aachen. Alcuin’s first 50 years were spent in Yorkshire, were he was first a pupil, later headmaster of the cathedral school of York, the most renowned of its day. Charlemagne was gathering at Aachen the leading Irish, English and Italian scholars of the age. Alcuin was appointed head of the Palatine school, where Charlemagne himself, his family, his friends, and his friends’s sons were taught. Alcuin introduced the traditions of Anglo-Saxon humanism into Western Europe and was the foremost scholar of the revival of learning known as the Carolingian Renaissance. He also promoted the use of the beautiful Carolingian minuscule script, the ancestor of modern Roman typefaces.
Editors and Affiliations
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Novo Nordisk Pharma GmbH, Mainz, Germany
Markus Leyck Dieken
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Institut für Biochemie, RWTH, Aachen, Germany
Matthias Federwisch
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Hagedorn Research Laboratory, Gentofte, Denmark
Pierre Meyts