Please note that all relationships with this element, and all its children will be deleted as well.
What does this mean?
Parent, Children and Cascade deletions
"Children" elements are elements that directly depend on another object (the "parent").
They only have sense in a certain context, and if the context to which they belong is removed, to mantain data meaning and integrity the application provides also the removal of them (now become "orphans").
Example
Take the case of a Travel and of the Events occurred during it.
In this example, deleting a Travel will leave all of its Events meaningless since, taken alone, they would have no context in which to place themselves, nor a way to reach them.
Consequently, the removal of a Travel also causes the elimination - cascading - of all Events that occurred in that Trip.
Important
Note that this operation is not limited to one level of relationship, but proceeds with children of deleted children and so on, until the entire database is freed from unnecessary data.
This lets the user remove all data about a Travel by simply deleting that Travel.
24. Pedestal where the cock crowed that made St Peter repent
Jerusalem - Israel
Title
Pedestal where the cock crowed that made St Peter repent
Short description
Fermo Cararra and Giovanni Antonio Soderini see the pedestal where the cock crowed that made St Peter repent.
Text on source
nel luoco ove stava il foccolare al presente vi sta piantato un olivo, appeso nella facciata della chiesa vi è il piedistallo sopra al quale vi era la collona sopra la quale vi stava il gallo quando canto, per il canto S. Pietro si pentì
English translation
Folios/Pages
f. 114v
Date
1672 10 07
Observations on the events description
The dots on the map indicate the places where sound and music events were described. They don't represent travel stages.
Murarotto E., "Pedestal where the cock crowed that made St Peter repent" (Event description), Echos. Sound Ecosystems in Travelogues. Published 2023 09 17.