Prospero - meaning and definition. What is Prospero
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What (who) is Prospero - definition

CHARACTER IN SHAKESPEARE'S THE TEMPEST
Prospero's speech

Prospero         
ONLINE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW DATABASE
International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews
A tool for organising Internet resources. Prospero allows each user to organise the contents of remote file servers into his own virtual file system with his own hierarchical name space consisting of links to remote objects. Remote indexing services are made available by treating the results as a virtual directory. A "union link" allows the contents of the link's target directory to appear as part of the directory containing the link. Arbitrary filters can be associated with links to modify the representation of the target directory as desired. Prospero directories can be shared between users. The Prospero protocol is used for communication between clients and servers in the archie system. A prototype of Prospero has been available since December 1990. It interfaces with Sun NFS, the Andrew File System and FTP (with local caching) and Archie. Support for World-Wide Web and WAIS is planned (1992). E-mail: <info-prospero@isi.edu>. prospero">ftp://prospero.isi.edu/pub/prospero.
Prospero         
ONLINE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW DATABASE
International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews
Prospero ( ) is a fictional character and the protagonist of William Shakespeare's play The Tempest.
PROSPERO         
ONLINE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW DATABASE
International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews
The International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews, better known as PROSPERO, is an open access online database of systematic review protocols on a wide range of topics. While it was initially restricted to medicine, , it also accepts protocols in criminology, social care, education and international development, as long as there is a health-related outcome.

Wikipedia

Prospero

Prospero ( PROS-pər-o) is a fictional character and the protagonist of William Shakespeare's play The Tempest. Prospero is the rightful Duke of Milan, whose usurping brother, Antonio, had put him (with his three-year-old daughter, Miranda) to sea on a "rotten carcass" of a boat to die, twelve years before the play begins. Prospero and Miranda had survived and found exile on a small island. He has learned sorcery from books, and uses it while on the island to protect Miranda and control the other characters.

Before the play has begun, Prospero has freed the magical spirit Ariel from entrapment within "a cloven pine". Ariel is beholden to Prospero after he is freed from his imprisonment inside the pine tree. Prospero then takes Ariel as a slave. Prospero's sorcery is sufficiently powerful to control Ariel and other spirits, as well as to alter weather and even raise the dead: "Graves at my command have waked their sleepers, oped, and let 'em forth, by my so potent Art." - Act V, scene 1.

On the island, Prospero becomes master of the monster Caliban (the son of Sycorax, a malevolent witch) and forces Caliban into submission by punishing him with magic if he does not obey.

At the end of the play, Prospero intends to drown his books and renounce magic. In the view of the audience, this may have been required to make the ending unambiguously happy, as magic was associated with diabolical works.

Examples of use of Prospero
1. Prospero Nograles, majority leader of the House of Representatives.
2. "It‘s going to be futile," Majority Floor Leader Prospero Nograles told reporters.
3. Red Brigades leader Prospero Gallinari was sentenced to life imprisonment for Moro‘s murder in 1'83.
4. Prospero Pichay, immediately suggested that he and other allies of the president would block the complaint.
5. It‘s passionately exciting for a moment and then it goes, leaving, as Prospero says, no trace.