| Sir Daniel Keyte Sandford - 1837 - 528 pages
...$•*«*"• Hungary. With the exception oí" these f«w «"« 322 ORDERICUS VITALIS — ORDERS. ordeals, the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century are to be regarded as the closing period of them in Europe. But it is to be lamented that the Roman... | |
| Gustav Friedrich Waagen - 1838 - 370 pages
...to what extraordinary perfection the proper school of miniature painting in France had attained, at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. This is a copy of the Roman dc la Rose, which was begun in the thirteenth century by Guillaume dc Lorris,... | |
| William Patrick Palmer - 1838 - 628 pages
...Sorbonne it was not allowed to defend that of the UltramontanesJ." He afterwards speaks thus : " At the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, the laws of a strict and rigorous policy prohibited at Rome the maintenance of the doctrine of the... | |
| Leopold von Ranke - 1840 - 564 pages
...few favoured and golden ages of the world to conceive and to express pure beauty of form. Such was the end of the fifteenth, and the beginning of the sixteenth century. How were it possible here to give the faintest outline of the entire devotion to art, of the fervid... | |
| Leopold von Ranke - 1840 - 568 pages
...few favoured and golden ages of the world to conceive and to express pure beauty of form. Such was the end of the fifteenth, and the beginning of the sixteenth century. How were it possible here to give the faintest outline of the entire devotion to art, of the fervid... | |
| Nathan Hale - 1840 - 618 pages
...age, the number is but 539, in a total of 10,526,248. ARTICLE IX. ARCTIC DISCOVERIES IN AMERICA. About the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, the English navigators and merchants turned their attention to the Northern shore of America in the... | |
| Charles Knight - 1841 - 440 pages
...the southern and western countries was comparatively slow. The fanatical policy of the Turks, who, at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, had got possession of them, shut up the roads through Asia Minor and the adjacent countries, which... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1841 - 638 pages
...Wolsey. Ina darker age the spiritual despotism of the priesthood might be more complete than it was in the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, when the ceneral advance of civilization had somewhat shaken the empire of ignorance, and the laws... | |
| 1842 - 554 pages
...[Млпоссо.] TEZCU'CO. [ MEXICAN STATES.] , TEZEL, or TETZEL, JOHANN, a Dominican monk, who lived about the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. His name would have been forgotten but for the scandalous manner in which he carried on the traffic... | |
| 1842 - 530 pages
...[MAHOCCO.] TEZOIJ'CO. [MEXICAN STATES.] , TEZEL, or TETZEL, JOHANN, a Dominican monk, who lived about the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. His name would have been forgotten but for the scandalous manner in which he carried on the traffic... | |
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