| Charles Austin Beard - 1906 - 696 páginas
...literature, and learned leisure; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library, are as truly the works of feudalism as is the baronial castle. When therefore...justice and which substitute the manor with its villeins for the free village, we shall — so at least it seems to us — be speaking not of abnormal forces,... | |
| Charles A. Beard, Charles Austin Beard - 1906 - 774 páginas
...literature, and learned leisure; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library, are as truly the works of feudalism as is the baronial castle. When therefore...subjection of the peasantry to seignorial justice Mid which substitute the manor with its villeins for the free \illage, we shall — so at least it... | |
| Sir Thomas Palmer Whittaker - 1914 - 616 páginas
...art, science, literature and learned leisure ; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library, are as truly the work of feudalism as is the baronial castle. When, therefore, we speak of forces which make for the subjection of the peasantry to seignorial justice and which substitute... | |
| Sir Thomas Palmer Whittaker - 1914 - 622 páginas
...art, science, literature and learned leisure ; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library, are as truly the work of feudalism as is the baronial castle. When, therefore, we speak of forces which make for the subjection of the peasantry to seignorial justice and which substitute... | |
| Charles Austin Beard - 1915 - 518 páginas
...defence, the possibility of art, science, literature, and learned leisure. . . . When we therefore speak ... of forces which make for the subjection of the peasantry to seigniorial justice and which substitute the manor with its villeins for the free village, we shall... | |
| Frederic W. Maitland - 1921 - 556 páginas
...art, science, literature and learned leisure ; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library, are as truly the work of feudalism as is the baronial castle....justice and which substitute the manor with its villeins for the free village, we shall — so at least it seems to us— be speaking not of abnormal forces,... | |
| George Macaulay Trevelyan - 1926 - 768 páginas
...learned leisure ; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library are as truly the work of feudalism as the baronial castle. When, therefore, we speak, as...justice and which substitute the manor with its villeins for the free village, we shall — so at least it seems to us — be speaking, not of abnormal forces,... | |
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