| James Edward Smith - 1832 - 630 páginas
...adverse to the discovery of truth. Nor is he less anxious to avoid personal partiality. Incorruptam Jidem professis, nee amore quisquam, et sine odio,...cultivators of this pleasing science might understand eaeh other, became every day more apparent. Nor was 442 there any deficiency of zeal among the leaders... | |
| Orestes Augustus Brownson - 1852 - 596 páginas
...so many excellent masters, it ought to have revived with new vigor. All the world knows that, at the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth, the men who had most largely participated in public instruction were the least Christian both in manners... | |
| Frank Brinkley - 1902 - 550 páginas
...whole of Occidental art from the times of Tanagra to the days of Giacometti and Hermann Fra^ois. By the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth, the range of the netsuke180 carver's motives had extended into the every-day life of the people, into the... | |
| Frank Brinkley - 1902 - 584 páginas
...of Occidental art from the times of Tanagra to the days of Giacometti and Hermann Fran£ois. By the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth, the range of the netsukecarver's motives had extended into the every-day life of the people, into the realm... | |
| Frank Brinkley - 1904 - 598 páginas
...of Occidental art from the times of Tanagra to the days of Giacometti and Hermann Franfois. By the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth, the range of the netsuke180 carver's motives had extended into the every-day life of the people, into the... | |
| Catholic University of America - 1904 - 568 páginas
...church have left their traces in the structure, style and ornamentation of the buildings. Toward the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth the Benedictines renovated the church and the monastery on a grand scale, and these remain with few changes... | |
| Edward Everett Hale - 1906 - 472 páginas
...hour the best narrative we have of the life of that class of men, the white slaves of Virginia at the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth. The book is worth reading to-day because it contains Defoe's views of African slavery, and what ought to... | |
| Edward Everett Hale - 1906 - 470 páginas
...hour the best narrative we have of the life of that class of men, the white slaves of Virginia at the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth. The book is worth reading to-day because it contains Defoe's views of African slavery, and what ought to... | |
| George Sarton - 1922 - 674 páginas
...LANGEWIESCHE-BRANDT. Ebenhausen bei Milnchen, 1915. »» Autobiography of a barber, that is a surgeon, at the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth. The title quoted on p. 11, being more explicit than that of the book, is worth quoting : > Meister Johann... | |
| John Wickham Legg - 1914 - 460 páginas
...for the Latin ones they seldom haunt, as being out of their sphear.1 It will be acknowledged that the end of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the eighteenth the scarf was thought to be a mark of dignity and was not given to the clergy all alike. The Spectator... | |
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