| Thomas Clifford Allbutt - 1905 - 156 pages
...Surgery, printed at Rome 1514, had enormous vogue, a vogue perhaps unique. If of Guy's Surgery, at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth, there were, as we have seen, 52 editions, the run of editions and translations of Vigo seems to have... | |
| Edward Channing - 1905 - 586 pages
...II THE ISOLATION OF THE NEW WORLD THE idea of obligation to one's fatherland is of modern growth. At the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth century and for years theremen of skill and daring served those masters who paid them best or gave... | |
| Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion (London, England) - 1905 - 596 pages
...the Franciscan John Waleys. He enjoyed a high reputation, and his works were frequently reprinted at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth. We have yet another famous Welshman in the person of Thomas Wallensia, the Dominican, a voluminous... | |
| Wilhelmine von Hillern - 1906 - 136 pages
...through the Italian poets, Dante and Petrarch, but the movement did not reach its height in Italy until the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth. The Renaissance or " rebirth " of classical learning and culture has been defined as a " resurrection... | |
| Charles George Herbermann - 1913 - 884 pages
...transparent enamels, known by the name of bassetaille, or still another process called encrusting. At the end of the fifteenth century, and the beginning of the sixteenth, in the era of the Renaissance, the art left Italy, and, taking a new form, that of painted enamels,... | |
| Émile Faguet - 1907 - 716 pages
...director of the theatre. With all due sense of proportion, he may certainly be considered the Voltaire of the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth. He had great pretensions to learning, moreover, and the portrait which is displayed at the beginning... | |
| Helen Churchill Candee - 1912 - 514 pages
...principle of art as it is of character. The style of Quentin Matsys, of the Van Eycks, was the mode at the end of the Fifteenth Century and the beginning of the Sixteenth, and after all this lapse of time it seems to us a sweet and natural expression of admirable human attributes.... | |
| Frederick William Puller - 1912 - 140 pages
...Bishops of the Province ; and if a really unworthy person were chosen, consecration would be refused. At the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth, there were a succession of worldlyminded and in some cases horribly immoral and even unbelieving Popes.... | |
| Olive Jocelyn Dunlop, Richard Douglas Denman - 1912 - 396 pages
...members at the outset ; this was by raising the fee for apprentices. It had been about 2s., but at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth fees varied from 2s. 6d. to £2.* The fees for ' Welch, Pewterers, p. i11. ' Surtees, op. cit., p.... | |
| Olive Jocelyn Dunlop, Richard Douglas Denman - 1912 - 402 pages
...members at the outset ; this was by raising the fee for apprentices. It had been about 2s., but at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth fees varied from 2s. 6d. to £2.4 The fees for » ' Welch, Pewterers.p. i11. ' Surtees, op. cit., p.... | |
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