| Antonio Pérez-Romero - 1996 - 244 pages
...religious ideas that he classifies as Erasmian were already present in the Spain of Cardinal Cisneros at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth. Bataillon and other modern scholars have established that grace-centered Christianity and the sal vation-by... | |
| Luigi Barzini - 1996 - 388 pages
...travellers did not stop coming. They found Italy once more transformed. Within a few fateful decades, at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth, ruin, defeat, and ignominy had followed pride and splendour. Foreign armies had fought on her territory,... | |
| David Lee Rubin - 1996 - 272 pages
...Ashworth puts it, the "most interesting work [in logic] of the [post-medieval] period. ..was done at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth century," mainly, she adds, "in Paris." It may also explain why Valla's and Agricola's work became... | |
| Arthur Erwin Imhof - 1996 - 230 pages
...the point? The art of printing also used this visual method of instruction as it rapidly developed at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth. Through a kind of a pictorial language—familiar to us today in comic strips—a significantly larger... | |
| Annabel S. Brett - 2003 - 276 pages
...the end of the fourteenth century a period of stagnation which lasted for almost a century. However, the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth saw a final flowering of the literature, producing two highly elaborate and influential works, both... | |
| Timothy J. Reiss - 1997 - 264 pages
...Ashworth puts it, the 'most interesting work [in logic] of the [post-medieval] period ... was done at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth century', mainly, she adds, 'in Paris'. It may also explain why Valla's and Agricola's work became... | |
| Oscar George Sonneck - 1924 - 734 pages
...the history of the formation of the Madrigal is, similarly, a process of conscious reaction. About the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth there existed a comparatively indigenous music in Italy, the so-called Frottola;— comparatively,... | |
| Aleksandr B. Kamenskii - 1997 - 324 pages
...were eliminated, and the war with the khanate of Kazan concluded victoriously. In 1485, Tver fell. At the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth, Moscow waged a successful war against the grand prince of Lithuania. The treaty of 1503 provided for... | |
| Adam Zwass - 2002 - 230 pages
...was powerfully expressed in the designation "Moscow as the Third Rome" coined by the monk Filofei at the end of the fifteenth century and the beginning of the sixteenth. According to more recent interpretations, the historical relay from Rome through Byzantium to Moscow... | |
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