| William Morris - 1882 - 236 pagina’s
...mentioned with the brocades (common everywhere), turned out from the looms x>f Lyons, Venice, and Genoa, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. The first perfectly simple in manufacture, trusting wholly to beauty of design, and the play of light... | |
| William Morris - 1882 - 272 pagina’s
...mentioned with the brocades (common everywhere), turned out from the looms of Lyons, Venice, and Genoa, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. The first perfectly simple in manufacture, trusting wholly to beauty of design, and the play of light... | |
| John Brown - 1885 - 552 pagina’s
...experience. One is greatly struck at the place he occupies in the writings of all the great medical authors at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. Morton, Willis, Boerhaave, Gaubius, Bordeu, etc., always speak of him as second in sagacity to 'the... | |
| William Joseph Amherst - 1886 - 356 pagina’s
...that not even the head of the Liberal party will think less of the loyalty of the Catholics who lived at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, because their sympathies were not strongly enlisted on the side of William III. Without entering into... | |
| Julius Sachs - 1887 - 944 pagina’s
...' bleeding ' and ' weeping ' particularly excited the interest of the older vegetable physiologists at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. By the terms Bleeding and Weeping are designated those excretions of water which occur under certain... | |
| 1889 - 602 pagina’s
...held the high position of sheriffclerk, and sometimes acted as sheriff-substitute of Renfrewshire, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. In the roll of the inhabitants of Paisley, taken in 1695, in connection with the poll tax, then to... | |
| Huguenot Society of London - 1889 - 550 pagina’s
...October the entire text of a very curious and interesting account of the family of Barjac-Eochegude, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, written by Captain Jacques de Barjac-Eochegude, and dedicated to the celebrated Marquis de Euvigny,... | |
| Henry Sutherland Edwards - 1890 - 392 pagina’s
...which maintained that Russian civilization had received from Peter a wrong direction. The Russians who, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, opposed Peter's reforms were scarcely conscious of the fact that they spoke a Slavonic tongue, and... | |
| Edwin Sidney Hartland - 1891 - 402 pagina’s
...FSA, to be in the handwriting of John Tipper, of Bablake, Coventry, a schoolmaster and local antiquary at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries), and also in the MS. in the British Museum (Additional MSS. 11,364), the entry runs simply: — "1678... | |
| Heinrich Graetz - 1892 - 864 pagina’s
...them well, they were found wanting in the balance. The Jews were at no time in so pitiful a plight as at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. Several circumstances had contributed to render them utterly demoralised and despised. The former teachers... | |
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