| Agnes Strickland, Elisabeth Strickland - 1852 - 578 pagina’s
...works, from the pens of Toland, Asgill, and \V . ' I ' laston, with reprints and discussions on Hobbes, marked this epoch, and caused great injury, not only...seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, forms the best criterion of the influence of the latitudinarian bishops appointed at the dictum of... | |
| Agnes Strickland - 1852 - 372 pagina’s
...deistical works, from the pens of Toland, Asgill, and Woll:,-n 11 with reprints and discussions on Hobbes, marked this epoch, and caused great injury not only...state of the morals of the poor, at the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries, forms the best criterion of the influence of the latitudinarian... | |
| Agnes Strickland - 1852 - 574 pagina’s
...pens of Toland, Asgill, and Wollaston, with reprints and discussions on Hobbes, marked this cpoch, and caused great injury, not only to the church of...but to the general cause of Christian belief. The dreadfiil state of the morals of the poor, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth... | |
| Agnes Strickland - 1854 - 692 pagina’s
...Anprill, and WolUston, with reprints and discussions on Hobbes, marked this epoch, and caused peat injury, not only to the church of England, but to...the general cause of Christian belief. The dreadful itate of the morals of the poor, at the end of UK seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries,... | |
| John Brown - 1861 - 526 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... | |
| Suffolk Institute of Archaeology - 1863 - 508 pagina’s
...on the first floor, on the east side, has some tapestry not worked but woven, of the style prevalent at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, and corresponding with some put up by Mr. Macro, in his house at Norton, and still remaining. Some... | |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - 1866 - 528 pagina’s
...denunciation of torture, i. 362 England, first law in, against witchcraft,i. 109. Scepticism in England at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, 131. The unexampled severity of the penal code in England in the middle ages, 381. Number of annual... | |
| Thomas Smith James - 1867 - 998 pagina’s
...Congregational Union of E. and W. The I. of the present day differ essentially from those called I. or C. at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, both with regard to doctrine and discipline. It is a matter of history beyond doubt that the I. of... | |
| Henry Trimen - 1869 - 482 pagina’s
...George Graves. 5 Nos. all published. Lond. 1822-23. Herb. Budd. — Herbarium collected by Adam Buddie at the end of the Seventeenth and beginning of the Eighteenth Centuries. Contained in 14 vols. (54 & 114-126) of Sir H. Sloane's Herbarium in the British Museum. Herb. G. $... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1872 - 720 pagina’s
...effected much. See also ART. 803. Pepys's Diary, 8vo, 1828, vol. iii. p. 4. Evelyn's Diary, iii. 379. 760. AT THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH AND BEGINNING OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES THERE WAS AN INCREASING SPIRIT OF PURITANISM. In Letters of Eminent Literary Men, published by the... | |
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