| Fedor Fedorovich Zigelʹ - 1902 - 168 pagina’s
...the law procedure, and of the private law in Victorin Kornelius of Vsehrd, the celebrated lawyer of the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries (0 prdvich zeme ceskt knihy devatery, ' Nine Books upon the Laws of the Bohemian Country'). A into... | |
| Stewart Dingwall Fordyce Salmond - 1902 - 604 pagina’s
...specially notice the opening one on " The Holy Eucharist," an historical inquiry dealing chiefly with the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, containing much interesting matter. We shall look with expectation for its completion. In the July... | |
| Thomas Hay Sweet Escott - 1902 - 382 pagina’s
...deputy ; thus no deputies from the Kingdom of Leon came to the Alcala Cortes of 1 348 ; * thus, towards the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, only seventeen Spanish towns were represented in the Cortes of Castile. Still the Castilian deputies... | |
| John Arthur Thomson - 1903 - 582 pagina’s
...since the great geographical voyages associated with the names of Columbus, Da Gama, and Magellan, at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries." * Our picture of the Deep Sea is necessarily darklyshaded and in many respects dim and vague, but it... | |
| Thomas Perkins - 1903 - 148 pagina’s
...palace was built by the Cardinals d'Estouteville and Georges d'Amboise I., and therefore dates from the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. The thrust of the vaulted roof, as is usual in French cathedrals, is opposed by a system of flying... | |
| John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler - 1903 - 868 pagina’s
...Boyd Thatcher. One object in view is to put before the reader the information that was accessible at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries ; wherefore old manuscripts, charts and accounts are reproduced in full. Also, an investigation is... | |
| Jacob Burckhardt - 1904 - 584 pagina’s
...to awaken in him such enthusiasm.3 The second great age of Italian poetry, which now followed '. at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, as well as the Latin poetry of the same period, is rich / in proofs of the powerful effect of nature... | |
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