| Jervis Wegg - 1916 - 398 pagina’s
...WAGHEMAKERE — THE BUILDING, DECORATING AND FURNISHING OF CHURCHES AND OTHER BUILDINGS IN LATE POINTED STYLE THE end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries saw much building at Antwerp, although the belt of town- walls was not enlarged until 1543. The arrival... | |
| Heinrich Boehmer - 1916 - 434 pagina’s
...exist. As a dogma it was received only by the strict papalists, but these were not very numerous at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. The theologians who regarded the council as the highest tribunal in matters of faith were decidedly... | |
| 1917 - 442 pagina’s
...Aly or of Alcoatim. Manfredi's description of the anatomy of the eye is that generally accepted at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, and is unusually clear for its date. It represents a considerable advance on such writers as Henri de Mondeville... | |
| Johann Michael Reu - 1917 - 224 pagina’s
...how to fan the fire, then the flames shot forth fiercely. Thus there were several bloody revolts at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. And now since Luther appeared the peasants associated various religious notions with their political unrest,... | |
| Hélène Harvitt - 1917 - 250 pagina’s
...grès, m., earthenware. grimace,/., grimace, wry face. grimper, to climb. Gringoire, French poet of the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. gris, -e, gray; tipsy. grisonnant, -e, getting gray. grognard, TO., grumbler, old soldier of the first... | |
| Phoebe Apperson Hearst, San Francisco Art Association - 1917 - 354 pagina’s
...tapestry continued to mount, reaching its highest supremacy in this GothicRenaissance transition of the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. Tapestry designing of this period is more orderly than before. The scenes are centralized and organized... | |
| Richard James Horatio Gottheil - 1917 - 288 pagina’s
...1404 congregations or settlements of Jews are known to have existed in Holland; but it was not until the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries that these settlements assumed importance.1 This period coincides with the rise of Amsterdam to the... | |
| National Conference of Social Work (U.S.). Annual Session - 1922 - 538 pagina’s
...was not until the beginning of what modern historians have come to call the commercial revolution, at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, that the peoples of Western civilization, at least, began to move on a scale unprecedented in history.... | |
| Christiane Klapisch-Zuber - 1987 - 354 pagina’s
...domum that, in the last analysis, opened the way to union of the flesh. In the domestic ricordi of the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, explicit notation of the moment of the consummation becomes more frequent. Out of some fifty precise... | |
| Francis Dvornik - 1962 - 724 pagina’s
...control of the voivodes and the starostas. All this contributed to the final ruin of the cities. At the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, the number of burghers in the cities had diminished considerably. Although during the sixteenth century... | |
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