| 1869 - 802 str.
...лн.илр. — The founder of this sect was Vallabha, the son of a Brahman of Telingana, who flourished towards the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. He became a devotoo of the god Krishna, who, though a king, was soon viewed by the Ilicdus as tho personification... | |
| Valerian Krasinski (Count), Walerian Skorobohaty KRASINSKI (Count.) - 1869 - 522 str.
...considerable degree of liberty ; but when these republics were reduced into provinces of Moscow (at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century) a severe persecution compelled them to seek shelter in the Swedish and Polish dominions, and it seems... | |
| Friedrich Bleek, Johannes Friedrich Bleek - 1870 - 456 str.
...original had fallen into disuse. A few short fragments only, at most only a few chapters,1 were printed in the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. The appearance of the whole Greek NT in a printed form was simultaneous with the beginning of the Reformation,... | |
| 1871 - 608 str.
...perfection of which it was susceptible, and was the master of a great number of Christian Hebraists " Tho revival of letters, by the universal activity of mind...naturally the teachers of this new generation of Hebraists Tho man whose name best deserves to bo coupled with this revolution, which was pregnant with such grave... | |
| 1872 - 614 str.
...so large a share in the revival of the arts and in the ultimate triumph which painting achieved at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. Whilst the North Italian schools owed their origin to the influence of Giotto, they were indebted for... | |
| Mary Mapes Dodge - 1905 - 612 str.
...to compare the two paintings; but there are other reasons. These two men lived at the same time — the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. Diirer was the greatest of German artists; Leonardo was in many ways the most remarkable of the Italian... | |
| Alexander Hislop (publisher) - 1874 - 786 str.
...udcr, For feir. At Christis kirk on the Grene that day." The historian John Major, who flourished in the end of the fifteenth, and the beginning of the sixteenth century, acquaints us, that in his time several poems which had been composed by James I. were repeated and... | |
| Illustrated reader - 1874 - 408 str.
...periodical and very violent character, called the " sweating sickness." That disease took place about the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. It took place in the following years—1485, 1506, 1517, 1528, and 1551, about a period of eleven years... | |
| American Geographical Society of New York - 1874 - 366 str.
...either returned, started, or are organizing, have been unusually numerous. In fact, at no time since the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century has such zeal been manifested, or have so many enterprises been undertaken, for the exploration of... | |
| Francis Lieber - 1875 - 474 str.
...person except a relation of his ? There is indeed no danger at present that nepotism, as it existed towards the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, can reappear there or in any other state; yet it is one of our duties to weigh attentively any institution... | |
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