| William Shakespeare - 1917 - 296 pages
...degenerate form of a play written not later than 1589. ' Several companies of English actors visited Germany at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century, and there is a record of a performance of Hamlet, a Prince in Dennemarck by "the English actors" at... | |
| 1920 - 434 pages
...endangering the safety of both Church and State? The place Germany occupied in our eyes Spain occupied at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century in the eyes of our forefathers. The Emperor Charles V., who was Spanish at heart, and his son, Philip... | |
| A. W. Ward, A. R. Waller - 1976 - 408 pages
...; it is again noticed here as giving an interesting account of the education of a highly-born youth at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century. Lord Herbert seems to have had a fair knowledge of Latin and Greek and of logic when, in his thirteenth... | |
| Robert Henry Murray - 1920 - 544 pages
...movement in which the doctrine of a body and the tendencies of the same body differ by worlds. The Jesuits at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century maintained far more democratic doctrines than the French reformers, but can any one hold that Jesuitism... | |
| John Nicol Farquhar - 1920 - 488 pages
...the favour of Krishna by worshipping Radha.' 11. The Hari-Ddsis. § 379- Svaml Hari Das, who lived at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century, founded the Hari Dasis, and appears to stand close to Chaitanya in his teaching and sympathies. He... | |
| Louis Newton Robinson - 1921 - 356 pages
...the house of correction will appear again in much the same light as it did to the people of England at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century. officials have been made to improve conditions for the inmates of the jails and houses of correction.... | |
| Louis Newton Robinson - 1921 - 358 pages
...the house of correction will appear again in much the same light as it did to the people of England at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century. officials have been made to improve conditions for the inmates of the jails tod houses of correction.... | |
| Maulavī Saiyid Amīr ʼAlī, Syed Ameer Ali - 1923 - 612 pages
...Islam, what would have happened in all Europe if the religious revival which took place (in Christendom) at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century had stopped all national development." This observation is absolutely true. The Persian always associated... | |
| John George Robertson, Charles Jasper Sisson - 1923 - 578 pages
...largely aesthetic in character; poets, painters, musicians were all required for their preparation. At the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century, there was a tendency to shape this inchoate mass of revellings into a definite genre, which was intended... | |
| Edward Stanley Roscoe - 1924 - 196 pages
...national prize tribunal, it did not attain to a complete and undisputed position without some disturbance at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century. From time to time in the sixteenth century a writ of prohibition in a prize suit was issued by one... | |
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