| Lord Alexander Fraser Tytler Woodhouselee - 1818 - 440 pągines
...FINE ARTS IN EUROPE IN THE AGE OF LEO X. 1. In enumerating those great objects which characterized the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, we remarked the high, advancement to which the fine arts 1 attained in Europe in the age of Leo X.... | |
| Sir William Lawrence - 1819 - 646 pągines
...and taken possession of by the same nation in the very ^rst year of the sixteenth century. Towards the end of the fifteenth, and the beginning of the sixteenth century, COLUMBUS, COKTEZ, and PIZAURO subjugated for the Spaniards the West Indian islands, with the empires... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1877 - 844 pągines
...publication of Brun de la Montaigne, not been traced farther back than the poet Jehan le Maire, who lived at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. It is, however, found observed, with few exceptions, in the poem before us, which is more than a century... | |
| James Mitchell - 1825 - 798 pągines
...uder, Kor feir, At Christis kiik of the Grene that dfly. The historian John Major, who flourished in the end of the fifteenth, and the beginning of the sixteenth century , acquaints us, that in his linio several poems wf, ich had been composed Ly James 1. wore repeated... | |
| Lord Alexander Fraser Tytler Woodhouselee, Edward Nares - 1825 - 608 pągines
...FINE ARTS IN EUROPE IN THE AGE OF LEO X. 1. IN enumerating those great objects which characterized the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, we remarked the high advancement to which the fine arts attained in Europe in the age of Leo X. The... | |
| A. Mercer - 1828 - 352 pągines
...the time and place of his birth, and ihe period at which he died, are un-known. He flourished towards the end of the fifteenth* and the beginning of the sixteenth century, in the reigns of Henry the VIII. of England, and James the IV. of Scotland. He reached an advanced... | |
| Thomas Curtis - 1829 - 834 pągines
...discontinued ; but the art itself of engraving upon wood continued in an improving state; and towards the end of the fifteenth, and the beginning of the sixteenth, century, it became the custom of almost all the German painters to engrave copies of their designs on wood as... | |
| Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - 1832 - 626 pągines
...weighed at Szegedin, ir Hungary. With the exception of the=r few relics of ordeals, the end of die fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century are to be regarded as the closn:: period of them in L.urope. But it is t be lamented that the Roman law substituted in their... | |
| Gustav Friedrich Waagen - 1838 - 370 pągines
...to what extraordinary perfection the proper school of miniature painting in France had attained, at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century. This is a copy of the Roman dc la Rose, which was begun in the thirteenth century by Guillaume dc Lorris,... | |
| William Patrick Palmer - 1838 - 628 pągines
...Sorbonne it was not allowed to defend that of the UltramontanesJ." He afterwards speaks thus : " At the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth century, the laws of a strict and rigorous policy prohibited at Rome the maintenance of the doctrine of the... | |
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