| Edward Everett - Speeches, addresses, etc., American - 1850 - 716 pages
...given to some of them belong. But though the misfortunes of Italy, at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth centuries, greatly diminished...the cities of Lombardy and Tuscany, those countries still continue to be among the most populous and best cultivated in Europe. The civil wars of Flanders... | |
| George Stillman Hillard - Spanish literature - 1850 - 60 pages
...Spanish theatre belongs, so far as it can belong to any one person, to Juan de la Enzina, who lived at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. After him, Gil Vicente, a native of Portugal, wrote plays both in Spanish and Portuguese. The dramatic... | |
| Theology - 1850 - 538 pages
...Spanish theatre belongs, so far as it can belong to any one person, to Juan de la Enzina, who lived at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. After him, Gil Vicente, a native of Portugal, wrote plays both in Spanish and Portuguese. The dramatic... | |
| Medicine - 1850 - 586 pages
...only be estimated by comparing them with the rude and erroneous anatomical delineations published at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. Magnus Hundt, a priest and schoolmaster at Magdeburgh, published, in 1501, his ' Antropologium,' containing... | |
| Alfred von Reumont - Naples (Kingdom) - 1854 - 494 pages
...(1,361). II. PRINTED AUTHORITIES. For the purpose of judging of the internal circumstances of Naples at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, and the causes of the terrible fall of the illegitimate Aragonese, as well as the rapid ruin of the... | |
| George Payne Rainsford James - English fiction - 1857 - 166 pages
...such was not destined to be the case upon the present occasion, though the times of which I write were the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries. Guilt, and fraud, and even murder, often in those days covered themselves with golden embroidery and... | |
| 1859 - 546 pages
...to a poet whose Pastorals possessed equal reputation in their own day, Andrew Naugerius. But towards the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries — when it was no unusual thing for an ecclesiastic who had perhaps received only the first tonsure,... | |
| Henry Allon - Christianity - 1861 - 580 pages
...island did not exceed 14,000 ! To him who has ears to hear, these figures speak for themselves. Thus, at the end of the fifteenth and the beginning of the sixteenth centuries, was it done by the Spaniards in Hispaniola; and in the sixty-first year of this nineteenth century,... | |
| Adam Smith - Economics - 1869 - 576 pages
...names given to some of them belong. But though the misfortunes of Italy in the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth centuries greatly diminished...commerce and manufactures of the cities of Lombardy and 1 Book ip i, inFenton's folio, 1618. CHAP. iv. THE WEALTH OF NATIONS. 423 Tuscany, those countries... | |
| |