| Rudolf Sohm - 1895 - 304 páginas
...dispense with neither. United, they represent and rule the Protestant Church of the present. The Pietism of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries was the last great surge of the waves of the ecclesiastical movement begun by the Reformation; it was... | |
| Rudolf Sohm - 1895 - 320 páginas
...dispense with neither. United, they represent and rule the Protestant Church of the present. The Pietism of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries was the last great surge of the waves of the ecclesiastical movement begun by the Reformation; it was... | |
| Florence Jean Ansell, Frank Roy Fraprie - 1910 - 580 páginas
...the sails of which are held by small Cupids. The almost passionate energy of the Neapolitan artists of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries was the most remarkable feature of their work, and the most noteworthy was one of the greatest of the... | |
| Sir William Searle Holdsworth - 1923 - 748 páginas
...Act—equality of distribution. 9 These rules were ascertained by decisions upon the construction of these Acts of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries. As the result of this legislation and these decisions the common law obtained a reasonable system of... | |
| Edward Alfred Jones - 1928 - 500 páginas
...unlike an English salt. By John Coney are also a pair of baluster candlesticks of true English type of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries. Both these and the previous candlestick belong to the estate of the late Miss Sally Pickman Dwight... | |
| Sir William Searle Holdsworth - 1923 - 770 páginas
...Act—equality of distribution. 9 These rules were ascertained by decisions upon the construction of these Acts of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries. As the result of this legislation and these decisions the common law obtained a reasonable system of... | |
| 1912 - 870 páginas
...form and the device of a Spanish atmosphere. Happily the society that surrounded Lesage in the Paris of the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries was sufficiently complex and representative for an exhaustive picture of that world to assume a typical... | |
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