| Gilbert Edward Brooke - 1920 - 440 Seiten
...like putty, and you spit out your teeth like stones -" The Lone Trail. some and extended voyages at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and continued until its final discomfiture between 1796 and 1800. The horrible conditions make one shudder... | |
| Robert Renwick, Sir John Lindsay - 1921 - 586 Seiten
...but in the absence of definite information the substitution of other figures need not be attempted. Towards the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, when the population may be assumed to have been from 2,000 to 3,500, the built portions of the city... | |
| Sir William Abbott Herdman - 1923 - 430 Seiten
...and writers up to the time of Ptolemy (about 150 AD), then the great age of geographical discovery at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and finally the modern expeditions beginning with Cook's voyages of 150 years ago and extending up to the... | |
| Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society - 1925 - 484 Seiten
...crown. These two marks (the Rose and Shield) are known to have belonged to the Nottingham founders at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and North had therefore no hesitation in assigning to all the SS bells a Nottingham origin.7 The early... | |
| Fan Dainian, Robert S. Cohen - 1996 - 506 Seiten
...history refers to a series of important discoveries made by Western European voyagers and adventurers at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century and to their tremendous historical impact. The most outstanding achievements were the discovery of America... | |
| Ruth Mazo Karras - 2003 - 258 Seiten
...170. Living together without marriage was inereasingly strictly condemned in south German towns at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and correspondingly legitimate bitth became an important requitement for craft guild membership and inclusion... | |
| 1851 - 922 Seiten
...was Ambrosius Calepinus, called so from Calepiiim, a town between Bergamo and Brescia, who lived at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and died 1510, at Bergamo, at a very advanced age. His dictionary, Lexicon Calepinnm, was long famous,... | |
| 1928 - 478 Seiten
...instance, how it is that Spain and France and England gained their complete unification and independence at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, and Italy meanwhile remained divided and enslaved? It was certainly not out of lack of Italian patriotism.... | |
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