 | Ralph Adams Cram - Art - 1915 - 500 pages
...and licentiousness of the Church. The centre of these mystical brotherhoods was Cologne, particularly at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century, and it is not a mere coincidence that here at Cologne also, and at the same time, a new school of painting... | |
 | British Museum. Department of Oriental Printed Books and Manuscripts - Bible - 1915 - 252 pages
...by that of Hasdai Grescas (see the fourth extract given in the present description), who flourished at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century. 1149. Or. 6359. — Five paper leave?, fol. 1 measuring about 11-J- in. by 7f, and foil. 2—5 about... | |
 | Cram - 1915 - 436 pages
...and licentiousness of the Church. The centre of these mystical brotherhoods was Cologne, particularly at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century, and it is not a mere coincidence that here at Cologne also, and at the same time, a new school of painting... | |
 | Romain Rolland - Composers - 1915 - 396 pages
...not inspire the paintings ? M. fimile Male has shown the influence of our own Mystery plays on art at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century.1 It is not unlikely that a similar influence was exercised by the Tuscan Rappresentazioni... | |
 | Charles Villiers Stanford, Cecil Forsyth - Music - 1916 - 478 pages
...leading tenor always wants to sing — in his top octave. Finally, there can be no doubt that towards the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century Englishmen took a very prominent and active part in the development of counterpoint. Lionel Power,... | |
 | World War, 1914-1918 - 1917 - 474 pages
...of Germany at the end of the Middle Ages. We leave out of our consideration those territories which at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century were only bound to the Empire by a loose connection and belonged naturally to France and Italy, like... | |
 | Charles Augustine (Rev. P., O.S.B.) - Canon law - 1919 - 616 pages
...rejects the famous " condliar theory," which, approved by Gerson, was a leading topic of discussion at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth centuries, and culminated in the assertion of the superiority of a general council over the Pope, thus... | |
 | Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher - Europe - 1920 - 224 pages
...of Germany at the end of the Middle Ages. We leave out of our consideration those territories which at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century were only bound to the Empire by a loose connexion and belonged naturally to France and Italy, like... | |
 | Hensley Henson - 1921 - 320 pages
...was built. The Lollard movement inaugurated by John Wycliffe (ob. 1384) reached formidable dimensions at the end of the fourteenth, and the beginning of the fifteenth century, when it was suppressed with some severity. Its association with the social discontent which had flamed... | |
 | Hensley Henson - 1921 - 318 pages
...was built. The Lollard movement inaugurated by John Wycliffe (ob. 1384) reached formidable dimensions at the end of the fourteenth, and the beginning of the fifteenth century, when it was suppressed with some severity. Its association with the social discontent which had flamed... | |
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