| Philip Kates - 1928 - 52 pages
...the gospel of poverty. The Lady Poverty was henceforth to be his bride, and the Gospel his life. But at the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth, the friars of St. Francis were no longer the poor mendicants he had hoped to head. They had become... | |
| Evie Margaret Grimes - 1928 - 160 pages
...improbable and unreal that after one had read them he wondered if he had not been asleep and dreaming. At the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth the lays ceased to be narrative poems, lost all connection with the old Breton lay, and became lyric,36... | |
| 1924 - 272 pages
...tendencies of one of the world's longer epochs as is presented to the eye of the student of Durham history at the end of the Thirteenth Century and the beginning of the Fourteenth. The Chronicle before us is a cross-section from the very heart of the period, and in one or another... | |
| A. H. De Oliveira - 1971 - 384 pages
...your backside often shows. And so the longer kind would look much better on you." Apparently, toward the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth, the tunic tended to become shorter and shorter, bnrely falling below the knees. The troubadours painted... | |
| Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka - 1977 - 208 pages
...Luther's pecca fortiter sed crede fortius), is developed by numerous more or less Ockhamite writers at the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth: Petrus Aureoli, John of Mirecourt, Nicholas of Autrecourt, Robert Holkot. See Andre de Muralt , " La... | |
| George Morrison - 1981 - 236 pages
...activity accompanying the exaltation of the personality of the mystic. Two biographies of BaqlT, written at the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth by his great-grandsons,84 show how the custom of glorifying great Sufts had progressed in the meantime.... | |
| Z. R. W. M. Von Martels - 1990 - 304 pages
...1958, p. 763; EJ Holmyard, op. cit. n. 4, p. 100 L that the leading names linked with alchemy between the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth, like those of Arnold of Villanova, Raymond of Tirrega (for a long time mistaken for Raymond Lull),... | |
| Geoffrey Hawthorn - 1993 - 212 pages
...physics as well as 'the phenomena', van Fraassen, Scientific Image, pp. 112-57. in Florence and Siena at the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth. I take each to make a different point. The example of vital events in early modern Europe shows that... | |
| Pseudo-Geber - 1991 - 842 pages
...the Middle Ages, but it can be said with certainty that their consideration reached a sort of crisis at the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth. Alchemy fell under increasing censure during this period, and alchemical writers felt themselves compelled... | |
| David Holton - 1991 - 360 pages
...The examples of Georgios Gialinas, loannis Gialinas and Stefano Bon are illustrative of the situation at the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth. Georgios Gialinas, who married a member of the Gradenigo family, was notable for his flourishing commercial... | |
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