| Joel Elias Spingarn - 1899 - 354 pages
...professions, and its creators patronized by kings and emperors from time immemorial. There were then at the end of the Middle Ages, and the beginning of the Renaissance, two opposing tendencies in regard to the poetic art, one representing the humanistic reverence for... | |
| Rodolfo Amedeo Lanciani - 1906 - 422 pages
...the end of the ancient and the beginning of the mediaeval periods, so the grave of that Pope marks the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. The transition from one to the other was neither sudden nor noticeable at first, but the simple fact... | |
| Edgcumbe Staley - 1906 - 806 pages
...the Commune. • • ••»•*• It is a question of unusual difficulty to determine precisely the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. Italians, and Florentines in particular, never quite sank to the dismal level of other peoples —... | |
| RODOLFO LANCIANI - 1906 - 812 pages
...the end of the ancient and the beginning of the mediaeval periods, so the grave of that Pope marks the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. The transition from one to the other was neither sudden nor noticeable at first, but the simple fact... | |
| Yale University. Graduate School - 1927 - 348 pages
....00. Mr. THOMPSON. *Art 310. Mediceval Italian Art. Study of the development of the Arts in Italy at the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. One and one half hours, second term. Mr. THOMPSON. * Architecture 10. Introduction to Architecture.... | |
| Francisco Rodríguez Adrados - 1975 - 486 pages
...Greek religion. So that this may be seen more clearly, a point of comparison may be offered. Towards the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance in Europe we find a tripartite, not a bipartite, division of Theatre. There was the profane Theatre,... | |
| J. H. W. Verzijl - 1976 - 660 pages
...vogue in the works of moralists, theologians and lawyers of the era at which we have now arrived, ie, the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance, one would expect to see it constantly applied by arbitral tribunals. But this is by no means the case... | |
| Lloyd Ultan - 1977 - 285 pages
...selected long after the fact. There is much difference of opinion about when one might securely date the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. The styles of the earlier period gradually evolved into those of the later period. However, some of... | |
| Claude Lv̌i-Strauss - 1983 - 404 pages
...one. It is the most ancient, most general form of what we designate by the name of humanism. When, at the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance, Greco-Roman antiquity was rediscovered, and when the Jesuits made Greek and Latin the basis of intellectual... | |
| Julia Kristeva - 1986 - 340 pages
...distinction We shall use the term novel to describe the kind of narrative that starts to emerge clearly at the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. The object of our analysis, Jehan de Saintré by Antoine de la Sale, is a perfect example of such a... | |
| |