| Guizot (M., François) - Civilization - 1838 - 352 pages
...former situation and manners. This class, accordingly, continued to embark in crusades, and endeavoured to renew them. Such, in my opinion, are the real effects...thirteenth century, will form the subject of our next lecture. LECTURE IX. Of Monarchy. I ENDEAVOURED, at our last meeting, to determine the essential and... | |
| Guizot (M., François) - Civilization - 1856 - 538 pages
...a very straightened track, and led it into new and infinitely more extensive paths; they commenced that transformation of the various elements of European society into governments and peoples, which is the character of modern civilization. About the same time, royalty, one of those... | |
| Morgan E. Dowling - Church - 1882 - 190 pages
...hand, and the state of society on the other. They drew society out of a very narrow road and threw it into new and infinitely broader paths ; they began...which is the characteristic of modern civilization." \Mn*_ — Then came the dawn of a still higher an mightier civilization, in that grand event called... | |
| 1884 - 588 pages
...society out of a very narrow road, to throw it into new and infinitely broader paths ; and, above all, they began that transformation of the various elements...which is the characteristic of modern civilization. IN SUMMER FIELDS. YE flowers in your wonderful silence, Ye birds with your wonderful sound, The love... | |
| François Guizot - Civilization - 1885 - 284 pages
...civilization—such as the compass, printing, and gunpowder—were known in the east, and that the crusades brought them into Europe. This is true to a certain...which has most powerfully contributed to this great result—monarchy; the history of which, from the birth of the modern states of Europe to the thirteenth... | |
| Guizot (M., François) - Civilization - 1898 - 562 pages
...a very straightened track, and led it into new and infinitely more extensive paths; they commenced that transformation of the various elements of European society into governments and peoples, which is the character of modern civilization. About the same time, royalty, one of those... | |
| Timothy Dwight, Julian Hawthorne - Literature - 1899 - 446 pages
...a very straightened tract, and led it into new and infinitely more extensive paths ; they commenced that transformation of the various elements of European society into governments and peoples which is the character of modern civilization. About the same time, royalty, one of those institutions... | |
| 1884 - 588 pages
...society ont of a very narrow road, to throw it into new and infinitely broader paths; and, above all, they began that transformation of the various elements...European society into governments and nations which is tLe characteristic of modern civilization. IN STJMMEH FIELDS. TE flowers In your wonderful silence,... | |
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