| 1825 - 564 strani
...bishops, governors of provinces, and chevaliers des ordrcs du roi, successively inhabited this hotel, from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth. It was sold, in 1624, for the sum of 30,000 crowns, to cardinal Richelieu, who demolished it in order... | |
| 1825 - 614 strani
...bishops, governors of provinces, and chevaliers des ordres du roi, successively inhabited this hotel, from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth. It was sold, -in 1624, for the sum of 30,000 crowns, to cardinal Richelieu, who demolished it in order... | |
| William Makepeace Thackeray - 1903 - 872 strani
...architecture, domestic and ecclesiastical, belongs almost entirely to the period of the great wool-merchants, from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth. After that there is the slow subsidence of prosperity, the dwelling still in the neighbourhood of descendants... | |
| George Edwin McNeill - 1892 - 724 strani
...apprentices in proportion to journeymen, by acknowledging the right of the unemployed to employment, by securing labor for the stranger or granting assistance...journeymen's unions never got the strong hold which they obtained on the continent. The system took a somewhat different form wherever the government became... | |
| Charles Cooper King - 1897 - 508 strani
...defensive armour, and relied on the leather " buff" coat or clothing of quilted cloth. But the armour from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the sixteenth century became more and more massive. At first mixed armour, — mail and plate, — then... | |
| 1900 - 706 strani
...Hanseatic League. A Danish influence, the result of political conditions under the Danish sovereigns from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the sixteenth, made itself widely felt, not only in the vocabulary by the introduction of Danish words,... | |
| William Holden Hutton - 1903 - 306 strani
...architecture, domestic and ecclesiastical, belongs almost entirely to the period of the great woolmerchants, from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth. After that there is the slow subsidenceof prosperity, the dwelling still in^^ie neighbourly •£ descendants... | |
| Erastus Whitford Hopkins - 1904 - 322 strani
...Berlin, after a careful comparison of all available records, estimates the total number of victims from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the eighteenth century at 7,500,000." " Gavinet, in his 'Memoir de la Magic,' assumes a much large aggregate,... | |
| George Borrow - 1924 - 608 strani
...of those now extant are as ancient as her language itself. They form a continued chain of narrative, from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the eighteenth ; in which the private actions of kings, and other distinguished persons, are frequently... | |
| James Mackinnon, James Alexander Rudolf Mackinnon - 1924 - 390 strani
...Aberdeenshire," Introduction, i. 14. became hereditary. In the case of Aberdeen, for instance, it was held from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the sixteenth by the Earls of Crawford, when it passed to the Earl of Errol and subsequently to the Earl... | |
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