... what is France to-day, as well as the Spanish March and Flanders.36. The great interest of the treaty of Verdun lies in the tolerably definite appearance of a western and an eastern Frankish kingdom, ... their love of adventure, their hope of enjoying some of the advantages of their civilized neighbors, or theneed of new lands for their increasing numbers. And the Romans, by means of their armies, ... among the officials of the government. In thisway it came about that a great many of the inhabitants of the Roman Empire were Germans before the greatinvasions. The line dividing the Roman and the...
... the Historyof Philosophy, the Philosophyof History, the Philosophy of Religion, ặsthetics, etc., made up with much literary skill from the Professor's own notes andfrom the reports of ... The most permanently valuable of these is the ặsthetics; but any studentdesirous of getting a notion of Hegelianism at first hand had better begin with the Philosophyof History, of which there ... wonderful than that space and time should result from the activity of the outer and inner senses. Thisfigment of my imagination is anyhow solid enough to beget a new feeling of resistance and recoil,...
... volume of the chief changes in western Europe since the German barbarians overcame the armies of the Roman Empire and set up states of their own, out of which the present countries of France, ... any considerable period of disorder and retrogression. learning and culture of Constantinople they were greatly and permanently impressed by them. General Reading.—For an outline of the history ... their love of adventure, their hope of enjoying some of the advantages of their civilized neighbors, or the need of new lands for their increasing numbers. And the Romans, by means of their armies,...
... volume of the chief changes in western Europe since theGerman barbarians overcame the armies of the Roman Empire and set up states of their own, out of which thepresent countries of France, Germany, ... embrace most ofwestern Europe and form the starting point for thedevelopment of the modern countries of France, Germany, and Austria. It furnishes the first instance of theinterference of a northern ... of Verdun 939 Treaty of Mersen 9510 Fiefs and Suzerains of the Counts of Champagne 11311 France at the Close of the Reign of Philip Augustus 12912 The Plantagenet Possessions in England and...
... sensation and perception and meant, in general, ‘knowledgegained by means of the senses’. As Ancient Greek was a pitched language, melody can beunderstood an outgrowth of the natural inflections of ... usage of meanings is not very helpful.The change in the conceptual significance of the word “aesthetic” has thus beenshown to broaden and change concurrently with changes in Western societies and ... itself the product of a long collective history. Thought patterns and knowledge can only exist as a result of the cumulativehabits of human culture:The experience of the work of art as immediately...
... Britons understood the manufactory of iron. Perhaps history cannot produce an instance of any place in an improving country, like England, where the coarsemanufactory of iron has been carried ... love of arms, of liberty, and of commerce. These are the strong outlines of national character, the interiorparts of which are finished with the softer touches of humanity, of science, and of ... and notwithstanding the plainness of the profession rather elegant.The congregation is very flourishing, rich, and peaceable. Chandler tells us, to the everlasting honour of the An History of...
... the Committee of Liquidation to call upon the country banks to redeem the notes of the Metropolitan Bank, paying an allowance of 1/4 of 1 per cent. interest, running from the 20th of November. ... Interrelations of Panics, Tariffs, and the Condition of Agriculture_, etc.; and especially what is said of the panic of 1848, on page 10.) M. Juglar has fully analyzed the three phases of our business ... by the banks of the United States, except those of New England, took place in August and September, 1814. THE PANIC OF 1814 An agreement took place at Philadelphia between the bank and the...
... Communicative Language Teaching 1 Emanating from the work of the Council of Europe in the 60s, the first tranche of the communicative 'revolution' was based on the idea of grouping bits of language ... out of many types of accuracy work) has an important place in language teaching, not to teach language points but to raise their noticeability in the minds of the students. As a matter of note, ... still has its place in the grand pantheon of language-teaching approaches, and that aware experienced teachers will be able to utilise all of them in an intuitive, and yet consciously integrated...
... understanding of any of the advanced systems of Indian thought. Thus in the absence of a book which could give us in brief the main epistemological,ontological, and psychological positions of the ... thou."Again the growth of the doctrine that Brahman is the "inner controller" in all the parts and forces of nature and of mankind as the âtman thereof, and that all the effects of the universe ... of the term. Thus Professor Frank Thilly of the Cornell University says inhis HistoryofPhilosophy [Footnote ref 1], "A universal historyofphilosophy would include the philosophiesof...
... get close to the animal, and to do this disguises of animal heads andskins were generally adopted. The Indians hunted and trapped nearly all kinds of American animals.ANIMALS AND IMPLEMENTS UNKNOWN ... called Indian jewelry consisted of necklaces of teethand claws of bears, claws of eagles and hawks, and strings of sea shells, colored feathers, and wampum.Wampum consisted of strings of beads ... girl was born and named Virginia. She was the granddaughter of Governor White and the daughter of Eleanor and Ananias Dare, and the first child of English parents born onthe soil of what is now...