Humanism and the Rise of Science in Tudor EnglandHeinemann Educational, 1972 - 258 pages |
Contents
The impact of printing I | 1 |
Early humanism in England | 29 |
Patronage and the new learning | 41 |
Copyright | |
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A. G. Dickens Arabic Aristotle astronomical Bacon became Bishop block printing Boorde Caius Cambridge Catalogue centre chantry Church classical Colet College of Physicians Conrad Gesner Cranmer Dee's early edition Education and Society Edward Elizabeth Elizabethan Elyot England English Humanists Erasmus Europe example fact fifteenth Galen Gesner Gilbert Greek Harriot Henry VIII Herball History humanism humanist ideas important included increased incunabula influence intellectual interesting invention J. H. Hexter John Colet John Dee knowledge Latin learning Leonard Digges Library Linacre London manuscripts Marsilio Ficino mathematical mathematician medicine medieval methods More's Naturalists nature original Oxford Paracelsus period Platonic practical Press printed books printers published Reformation reign religious Renaissance Royal Salernitan scholars scientific scientists Sears Jayne seventeenth century Simon Sir Thomas sixteenth century surgeon teaching theory Thomas Digges Thomas Harriot thought translation treatise Tudor Turner University Utopia whole William writings wrote