| 1825 - 564 pages
...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 pages
...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... | |
| Terence Vincent Powderly, Edmund Janes James - 1886 - 698 pages
...community, and which was bound to help the poor. This system of industrial organization existed in Germany from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth, and, indeed, in the free cities, where the authority in industrial matters remained in the hands of... | |
| George Edwin McNeill - 1892 - 724 pages
...community, and which was bound to help the poor. This system of industrial organization existed in Germany from the end of the fourteenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth, and, indeed, in the free cities, where the authority in industrial matters remained in the hands of... | |
| Charles Cooper King - 1897 - 508 pages
...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 pages
...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 pages
...the district that would better serve for a type of the historical and architectural interest which belongs to the fringes of the Cotswolds than Chipping...beginning of the seventeenth. After that there is the slow subsidenceof prosperity, the dwelling still in^^ie neighbourly •£ descendants of the tradep^ evival... | |
| Erastus Whitford Hopkins - 1904 - 322 pages
...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,... | |
| William Holden Hutton - 1908 - 334 pages
...the district that would better serve for a type of the historical and architectural interest which belongs to the fringes of the Cotswolds than Chipping...period of the great woolmerchants, from the end of the four teenth century to the beginning of the seventeenth, After that there is the slow subsidence of... | |
| George Borrow - 1924 - 608 pages
...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... | |
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