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Burckhardt and being
Another student, Johann Karl Burckhardt published the book Theorie der Kettenbrüche after being encouraged by Hindenberg to work on continued fractions.

Burckhardt and removed
On the recommendation of the orientalist, J. L. Burckhardt, he was sent by Henry Salt, the British consul to Egypt, to the Ramesseum at Thebes, from where he removed with great skill the colossal bust of Ramesses II, commonly called " the Young Memnon ".

Burckhardt and from
Jacob Burckhardt, in his cultural classic The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy, observed that hierarchy, exclusionary and inherited caste structure was pervasive in Italy, from the nobili caste to the merchants to the peasants.
* Averil Cameron ( professor at King's College and Oxford ) and Stuart Hall ( historian and theologian ), in their recent translation of the Life of Constantine, point out that writers such as Burckhardt found it necessary to attack Eusebius in order to undermine the ideological legitimacy of the Habsburg empire, which based itself on the idea of Christian empire derived from Constantine, and that the most controversial letter in the Life has since been found among the papyri of Egypt.
He differed significantly from Burckhardt in that he did not think there was any physical anatomical pathology in the brains of the mentally ill, but rather that their neural pathways were caught in fixed and destructive circuits As he wrote in 1936:
The first English translation was done in partial form by Angela Culme-Seymour from the French translation of Titus Burckhardt as Wisdom of the Prophets ( 1975 ), and the first full translation was by Ralph Austin as Bezels of Wisdom ( 1980 ).
* John Lewis Burckhardt ( Johann Ludwig Burckhardt )-Travels in Arabia ; comprehending an account of those territories in Hedjaz which the Muslims regard as sacred, online version available free from the Gutenberg Project
Historian Steven Kreis expresses a widespread view ( derived from the nineteenth-century Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt ), when he writes that: The period from the fourteenth century to the seventeenth worked in favor of the general emancipation of the individual.
The critic and historian Jacob Burckhardt was from Basel.
Johann Ludwig Burckhardt said that the true Ja ' alin from the eastern desert of Sudan are exactly like the Bedouin of eastern Arabia.
In 1999, with another group of collaborators, notably the Italian architecture collective, Gruppo A12, net programmer Daniel Burckhardt, Brazilian artist Roberto Cabot, Thing. net founder Wolfgang Staehle, as well as the Equator group, Philip Pocock produced H | u | m | b | o | t for the ZKM Center for Art and Media's net_condition exhibition in Karlsruhe, Germany, initiated with support from the Goethe-Institut, Caracas, Venezuela.
After publishing a proclamation on October 26, Dufour appointed as division commanders: Peter Ludwig von Donatz ( Grisons ), Johannes Burckhardt and Eduard Ziegler ( Aargau ) from among the Conservatives and Louis Rilliet de Constant ( Vaud ), Dominik Gmür, Giacomo Luvini ( Ticino ) and Ochsenbein ( Bern ) from among the Radicals.
19th-century Swiss traveller Johann Ludwig Burckhardt noted his observation of people from the region:
Selections from the Letters of al-Darqawi have been translated by the Shadhili initiate Titus Burckhardt, and also by the scholar Aisha Bewley.
Unlike Burckhardt, Voigt described only the first century of a movement which came from Renaissance Florence and spread all through Europe.
He was an academic member of the International Philo-Byzantine Academy and University ( IPHBAU ) and the International Burckhardt Academy ( Italy ), a knight of the Real Orden de San Ildefonso y San Atilano, and a recipient of the silver cross from the Société Académique Arts Sciences Lettres ( France )
He has translated into English, from the original French or German, several of the books of the perennialist masters Frithjof Schuon ( 1907 – 1998 ) and Titus Burckhardt ( 1908 – 1984 ).
Books of Titus Burckhardt ( from ):
Translation from the French by Titus Burckhardt of Regards sur les Mondes anciens.
Translation from the English by Titus Burckhardt of Athos, the Mountain of Silence.

Burckhardt and eyes
The second component is a line ( the Prévost – Burckhardt line ) which is perpendicular to this arc, cutting it at the point midway between the two eyes ( which may, or may not, be the fixation point ).

Burckhardt and him
Later, Burckhardt was condemned for his methodology while Moniz's more favorable results earned him acceptance within the psychology community.
As further testimony to the latter, Jacob Burckhardt described his recreational activities as follows: " Besides hunting, which he practiced regardless of all rights of property, his pleasures were of two kinds: he liked to have his opponents near him, either alive in well-guarded prisons, or dead and embalmed, dressed in the costume which they wore in their lifetime.
For Wölfflin, the 16th-century art now described as " Mannerist " was part of the Baroque aesthetic, one that Burckhardt before him as well as most French and English-speaking scholars for a generation after him dismissed as degenerate.
On the death of Jacob Burckhardt in 1897 Wöllflin succeeded him in the Art History Chair at Basel.
In 1824, Linant spent a couple of months in London, where the African Company proposed to support him in a voyage of exploration, as they had supported Burckhardt.
" Jakob Burckhardt fully cognizant of Springer's enmity, reportedly gave one Springer student ( Gustav Pauli ) a rough reception when Pauli applied to study under him.

Burckhardt and clearly
What really matters is the distinctive murderous will of the Nazi leadership ... First, the intentionalist attack on the incorporation of functionalist types of explanation into our understanding of National Socialism proposes, implicitly but clearly, a retreat by the historical profession to the methods and stance of Burckhardt.

Burckhardt and .
Glance at the list: Burckhardt, Tolstoy, Proudhon, Thoreau, London, Marx, Tawney, Mayo, Durkheim, Tannenbaum, Mumford, A. R. Heron, Huxley, Schweitzer, and Einstein.
At Kuffeir near Bostra in Syria, Burckhardt found stone doors, 9 to.
In the 19th century Jacob Burckhardt viewed Eusebius as ' a liar ', the “ first thoroughly dishonest historian of antiquity .” Ramsay MacMullen in the 20th century regarded Eusebius's work as representative of early Christian historical accounts in which “ Hostile writings and discarded views were not recopied or passed on, or they were actively suppressed ..., matters discreditable to the faith were to be consigned to silence .” As a consequence this kind of methodology in MacMullens view has distorted modern attempts, ( e. g. Harnack, Nock, and Brady ), to describe how the Church grew in the early centuries.
" Jacob Burckhardt portrayed Alberti in The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy as a truly universal genius.
" Burckhardt also mentions Alberti's love for animals.
However, the nineteenth-century Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt noted that Jean Buridan had climbed the same mountain a few years before, and ascents accomplished during the Middle Ages have been recorded, including that of Anno II, Archbishop of Cologne.
The Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt ( 1818 – 1897 ) in his Die Cultur der Renaissance in Italien ( 1860 ), by contrast, defined the Renaissance as the period between Giotto and Michelangelo in Italy, that is, the 14th to mid-16th centuries.
Both Michelet and Burckhardt were keen to describe the progress made in the Renaissance towards the modern age.
The modern history of psychosurgery begins in the 1880s under the Swiss psychiatrist Gottlieb Burckhardt.
The first systematic attempt at human psychosurgery is commonly attributed to the Swiss psychiatrist Gottlieb Burckhardt.
In December 1888 Burckhardt operated on the brains of six patients ( one of whom died a few days after the operation ) at the Préfargier Asylum, cutting out a piece of cerebral cortex.
The site remained unknown to the Western world until 1812, when it was introduced by Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt.
The first European to describe them was Swiss traveller Johann Ludwig Burckhardt in 1812.
It is commonly accepted that the first systematic attempt at human psychosurgery was conducted by the Swiss psychiatrist Gottlieb Burckhardt in the late 1880s.
Burckhardt operated on the brains of six patients ( one of whom died a few days after the operation ) at Préfargier Asylum, cutting out a piece of cerebral cortex.
A significant advantage of this approach was that, unlike the position adopted by Burckhardt, it was unfalsifiable according to the knowledge and technology of the time as the absence of a known correlation between physical brain pathology and mental illness could not disprove his thesis.
It has precedents, however, in the history of philosophy, the history of ideas, and in cultural history as practiced since Burckhardt or indeed since Voltaire.
But in 1951, the Neuen Helvetischen Gesellschaft ( New Swiss Society ), under the leadership of Emil Egli, got 150, 000 Swiss citizens to sign a petition protesting the project ; among the signatories were 49 famous citizens, including Hermann Hesse and Carl Jacob Burckhardt.
One of his most widely exhibited and best loved works of the 1880s was The Lady with the Rose ( 1882 ), a portrait of Charlotte Burckhardt, a close friend and possible romantic attachment.

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