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Engraving and by
Engraving by Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze | Mme Lavoisier in the 1780s taken from Traité élémentaire de chimie ( Elementary treatise on chemistry )
Engraving by Alfred Guesdon
Engraving by Willem Swidde.
Engraving by Theodor de Bry for Hans Staden's account of his 1557 captivity.
Engraving by Gustave Doré.
Engraving by Dominique Vivant | Denon. David incorporated many revolutionary symbols into these theatrical performances and orchestrated ceremonial rituals ; in effect radicalizing the applied arts, themselves.
Engraving by Israel Silvestre c. 1650.
Engraving by Georg Lichtensteger, c. 1745.
Engraving of a 1784 steam engine designed by Boulton and Watt.
Engraving by John Cochran ( artist ) | John Cochran after a portrait by Thomas Lawrence.
Engraving by Ogata Gekkō ( 1859 – 1920 ), 1873.
Engraving of a crowned Ptolemy being guided by the muse Astronomy, from Margarita Philosophica by Gregor Reisch, 1508.
Engraving of the type specimen | original P. antiquus specimen by Egid Verhelst II, 1784
Engraving of the 13th century Fakr ad-Din Mosque built by Fakr ad-Din, the first Sultan of the Sultanate of Mogadishu.
The Engraving Copyright Act 1734 extended copyright to cover engravings, statutes in 1789 and 1792 involved cloth, sculptures were copyrighted in 1914 and the performance of plays and music were covered by copyright in 1833 and 1842 respectively.
Engraving The Confusion of Tongues by Gustave Doré ( 1865 )
Engraving by John Heaviside Clark | J. H. Clark of the harpoon ing of a whale ( c. 1814 )
Engraving by Thomas Goff Lupton
Engraving of Hippocrates by Peter Paul Rubens, 1638.
File: Tantalus by HGoltzius CCornelius 1588. jpg | Engraving by Hendrik Goltzius and C. Cornelius ( 1588 )
Engraving by Gustave Doré for an 1876 edition of the poem.

Engraving and Aegidius
Engraving of Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor | Rudolf II by Aegidius Sadeler II ( 1603 ).

by and Aegidius
* Death Hath Eloquence ( 1981 ) edited by Aegidius Jean Blignaut ISBN 0-86984-189-0 Christelike Uitgewersmaatskappy
According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, " The enthusiasm felt for the Zohar was shared by many Christian scholars, such as Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Johann Reuchlin, Aegidius of Viterbo, etc., all of whom believed that the book contained proofs of the truth of Christianity.
* Aegidius dies ( possibly poisoned ) and is succeeded by his son Syagrius who becomes ruler of the Domain of Soissons ( Gaul ).
Silver coinage was issued almost exclusively by the Gallic mints ; it has been suggested that these series were not issued by Majorian, but by Aegidius after the Emperor's death, to mark the fact that he did not recognise his successor, Libius Severus.
The new emperor was not recognized by the Eastern Emperor Leo I, nor by any of the generals who had served under Majorian ; not by Aegidius in Gaul, not by Marcellinus in Sicily and Illyria, and not by Nepotianus in Hispania.
" The Goths thought that they were supposed to perform the usual federate ritual outside the walls of the Gallic capital ," writes Wolfram, " but they were rudely awakened from their daydreaming by an attack of Majorian and the ' Frankish ' Aegidius.
Aegidius refused to recognize Ricimer's new figurehead, Separated from Ricimer and Severus in Northern Gaul by the Visigoths and Burgunds, Aegidius was safe from any direct response they might make.
Aegidius struck back by attacking Orleans with the help of Childeric, and the brother of king Theoderic, Frideric, was killed in the fighting.
However, Aegidius did not press his victory ; Elton speculates that Aegidius ' attention was distracted by " increasing conflict with various Frankish groups on the north-eastern frontier or lack of resources.
" Hilton notes that Aegidius had other rivals beyond the Visgoths he needed to confront: there were Saxons in the Loire valley, Bretons under Riothamus who fought the Visigoths, " sometimes in co-operation with the Italian imperial Romans ", and other Roman factions led by the comites Paul and Arbogast.
It is depicted in the Swiss illustrated chronicles of the period, and discussed by Reformation era historiographers such as Aegidius Tschudi and Wernher Steiner.
A work published under the name of L. Fenestella ( De magistratibus et sacerdotiis Romanorum, 1510 ) is really by A. D. Fiocchi, canon and papal secretary, and was subsequently published as by him ( under the Latinized form of his name, Floccus ), edited by Aegidius Witsius ( 1561 ).
* also a new German version, " Der selige Aegidius von Assisi, sein Leben und seine Sprüche ", by Gisbert Minge ( Paderborn, 1905 ).
As phrased in the Halbsuterlied printed in the 1530s by Aegidius Tschudi and Wernher Steiner:

by and Sadeler
His works have been copied by Wolfgang Kilian, Dominicus Custos and Jan Sadeler.
Portrait of Krystof Harant by Aegidius Sadeler
Portrait of Michael the Brave, made by Aegidius Sadeler II
In 1601, during a stay in Prague, he was portrayed by the painter Aegidius Sadeler, who mentioned on the portrait the words aetatis XLIII (" in the 43rd year of life "), which indicates 1558 as the year of Michael's birth.

by and 1603
In early 1578, the regency was taken over by his cousin, George Frederick of Brandenburg-Kulmbach ( 1539 – 1603 ).
Most of the brighter stars were assigned their first systematic names by the German astronomer Johann Bayer in 1603, in his star atlas Uranometria ( named after Urania, the Greek Muse of Astronomy, along with Uranus, the Greek god of the sky and heavens ).
Blackadder II is set in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I ( 1558 – 1603 ), played by Miranda Richardson.
Historically, this proceeded from the labours of Jean de Launoy ( 1603 – 1678 ), " le dénicheur des saints ", and Louis Sébastien le Nain de Tillemont, who had shown the falsity of numerous lives of the saints ; while theologically it was produced by the Port Royal school, which led men to dwell more on communion with God as contrasted with the invocation of the saints.
On Elizabeth's death in 1603, the 1559 book, substantially that of 1552 which had been regarded as offensive by the likes of Bishop Stephen Gardiner as being a break with the tradition of the Western church, had come to be regarded in some quarters as unduly Catholic.
They were depicted by Johann Bayer in his star atlas Uranometria of 1603.
The stars of the main asterism within a constellation are usually given Greek letters in their order of brightness, the so-called Bayer designation introduced by Johann Bayer in 1603.
Of the famine in Povolzhie ( 1921 – 1922 ) he wrote: " That horrible famine was up to cannibalism, up to consuming children by their own parents — the famine, which Russia had never known even in Time of Troubles 1601 – 1603 ..."
Constantine's reign of 43 years, exceeded in Scotland only by that of King William the Lion before the Union of the Crowns in 1603, is believed to have played a defining part in the gaelicisation of Pictland, in which his patronage of the Irish Céli Dé monastic reformers was a significant factor.
The Hindu social code was later set up in Gorkha by Ram Shah ( 1603 – 36 ).
** The Barons ' Wars by Michael Drayton ( 1603 ; early version 1596 entitled Mortimeriados )
The word geology was first used by Ulisse Aldrovandi in 1603, then by Jean-André Deluc in 1778 and introduced as a fixed term by Horace-Bénédict de Saussure in 1779.
Several assassination attempts were made on James, notably the Main Plot and Bye Plots of 1603, and most famously, on 5 November 1605, the Gunpowder Plot, by a group of Catholic conspirators, led by Sir Robert Catesby, which caused more antipathy in England towards the Catholic faith.
Hamilton was made Sheriff of Linlithgow in 1600, received large grants of lands in Scotland and Ireland, was created in 1603 Baron Abercorn, and on 10 July 1606 was rewarded for his services in the matter of the union by being made Earl of Abercorn and Lord Paisley, Hamilton, Mountcastell and Kilpatrick.
The French Baroque school is exemplified by composers such as Ennemond Gaultier ( 1575 – 1651 ), Denis Gaultier ( 1597 / 1603 – 1672 ), François Dufaut ( before 1604 – before 1672 ) and many others.
The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice is a tragedy by William Shakespeare, believed to have been written in approximately 1603, and based on the Italian short story Un Capitano Moro (" A Moorish Captain ") by Cinthio, a disciple of Boccaccio, first published in 1565.
Oxfordian researchers believe that the play is an early version of Shakespeare's own play, and point to the fact that Shakespeare's version survives in three quite different early texts, Q1 ( 1603 ), Q2 ( 1604 ) and F ( 1623 ), suggesting the possibility that it was revised by the author over a period of many years.
From 1593 through 1603, the publication of new plays appeared at the rate of two per year, and whenever an inferior or pirated text was published, it was typically followed by a genuine text described on the title page as " newly augmented " or " corrected ".
The Academy has its origins in the Accademia dei Lincei (" Academy of Lynxes ") established in Rome in 1603, under Pope Clement VIII by the learned Roman prince, Federico Cesi ( 1585 – 1630 ), who was a young botanist and naturalist, and which claimed Galileo Galilei as its president.
In 1603 Lancaster again visited Saint Helena on his return from the first voyage equipped by the British East India Company.

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