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Nineteenth-century and have
Nineteenth-century travellers could point to the Hill of San Giovanni on the northwest shore of the Gulf of Ajaccio, which still had a cathedral said to have been the 6th century seat of the Bishop of Ajaccio.
Nineteenth-century botanists had problems in classifying Douglas-firs, due to the species ' similarity to various other conifers better known at the time ; they have at times been classified in Pinus, Picea, Abies, Tsuga, and even Sequoia.
Nineteenth-century accounts portrayed him as the mastermind and leader of the revolt, while some subsequent interpretations have depicted him as a local leader with limited overall influence.
Nineteenth-century musicologist François-Joseph Fétis claimed to have seen a sixteenth-century copy of a Tractatus de musica mensurata et de proportionibus by Dufay, last seen in a bookshop in London in 1824.
Nineteenth-century boat-building practices in the Highlands are likely to have applied also to the birlinn: examples are the use of dried moss, steeped in tar, for caulking, and the use of stocks in construction.

Nineteenth-century and out
Nineteenth-century European travellers noted the presence of archaeological remains in the Balikh Valley, but the first investigations were not carried out until 1938, when the English archaeologist Sir Max Mallowan ( husband of author Agatha Christie ) spent six weeks investigating five archaeological sites dating from the seventh to the second millennium BCE.

Nineteenth-century and particularly
Nineteenth-century Russian writers, starting with Ivan Zabelin, emphasized the influence of the vernacular wooden churches of the Russian North ; their motifs made their ways into masonry, particularly the votive churches that did not need to house substantial congregations.

Nineteenth-century and .
Nineteenth-century bird's-eye view of Fort Collins.
Nineteenth-century biologists reported that the Hydra was such a simple animal that it was possible to force one through gauze to separate it into individual cells ; if the cells were then left to themselves, they would regroup to form a hydra again.
Nineteenth-century newspaper reports of actual gypsy weddings indicate that they took place in church.
Nineteenth-century Irish amateur scholar William Betham speculated that worship of Oannes is the origin of the cult of the Roman god Janus.
Nineteenth-century fictional depictions of John were heavily influenced by Sir Walter Scott's historical romance, Ivanhoe, which presented " an almost totally unfavourable picture " of the king ; the work drew on Victorian histories of the period and on Shakespeare's play.
Nineteenth-century comparative mythology reinterpreted myth as evolution toward science ( E. B. Tylor ), " disease of language " ( Max Müller ), or misinterpretation of magical ritual ( James Frazer ).
Nineteenth-century interpretations of myth were often highly comparative, seeking a common origin for all myths.
Nineteenth-century positivist historians stressed what they saw as Thucydides ' seriousness, his scientific objectivity and his advanced handling of evidence.
* Nineteenth-century theatre – wide range of movements in the theatrical culture of Europe and the United States in the 19th century.
Nineteenth-century English ( language ) literature features usages of nigger without racist connotation, e. g. the Joseph Conrad novella The Nigger of the ' Narcissus ' ( 1897 ).
: Great Puzzles In Nineteenth-century Fiction.
Nineteenth-century Britain was home to a great deal of scientific progress.
In R. Bellamy, ed., Victorian Liberalism: Nineteenth-century Political Thought and Practice, London, pp. 5870
Nineteenth-century British anthropology advanced a lineal, evolutionary sequence in a given culture from savagery to civilization.
Nineteenth-century culinary writer Pierre Lacam suggested that in 1459, a London woman named Annamarie Turcauht stumbled upon this condiment after trying to create a custard of some sort.
Nineteenth-century operettas became the preserve of lightweight baritone voices.
Nineteenth-century critic Rev.
Nineteenth-century inventors were reluctant to accept this added complication and experimented with a variety of caseless or self-consuming cartridges before finally accepting that the advantages of brass cases far outweighed this one drawback.
Nineteenth-century Cannes can still be seen in its grand villas, built to reflect the wealth and standing of their owners and inspired by anything from medieval castles to Roman villas.

virtues and however
Heinlein's juvenile fiction of the 1940s and ' 50s, however, began to espouse conservative virtues.
The term was brought to China by writers and students who hoped that China would modernise its military and place emphasis on martial virtues, and it quickly became entrenched as the term used to refer to xiayi and other predecessors of wuxia proper, while in Japan itself, however, it faded into obscurity.
Against these expectations, however, Titus proved to be an effective Emperor and was well loved by the population, who praised him highly when they found that he possessed the greatest virtues instead of vices.
Libertarian Marxists, however, fully support direct democracy in the form of the proletarian republic and see majority rule and citizen participation as virtues.
Plato and Aristotle's treatment of virtues is by no means the same however.
Under the surface, however, Elizabeth is appalled by Flory's relatively egalitarian attitude towards the natives, seeing them as ' beastly ' while Flory extolls the virtues of their rich culture.
Sariel is identified as being the same angel as Saraqael, said in the Book of Enoch to be the fifth archangel, set over spirits who sin in the spirit, change into all virtues, to eradicate particularly widespread vices of a city or a whole district and transform into all virtues, Before the identification of Sariel / Saraqael as the fifth archangel, however, the Book of Enoch identifies Sariel as one of the fallen host's " chiefs of tens.
General opinion, however, attributes the the virtues of Ekathotsarot to Naresuan.
There are, however, three theological virtues: faith, hope, and charity ( which is used interchangeably with love in the sense of agape ).
Euclid taught that virtues themselves, however, were simply the knowledge of the one good, or Being.

virtues and seem
Socrates generally applied his method of examination to concepts that seem to lack any concrete definition ; e. g., the key moral concepts at the time, the virtues of piety, wisdom, temperance, courage, and justice.
He draws the conclusion that to an observer he and Protagoras would seem as crazy, having argued at great lengths only to mutually exchanged positions with Socrates now believing that virtue can be taught and Protagoras that all virtues are one instead of his initial position ( 361a ).
This style of building up a picture wherein it becomes clear that praiseworthy virtues in their highest form, even virtues like courage, seem to require intellectual virtue, is a theme of discussion which Aristotle chooses to associate in the Nicomachean Ethics with Socrates, and indeed it is an approach we find portrayed in the Socratic dialogues of Plato.
The town has lost thousands of dollars and the virtues of the area seem to be going as well.
Chaucer's very careful, mollifying words on the difficult job and the virtues of governesses seem to be a very canny political move.
Early theorists like Jane Addams and Charlotte Perkins Gilman argued that in governing the state, cooperation, caring, and nonviolence in the settlement of conflicts society seem to be what was needed from women ’ s virtues.
It would also seem that, although in the devotion to the Heart of Mary the heart has an essential part as symbol and sensible object, it does not stand out as prominently as in the devotion to the Heart of Jesus ; devotion focuses rather on the thing symbolized, the love, virtues, and sentiments of Mary's interior life.
The virtues are given in a pleonastic style which rhetorician George Kennedy describes as " The cumulation of a series of words which seem to come pouring out of his heart " ( p. 90 ).
Criseyde is made to seem inconstant in love in that earlier work, and Alceste demands a poem of Chaucer extolling the virtues of women and their good deeds.

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