Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Abbadid dynasty" ¶ 10
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

caprices and form
A capriccio or caprice ( sometimes plural: caprices, capri or, in Italian, capricci ), is a piece of music, usually fairly free in form and of a lively character.

caprices and subject
Nevertheless, they were subject to the caprices of princes and outbursts of fanaticism.

caprices and many
Rose's edition ( 1934 ) of Hygini Fabulae for the Loeb Classical Library wondered " at the caprices of Fortune who has allowed many of the plays of an Aeschylus, the larger portion of Livy's histories, and other priceless treasures to perish, while this school-boy's exercise has survived to become the pabulum of scholarly effort.

caprices and stories
His main biographer, Giampietro Zanotti, said of Crespi: "( He ) never again wanted for money, and he would make the stories and caprices that came into his imagination.

caprices and like
Their eyes turned with the somber disquiet of resentment to the superb château where they had so often gone to lower themselves by shameful homage, and from which, more than once, the caprices of pride ... had spread like devastating torrents.

caprices and on
Mention may also be made of a dramatic sketch in iambic verse, in which the caprices of fortune and the wretched lot of the learned are described ; and of an iambic poem on the death of the emperor Manuel, noticeable for introducing at the beginning of each line the last word of the line preceding it ( both in Pietro Matranga, Anecdota Graeca 1850 ).
* Nathan Milstein – Paganiniana, an arrangement of the 24th Caprice, with variations based on the other caprices
According to a contemporary New York Times review of the book, Thompson relates how he " drank at their bars, exchanged home visits, recorded their brutalities, viewed their sexual caprices, became converted to their motorcycle mystique, and was so intrigued, as he puts it, that ' I was no longer sure whether I was doing research on the Hell's Angels or being slowly absorbed by them.
*" In several of the caprices, as arranged and played by Eliot Fisk, one gets an impression that they are either unsuitable for playing on the guitar or the musician has been stretched beyond his technical capabilities.

caprices and de
* Franz Liszt – Six Grandes Études de Paganini, S. 141 for solo piano ( 1851 ) ( virtuoso arrangements of 5 caprices, including the 24th, and La Campanella from Violin Concerto No. 2 )
Six caprices sur une romance de l ' opéra de Halévy
Deux caprices sur une mélodie de Reber
Three Concert Études ( Trois études de concert ), S. 144, are a set of three piano études by Franz Liszt, composed between 1845 – 49 and published in Paris as Trois caprices poétiques with its three individual titles as they are known today.

caprices and King
Consequently, Reade's indomitable spirit prevailed and he refused to wilt under the caprices of the King and the heat of the sun.

caprices and with
The purpose and objective is that the people may pursue / critically examine / link / study its Aa ' ya ' at-verbal passages mirroring established realities and facts ; and so that the men of wisdom who look into matters and conduct objectively without overlapping it with emotions / prejudices / biases / whims / caprices may remember and orate to others.
They would hold social gatherings, " Kaamulan " and ' Kaliga " and other forms of intimate social merry-makings to satisfy their whims and caprices often with paganic undertones.

caprices and ).
During Paganini's study in Parma, he came across the 24 Caprices of Locatelli ( entitled L ' arte di nuova modulazione – Capricci enigmatici or The art of the new style – the enigmatic caprices ).
" We have to remember that behind the various caprices of modern historical theories, and as a more profound and primordial reality, there stands the unity of blood and spirit of the white races who created the greatest civilizations both of the East and West, the Iranian and Hindu as well as the ancient Greek and Roman and the Germanic " ( The Doctrine of Awakening, p. 14 ).
Only two compositions by Froberger were published during his lifetime: the Hexachord Fantasia, published by Kircher in 1650 in Rome, and a piece in François Roberday's Fugues et caprices ( 1660, Paris ).

Romaica and Rumayqiyya
Al-Mu ' tamid came even more under the influence of his favourite wife, Romaica ( also spelt Rumayqiyya in Seville tradition ), even more than that of his vizier.

lavish and extravagance
Tree staged the Shakespeare plays, in particular, to appeal to the broad public taste for realistic scenery and scenic effects and lavish spectacle, mirroring the Edwardian fashion for luxury and extravagance.
Cato's enmity dated from the African campaign when he quarrelled with Scipio for his lavish distribution of the spoil amongst the troops, and his general luxury and extravagance.
The modern extravagance of gilding such a large statue pales in comparison to the lavish spending of the Greeks.
His extravagance and lavish expenditure, his double suppers and costly entertainments, were the theme of satirists and wonder of society, and his debts were said at his death to amount to more than £ 80, 000.
Van Rossem's lavish lifestyle and extravagance came to the fore, having purchased a US $ 20 million Gulfstream Jet 4 prior to the Phoenix Grand Prix.
To supply his lavish extravagance, he oppressed and pillaged his subjects, putting many to death and confiscating their property.

lavish and III
1328 saw the marriage of Isabella's son, Edward III to Philippa of Hainault, as agreed before the invasion of 1326 ; the lavish ceremony was held in London to popular acclaim.
Here, he improved the orchestra and began providing incidental music for the theatre's lavish productions, starting with Richard III in 1889.
The Hippodrome was used for various occasions such as the lavish and days-long circumcision ceremony of the sons of Sultan Ahmed III.
Under the influence of Louis XIV of France, music for the theatre was established in Denmark during the reigns of Frederik III and Christian V when lavish court ballets were performed.
The annals describe in lavish detail 14 campaigns led by Thutmose III in the Levant, the booty gained through his campaigning, tribute received from conquered regions, and, lastly, offerings to Amun-Re.
The French word bichonner, which means to pamper or doll up, derives from the be-ribboned and lavish lifestyles of the Bichon of Henry III of France, who was carried in a little basket wherever the King went.
Philip III succeeded his father in 1598, and as had been predicted by his father, was a weak man who had no interest in politics or government, preferring to engage in lavish court festivities and religious indulgences.
The most lavish, judging by surviving inscriptions, were those of Ramesses II and Amenhotep III.
The Ottoman ruler Murad III ( 1574 – 1595 ) commissioned a lavish illustrated copy of the work, which has been described as " the largest single cycle of religious painting in Islamic art " and " the most complete visual portrayal of the life of the prophet Muhammad ".

lavish and efforts
He has been criticized for some ineffectiveness of his anti-corruption efforts as well as for his lavish spending.
Also likely, Mrs. Astor had noted the rising social profile of the Vanderbilt family, led by Alva and Willie, and viewing them as useful allies in her efforts to keep New York society exclusive had called formally on the Vanderbilts prior to Alva's lavish ball which Mrs. Astor herself attended.
The weekly entertainment-trade magazine Variety gave the film a positive pre-release review, stating, " The lavish production, boasting some brilliant special effects and superior creative efforts, is an entertaining, enlightening excursion through inner space — the body of a man.
Tsui Hark's lavish CGI-enhanced efforts Time and Tide ( 2000 ) and The Legend of Zu ( 2001 ), however, were surprisingly unsuccessful.

lavish and her
According to Tacitus in his Annals, Boudica poisoned herself, though in the Agricola which was written almost twenty years prior he mentions nothing of suicide and attributes the end of the revolt to socordia (" indolence "); Dio says she fell sick and died and then was given a lavish burial ; though this may be a convenient way to remove her from the story.
Another such story revolved around a man who won an inconsequential amount of money on the pools, and began living an inordinately lavish lifestyle (" I bought the wife a new cover for her ironing board " being one such example of his largesse ), which collapsed when the money inevitably ran out, much to his chagrin (" I wish I'd never set eyes on the money ").
Kemble's productions made use of lavish spectacle and scenery ; one critic noted that during the bedroom scene, the bed was so large that Jachimo all but needed a ladder to view Imogen in her sleep.
She also met her daughter Elisabeth at Bayonne near the Spanish border, amidst lavish court festivities.
As Catherine the Great ’ s advisor Potemkin posited, this adoration was due to the fact that she was “ the only woman who looked truly fine, and completely a man … As she was tall and powerful, male attire suited her .” Though the balls were by far her most personally beloved and lavish events, Elizabeth often threw children ’ s birthday parties and wedding receptions for those affiliated with her Court, going so far as to provide dowries for each of her ladies-in-waiting.
* 17 November: Accession Day or Queen's Day, the anniversary of Queen Elizabeth's accession to the throne, celebrated with lavish court festivities featuring jousting during her lifetime and as a national holiday for dozens of years after her death.
After retiring from London to live in lavish state at Greenwich, Margaret was occupied with the care of her young son and did not display any signs of overt belligerence until she believed her husband was threatened with deposition by the ambitious Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, who, to her consternation, had been appointed regent while Henry was mentally incapacitated from 1453 to 1454.
Isabella and Mortimer's regime began to crumble, partly because of her lavish spending, but also because the Queen successfully, but unpopularly, resolved long-running problems such as the wars with Scotland.
Isabella's lavish lifestyle matched her new incomes.
There were reports that she misplaced it at parties, deliberately and frequently, and then make a children's game out of " finding the Hope ", and times when she hid the diamond somewhere on her estate during the " lavish parties she threw and invite guests to find it.
She was criticised for the lavish display of luxury in her various estates, although her rich family of financiers in many instances gave money to the government and saved the monarchy from bankruptcy.
After the Astors married, Nancy moved into Cliveden, a lavish estate in Buckinghamshire on the River Thames, and began her life as a prominent hostess for the social elite.
The lavish spectacle made an impression on the young Pavlova, and at the age of nine she was taken by her mother to audition for the renowned Imperial Ballet School.
" While riding along a road on the border of Hel in a lavish cart ( the cart her corpse was burnt within ), Brynhildr encounters a dead giantess at a burial mound belonging to her.
The plans for a lavish wedding continue until the day that Buckley tells Kay that he wants to take her on a fishing trip in Nova Scotia for their honeymoon.
In one story, Bertie complains about the lavish and constant attentions of a woman in whom he has no interest by referring to her as " old sticketh closer than a brother " in an annoyed fashion.

0.867 seconds.