A History of Western Civilization ...Prentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1939 |
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... continued peace and unprecedented material prosperity . The Roman peace was not a world peace , but a Mediterranean peace , and afforded an opportunity for the de- velopment of industry , agriculture , and commerce and for the diffusion ...
... continued peace and unprecedented material prosperity . The Roman peace was not a world peace , but a Mediterranean peace , and afforded an opportunity for the de- velopment of industry , agriculture , and commerce and for the diffusion ...
Trang 226
... continued to such an extent that , in theory , the barbarians considered themselves still as being within the Empire . This is shown by the titles they chose and the coins they struck . But the Roman peace had really gone when the lines ...
... continued to such an extent that , in theory , the barbarians considered themselves still as being within the Empire . This is shown by the titles they chose and the coins they struck . But the Roman peace had really gone when the lines ...
Trang 628
... continued use of French . The English tongue gradually supplanted the French , and for the next two centuries the maintenance of the Anglo - Norman language was increasingly artificial . But , at the same time , the use of French in ...
... continued use of French . The English tongue gradually supplanted the French , and for the next two centuries the maintenance of the Anglo - Norman language was increasingly artificial . But , at the same time , the use of French in ...
Nội dung
GROWTH OF IDEALS OF LIBERTY | 1 |
Pisistratus | 23 |
The Athenian Empire | 29 |
Bản quyền | |
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administration agricultural Arabic army Athens authority barbarian barons became began bishops Byzantine Byzantine Empire century B.C. Christian Church cities civilization clergy commerce common conquest Constantinople council court crusades culture early East eastern ecclesiastical economic elected eleventh century emperor England English estates feudal fifteenth century forced fourteenth century France French Gaul Germany gradually greatest Greece Greek growth Guelfs Henry Holy Roman Empire ideas imperial important influence Italian Italy king kingdom land later Latin literature lord manor mediaeval mediaeval period Mediterranean ment merchants Middle Ages modern Mohammedans monarchy nobility nobles Norman organization papacy papal Parlement Parliament peace peasants Persian political pope reform reign religion religious Renaissance result Roman Empire Roman law Rome royal rule serfs Sicily social Spain struggle tenth century theory third estate thirteenth century tion towns trade tury twelfth century western Europe