A History of Western Civilization ...Prentice-Hall, Incorporated, 1939 |
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... learning in the West can be traced to the crusades has been thoroughly disproved . No philo- sophical ideas of importance and no medical learning was adopted by the men who went to the Holy Land . No knowl- edge of Greek or eastern ...
... learning in the West can be traced to the crusades has been thoroughly disproved . No philo- sophical ideas of importance and no medical learning was adopted by the men who went to the Holy Land . No knowl- edge of Greek or eastern ...
Trang 583
... learning and condemning the ideas contained in pagan books . Even had the desire for learning not diminished after the decline of the Roman Empire , men would have had little leisure because of the constant labor required to secure ...
... learning and condemning the ideas contained in pagan books . Even had the desire for learning not diminished after the decline of the Roman Empire , men would have had little leisure because of the constant labor required to secure ...
Trang 585
... LEARNING DECLINES EXCEPT IN GERMANY The misery , poverty , and political anarchy that followed the disintegration of the Carolingian Empire were made worse by the pillaging expeditions of the Vikings and the attacks of Saracens and ...
... LEARNING DECLINES EXCEPT IN GERMANY The misery , poverty , and political anarchy that followed the disintegration of the Carolingian Empire were made worse by the pillaging expeditions of the Vikings and the attacks of Saracens and ...
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GROWTH OF IDEALS OF LIBERTY | 1 |
Pisistratus | 23 |
The Athenian Empire | 29 |
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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