The Cambridge Modern History, Volume 5The University Press, 1908 - History, Modern |
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Page vii
... century to the Peace of Carlowitz . Its significance for the Empire , Hungary , Poland , and the Venetian dominions continued till nearly the end of the period treated in this volume . The policy of Louis XIV drew no small advantage ...
... century to the Peace of Carlowitz . Its significance for the Empire , Hungary , Poland , and the Venetian dominions continued till nearly the end of the period treated in this volume . The policy of Louis XIV drew no small advantage ...
Page viii
... century was impossible without due regard to the moral and intellectual interests which this period inherited from its predecessors or bequeathed to ensuing ages . From the Reformation to the times of the Thirty Years ' War the ...
... century was impossible without due regard to the moral and intellectual interests which this period inherited from its predecessors or bequeathed to ensuing ages . From the Reformation to the times of the Thirty Years ' War the ...
Page xiii
Contents xiii CHAPTER III FRENCH SEVENTEENTH CENTURY LITERATURE AND ITS EUROPEAN INFLUENCE BY ÉMILE FAGUET , of the French Academy Representative character of French Seventeenth Century literature Montaigne , Descartes , and Malherbe ...
Contents xiii CHAPTER III FRENCH SEVENTEENTH CENTURY LITERATURE AND ITS EUROPEAN INFLUENCE BY ÉMILE FAGUET , of the French Academy Representative character of French Seventeenth Century literature Montaigne , Descartes , and Malherbe ...
Page xx
... century idea of Toleration Church and dissent under Tudors and Stewarts The Civil War • The drift towards Toleration The Restoration and the Cavalier Parliament 324 325 326 327 328 329 The Act of Uniformity 330 The contest under Charles ...
... century idea of Toleration Church and dissent under Tudors and Stewarts The Civil War • The drift towards Toleration The Restoration and the Cavalier Parliament 324 325 326 327 328 329 The Act of Uniformity 330 The contest under Charles ...
Page xxx
... centuries • Mathematical and Applied Science in the sixteenth century 706 707-8 Arithmetic . Introduction of logarithms and decimals Development of Algebra and Trigonometry Development of Geometry 708-9 709 710-1 Development of ...
... centuries • Mathematical and Applied Science in the sixteenth century 706 707-8 Arithmetic . Introduction of logarithms and decimals Development of Algebra and Trigonometry Development of Geometry 708-9 709 710-1 Development of ...
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Popular passages
Page 713 - that every particle of matter attracts every other particle, and suspected that the attraction varied as the product of their masses, and inversely as the square of the distance between them; but it is certain that he did not then know what the attraction of a spherical mass
Page 741 - would often say that he would renounce the religion of the Church of England to-morrow, if it obliged him to believe that any other Christian should be damned ; and that nobody would conclude another man to be damned who did not wish him so.
Page 104 - promised that no man should be " disquieted or called in question " for differences of opinion in matters of religion, which did not disturb the peace of the kingdom.
Page 337 - that it is not lawful on any pretence whatever to take arms against the King, and that I do abhor that traitorous position of taking arms by his authority against his person,
Page 226 - a joint resolution was voted that " there hath been and still is a damnable and hellish plot, contrived and carried on by popish recusants, for the assassinating and murdering the King and rooting out and destroying the Protestant religion.
Page 823 - A discourse of the Liberty of Prophesying, with its just limits and temper, shewing the unreasonableness of prescribing to other men's faith, and the iniquity of persecuting differing opinions. London.
Page 744 - being disgusted with the dry systematical way of those times, he studied to raise those who conversed with him to a nobler set of thoughts, and to consider religion as a seed of a deiform nature.
Page 177 - ever did so unaccountable a thing to oblige his people by, as to dissolve a Commission of the Admiralty then in his own hand, who best understands the business of the sea of any prince the world ever had, and things never better done, and put it into hands which he knew were wholly ignorant thereof, sporting
Page 213 - of 168 to 116 in favour of the resolution, " That Penal Statutes in matters ecclesiastical cannot be suspended but by act of Parliament,
Page iii - No enlightened American can desire a better thing for his country than the widest diffusion and the most thorough reading of Mr. Bryce's impartial and penetrating work." — Literary World. THE LIFE OF NAPOLEON I. INCLUDING NEW MATERIALS FROM THE BRITISH OFFICIAL RECORDS By JH ROSE, NLA. Author at " The Revolutionary and Napoleonic