Results for ' sixteenth century'

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  1. agassi, joseph and abraham meidan. Philosophy from a Skeptical Perspective. Cambridge Univer-sity Press, 2008, xv+ 163 pp., $80.00 cloth, $22.99 paper. [REVIEW]Sixteenth-Century Europe - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (2).
     
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  2. Sixteenth-Century Pharmacology and the Controversy between Reductionism and Emergentism.Andreas Blank - 2018 - Perspectives on Science 26 (2):157-184.
    Sixteenth century pharmacology was still very much under the influence of a distinction going back to ancient medicine: the distinction between effects of medicaments that were taken to be explainable by the elementary qualities, their mutual modification in mixture, and the combination of these modified elementary qualities on the one hand, and the effects of medicaments that were taken not to be explicable in this manner.1 Galen coined the expression that a medicament of the latter kind possesses the (...)
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  3.  12
    Sixteenth-Century Discussion on the Origin of the Intellective Soul and a Confessional Divide.Davide Cellamare - 2023 - Recherches de Theologie Et Philosophie Medievales 90 (1):173-213.
    This article studies sixteenth-century discussions on the origin of the soul and reappraises a confessional divide that scholarship has identified within these discussions. Historians have claimed that while Catholic and Calvinist authors defended the idea that individual human souls were created by God ex nihilo (creationism), Lutherans argued that human souls were propagated through the seed of the parents, ex traduce (traducianism). This study demonstrates that, while several Lutherans did defend traducianism, this opinion was not required by their (...)
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  4.  9
    Late Sixteenth-Century Chinese Buddhist Fellowship: Spiritual Ambitions, Intellectual Debates, and Epis- tolary Connections. By Jennifer Eichman.Beverly Foulks McGuire - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 137 (4):889.
    A Late Sixteenth-Century Chinese Buddhist Fellowship: Spiritual Ambitions, Intellectual Debates, and Epis- tolary Connections. By Jennifer Eichman. Sinica Leidensia, vol. 127. Boston: Brill, 2016. Pp. xvi + 422. €139, $180.
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  5.  13
    (1 other version)Routledge Companion to Sixteenth Century Philosophy.Henrik Lagerlund & Benjamin Hill (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Routledge.
    Sixteenth Century philosophy was a unique synthesis of several philosophical frameworks, a blend of old and new, including but not limited to scholasticism, humanism, Neo-Thomism, Aristotelianism, and Stoicism. It was a century that witnessed culturally and philosophically significant moments whose impact still is felt today—some examples include the emergence of Jesuits, the height of the witchcraze, the Protestant Reformation, the rise of philosophical skepticism, Pietro Pomponazzi’s controversial reexamination of traditional understandings of the soul’s mortality, and the deflation (...)
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  6.  27
    Sixteenth-Century Sentences Commentaries from Coimbra.Lidia Lanza & Marco Toste - 2018 - Studia Neoaristotelica 15 (2):217-284.
    In the second half of the sixteenth century, many universities influenced by Salamanca adopted the Summa theologiae as the textbook for teaching scholastic theology. At the same time, the universities decided that some minor chairs should teach one of the Sentences commentaries written by one of the following authors: Duns Scotus, Durand of Saint-Pourçain, or Gabriel Biel. As a result, some commentaries on these commentaries started to appear. This is most notably the case when it comes to the (...)
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  7.  41
    A Sixteenth-Century Meaning of the Escorial.George Kubler - 1981 - Diogenes 29 (113-114):229-248.
    A quest for meaning characterizes the thought of this century everywhere in humanistic studies, and it is a quest justified by exploring and mapping old and new terrains of which the resources are still uncertain. The Monastery of Escorial today raises so many questions about the traditional ideas with which we treat the history of art in the sixteenth century, that they are the subject of this paper. It is in four parts: the Escorial as Mannerism; as (...)
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  8. Early Sixteenth-Century Florentine Republicanism.Giovanni Silvano - 1990 - In Gisela Bock, Quentin Skinner & Maurizio Viroli (eds.), Machiavelli and republicanism. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 41--70.
  9.  94
    Realism and instrumentalism in sixteenth century astronomy: A reappraisal.Peter Barker & Bernard R. Goldstein - 1998 - Perspectives on Science 6 (3):232-258.
    : We question the claim, common since Duhem, that sixteenth century astronomy, and especially the Wittenberg interpretation of Copernicus, was instrumentalistic rather than realistic. We identify a previously unrecognized Wittenberg astronomer, Edo Hildericus (Hilderich von Varel), who presents a detailed exposition of Copernicus's cosmology that is incompatible with instrumentalism. Quotations from other sixteenth century astronomers show that knowledge of the real configuration of the heavens was unattainable practically, rather than in principle. Astronomy was limited to quia (...)
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  10.  17
    SixteenthCentury Discussions of the Passions of the Will.Simo Knuuttila - 2012 - In Martin Pickavé & Lisa Shapiro (eds.), Emotion and cognitive life in Medieval and early modern philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 116.
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  11.  14
    Late Sixteenth-Century Portuguese Manuscripts Relating to Galileo's Early Notebooks.William Wallace - 1995 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 51 (3/4):677 - 698.
  12. A Sixteenth Century Psychologist, Bernardino Telesio.J. L. Mcintyre - 1904 - Philosophical Review 13:373.
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  13.  20
    The Sixteenth century quest for a reformed Orthography: the Alphabet of Honorat Rambaud.Robert E. Bousquet - 1981 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 43 (3):545-566.
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  14.  24
    Ancients and moderns in sixteenth-century ethnography.Kathryn Taylor - 2020 - History of European Ideas 46 (2):113-130.
    The sixteenth-century reckoning with extra-European peoples and cultures occurred at precisely the same moment that humanists were increasingly preoccupied with the daily life, material culture, and lived religion of classical antiquity. Leading figures in sixteenth-century antiquarianism took an abiding interest in ethnographic accounts of contemporary peoples and even produced such accounts. This article examines how sixteenth-century readers and scholars placed bodies of literature on ancient and modern customs in dialogue with one another. While scholars (...)
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  15.  11
    ‘Rabbinising’ in sixteenth-century polemics.Avner Shamir - 2022 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 33 (1):3-18.
    ‘Rabbi’ is the title of Jewish scholars and teachers. Yet, in the sixteenth century, the word was sometimes employed in Christian discourse, when Christian scholars referred to their Christian peers as rabbis. How could non-Jews be called rabbis? This article explores the meaning of the term ‘rabbi’ in sixteenth-century intra-Christian polemics and discourse. It shows how the image of the ‘rabbi’, a figure of (negative) intellectual authority, penetrated the speech of Christian intellectuals and polemicists. It suggests (...)
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  16.  38
    A sixteenth-century illustrated treatise on comets.Jean-Michel Massing - 1977 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 40 (1):318-322.
  17.  20
    Learning anatomy in late sixteenth-century Padua.Michael Stolberg - 2018 - History of Science 56 (4):381-402.
    Based on the newly discovered, extensive manuscript notes of a virtually unknown German medical student by the name of Johann Konrad Zinn, who studied in Padua from 1593 to 1595, this paper offers a detailed account of what medical students could expect to learn about anatomy in late sixteenth-century Padua. It highlights the large number and wide range of anatomical demonstrations, most of which were private anatomies for a small circle of students and do not figure in Acta (...)
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  18.  31
    Rethinking Sixteenth-Century ‘Lutheran Astronomy’.Gábor Almási - 2014 - Intellectual History Review 24 (1):5-20.
    Narratives about the peaceful and fruitful relationship of religion and science in early-modern times have long since replaced the nineteenth-century vision of the ‘warfare of science with theology...
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  19.  30
    Sixteenth century Europe: Expansion and conflict.John E. Weakland - 1995 - History of European Ideas 21 (6):789-790.
  20.  46
    French sixteenth century genre paintings.Jean Adhémar - 1945 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 8 (1):191-195.
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  21.  35
    A Sixteenth-Century Gloss on the Roman de la rose.Maxwell Luria - 1982 - Mediaeval Studies 44 (1):333-370.
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  22.  33
    SixteenthCentury English Geographers: Earth Scientists as an 'Organic Intelligentsia'.Jim MacLaughlin - 1999 - The European Legacy 4 (2):69-73.
    Charting an Empire: Geography at the English Universities, 1580?1620. By Lesley B. Cormack (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1997) xvi+281 pp. $68.00/£54.50 cloth, $23.95/£19.25 paper.
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  23.  29
    Kingship and Conversion in Sixteenth-Century Sri Lanka: Portuguese Imperialism in a Buddhist Land (review).Terry C. Muck - 2010 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 30:221-225.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Kingship and Conversion in Sixteenth-Century Sri Lanka: Portuguese Imperialism in a Buddhist LandTerry C. MuckKingship and Conversion in Sixteenth-Century Sri Lanka: Portuguese Imperialism in a Buddhist Land. By Alan Strathern. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2007. 304 pp.Buddhist-Christian relationships in Southeast Asian countries have a history that goes back to colonizations of the Portuguese, Dutch, British, and French beginning in the sixteenth (...). By studying the story of those early occupations, one can predict with some accuracy the nature of the relationships between Buddhists and Christians today.In Kingship and Conversion in Sixteenth-Century Sri Lanka, Alan Strathern, research fellow in history at Clare Hall, Cambridge, unearths a piece of the story that helps us understand the antipathy that exists today between Buddhists and Christians in Sri Lanka. As the title indicates, it is a book with a small thesis, limited geographical scope, and of short temporal duration. That is, it is a scholarly book that examines why a Christian monarchy was never established in sixteenth century coastal Sri Lanka during the one hundred years of colonial presence and rule of the maritime regions (ca. 1600–1658) by Roman Catholic Portugal.Strathern breaks new ground by delving into letters written by Portuguese churchmen, which have not previously been used in histories of this period. He ignores neither traditional Buddhist sources (the vaṃsa tradition in Sri Lanka) nor traditional Christian sources (principally Portuguese Jesuit Fernao de Queiros’s The Temporal and [End Page 221] Spiritual Conquest of Ceylon). And he is candid about his debt to the “presiding scholar” of the Portuguese period in Sri Lanka, C.R. de Silva, and also the “other expert in the field,” Jorge Manuel Flores. But the heretofore unused Portuguese letters provide the other side of the conversation that helps explain much.Strathern’s broader periodization begins with the Portuguese’s first incursions into Sri Lanka in 1505 and ends with the collapse of the Portuguese rule in the coastal regions to the Dutch in 1658. But his real focus is on the reign of the most important Sri Lankan monarch during this period, King Bhuvanekabāhu VII, who reigned from 1521 to 1551. It was King Bhuvanekabāhu’s policies regarding the Portuguese and particularly his welcoming of Christian missionaries that have created such controversy among historians of this period, both Sinhalese and Portuguese (and other Western historians). For some, Bhuvanekabāhu was weak and vacillating, for others strong and consistent. For some Bhuvanekabāhu was a captive, powerless vassal, for others a ruler of agency and foresight, making decisions that were the very best he could do given the overwhelming might of the Portuguese navy.Strathern’s conclusion, finely argued and carefully nuanced, is that Bhuvanekabāhu should be given more credit that he is usually given for wise kingship. But the pointed question that Strathern decides is key to the role Bhuvanekabāhu plays is his decision not to convert to Christianity, at an important period in Southeast Asian history when “conversion” to Christianity had become more than a religious decision—it had become a political and economic strategy of some weight, a decision that many other rulers of this period in south India and elsewhere were making as a matter of expedience. Why, asks Strathern, did Bhuvanekabāhu not make the same decision?The answer comes in three explorations that form the three parts of the book. The first is an exploration of the question of kingship in South and Southeast Asia during this period, specifically the role that kings conquered by colonial powers played. Strathern calls this the Temporal Question. The second is an exploration of what happened to these political dynamics when Christian missionaries are thrown in the mix. Strathern calls this the Spiritual Question. Third is an exploration of the overall effect on these two factors on the colonial powers, indigenous nationhoods, and the two religious institutions, Buddhism and Christianity.The TemporalThe sixteenth century in Sri Lanka was a time of unavoidable political alliances. The irresistible power of the colonizing power in Sri Lanka, beginning with Portuguese in 1505, meant that one could either fight to the death... (shrink)
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  24.  26
    A sixteenth-century war of ideas: Science against the church.Ronald A. Sarno - 1969 - Annals of Science 25 (3):209-227.
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  25.  20
    Sixteenth-Century French Arithmetics on the Business Life.Natalie Zemon Davis - 1960 - Journal of the History of Ideas 21 (1/4):18.
  26.  52
    Special Providence and Sixteenth-Century Astronomical Observation: Some Preliminary Reflections.Charlotte Methuen - 1999 - Early Science and Medicine 4 (2):99-113.
    This paper considers the role of the doctrine of providence, and particularly the distinction between general and special providence, in the interpretation of astronomical observations in the sixteenth century, with particular reference to the discussion of the 1572 nova by Lutheran astronomers. It suggests that the essential difference between the events of special providence and those of general providence could be used to legitimate observations which contradicted accepted Aristotelian physics. The decision that the underlying explanatory system must be (...)
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  27.  20
    Two Sixteenth-Century Coimbra Commentaries on 'De anima': Pedro da Fonseca (attr.) and Cristóvão Gil. 'On the Soul' and 'On the Immortality of the Soul'.Paula Oliveira E. Silva - 2023 - Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 29 (2):73-90.
    This paper analyses the questions on the science of the soul and on the immortality of the soul in two commentaries on Aristotle’s De anima that subsist in the manuscripts of the teaching of philosophy in Coimbra in the sixteenth-century. The paper shows that the positions of the two commentators – Petrus Fonsecae (attr.) and Christophorus Gilli – are in total opposition, concerning either the commentary tradition on Aristotle’s De anima or the theories on the soul they assume. (...)
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  28.  20
    Sixteenth-Century Prognostications: Libri Impressi cum Notis Manuscriptis--Part II.Curt F. Buhler - 1942 - Isis 33 (5):609-620.
  29.  24
    A Sixteenth-century Neoplatonic Synthesis: Francesco Piccolomini's theory of mathematics and imagination in the Academicae contemplationes.Guy6 Claessens - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Science 47 (3):421-431.
    The metamathematical framework of the early modern period is primarily determined by two presuppositions stemming from the Aristotelian tradition: mathematical objects are abstracted from sensible matter; imagination is a reproductive faculty exclusively connected with the sensible realm. The recovery of the works of the Greek commentators confronted the early modern readers with rivalling philosophical–mathematical views that explicitly called into question some of their previously undisputed assumptions. In this article I will argue that Francesco Piccolomini in his Academicae contemplationes brings about (...)
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  30.  30
    Sixteenth-century metalworking technology used in the manufacture of two German astrolabes.Robert B. Gordon - 1987 - Annals of Science 44 (1):71-84.
    An examination of tool marks and other evidence of manufacturing techniques on two astrolabes of identical pattern made by Hartman of Nuremberg in 1537 shows that all of the parts have been laid out with scribers and filed to final dimensions. All parts except the rings of the maters, which are castings, are made of sheet brass. The only machine tool employed was a small lathe with longitudinal feed, which was used to turn the diameters of the pins. Corresponding dimensions (...)
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  31.  14
    Politics and "politiques" in sixteenth-century France: a conceptual history.Emma Claussen - 2021 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    This book asks how people understood the concept of politics in sixteenth-century France, and how those who practised it were characterised. Both concept and practitioners were referred to by the same word, politique. I trace written uses of this word as a means of studying shifts in the meaning of the concept and the figure. As much as this is a conceptual history, therefore, it is a textual, and indeed, a literary one. Part of the book's argument is (...)
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  32.  12
    Jean Bodin and the sixteenth-century revolution in the methodology of law and history.Julian H. Franklin - 1977 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    Professor Franklin shows how the humanist approach of Jean Bodin and other French jurists of the 16th century led to a break, at least in principle, with the intellectual authority of Roman law and to the attempt to reconstruct juristic science through a comparison and synthesis of all the juridical experience of the most famous states.
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  33.  10
    Sixteenth-Century Dissemination of the Coconut Palm.H. Harries - 1977 - Isis 68 (4):605-606.
  34.  39
    Theology of Nature in Sixteenth-Century Italian Jewish Philosophy.Hava Tirosh-Samuelson - 1997 - Science in Context 10 (4):529-570.
    The ArgumentThis paper focuses on several Italian Jewish philosophers in the second half of the sixteenth century and the first third of the seventeenth century. It argues that their writings share a certain theology of nature. Because of it, the interest of Jews in the study of nature was not a proto-scientific but a hermeneutical activity based on the essential correspondence between God, Torah, and Israel. While the theology of nature analyzed in the paper did not prevent (...)
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  35.  32
    Sixteenth-Century Patterns of Art Patronage: Qiu Ying and the Xiang Family.Ellen Johnston Laing - 1991 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 111 (1):1-7.
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  36.  15
    Humanism and Medicine in SixteenthCentury Aberdeen.Karen Jillings - 2008 - Intellectual History Review 18 (1):31-40.
    (2008). Humanism and Medicine in SixteenthCentury Aberdeen. Intellectual History Review: Vol. 18, Humanism and Medicine in the Early Modern Era, pp. 31-40.
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  37.  54
    Grotius, Necessity and the Sixteenth-Century Scholastic Tradition.Bart Wauters - 2017 - Grotiana 38 (1):129-147.
    _ Source: _Volume 38, Issue 1, pp 129 - 147 The essay investigates elements of sixteenth-century scholastic thought that have played a role in Grotius’s doctrine of necessity: the nature of the rights of the person in extreme need; the relation of the right of necessity to self-preservation; the compact that lies at the origin of property rights; and finally the obligation of restitution once the emergency is over. Grotius did not develop the doctrine of necessity as an (...)
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  38.  32
    Early Sixteenth-Century Stained Glass at St. Michael-le-Belfrey and the Commemoration of Thomas Becket in Late Medieval York.Rachel Koopmans - 2014 - Speculum 89 (4):1040-1100.
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  39.  25
    A sixteenth-century manifesto for social mobility or the body politic metaphor in mutation.Nicole Hochner - 2012 - History of Political Thought 33 (4):607-626.
    During the fifteenth century the organic body politic metaphor was gradually associated or superseded by a physiological paradigm built on the ancient humoral theory. The new body politic, based on humours rather than on organs, eventually became a dynamic and fluid entity. Authors such as Nicole Oresme or Jean Gerson alleged that the etiology of humoral imbalance had its origins in growing social inequalities; Claude de Seyssel subsequently urged that the cure to restore the humoral balance should focus on (...)
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  40. Dante across the sixteenth century: The'De vulgari eloquenta'and the question of language.E. Pistolesi - 2000 - Rinascimento 40:269-296.
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  41.  41
    The “Calculatores” in Early Sixteenth-century Physics.William A. Wallace - 1969 - British Journal for the History of Science 4 (3):221-232.
    The aim of this paper is to report some little-known aspects of sixteenth-century physics as these relate to the development of mechanics in the seventeenth century. The research herein reported grew out of a study on the mechanics of Domingo de Soto, a sixteenth-century Spanish scholastic,1 which has been concerned, in part, with examining critically Pierre Duhem's thesis that the English “Calculatores” of the fourteenth century were a primary source for Galileo's science.2 The conclusion (...)
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  42.  13
    Fifteenth and Sixteenth-Century Editions of the Légende Dorée.Brenda Dunn-Lardeau & Dominique Coq - 1985 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 47 (1):87-101.
  43.  32
    A Recently Discovered Sixteenth-Century Spanish Astrolabe.Roberto Moreno, Koenraad Van Cleempoel & David King - 2002 - Annals of Science 59 (4):331-362.
    Astrolabes serving all latitudes are very rare. This recently rediscovered sixteenth-century Spanish example raises a host of questions which can only be addressed by considering all other such instruments and the few available textual sources. The instruments can all be traced back, not always directly, to an invention of the eleventh-century Andalusian astronomer Ali ibn Khalaf, preserved in the Old Castillian Libros del Saber de Astronomía of King Alfonso X. The design of this particular astrolabe and the (...)
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  44. Mapmakers of the Sixteenth Century and their Maps.R. W. Karrow Jr & G. L'E. Turner - 1995 - Annals of Science 52 (1):101.
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  45. The Reformation of the Sixteenth Century.ROLAND H. BAINTON - 1956
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  46. Classics, In Sixteenth Century France, The.James Hutton - 1949 - Classical Weekly 43:131.
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  47. Painting in Sixteenth-Century Venice: Titian, Veronese, Tintoretto. By David Rosand.W. Andersen - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (3):439-440.
     
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  48.  41
    An Assessment of the Role of Gregorio de Céspedes, S.J. during the Imjin War in the Late Sixteenth Century: Church and State Collaboration in the Spanish Colonization.Seung Ho Bang - 2015 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 14 (40):186-206.
    When the Japanese invaded Joseon at the end of the sixteenth century, a Spanish Jesuit priest, Gregorio de Céspedes, S.J. , stayed in the Japanese fortress in Ungcheon with Japanese soldiers. While Céspedes is celebrated as the first European who allegedly came with an evangelical vision of proselytizing the native Koreans, previous scholarship has inadequately acknowledged Céspedes’ role without consideration of his concrete actions in the Japanese fortress and of the broader context of sixteenthcentury Spanish colonial (...)
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  49. An Early Sixteenth-century Art Poétique, By Guillaume Télin.J. E. Clark - 1969 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 31 (1):129-137.
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  50.  35
    Scotist Metaphysics in Mid-Sixteenth Century Padua Giacomino Malafossa from Barge’s A Question on the Subject of Metaphysics.Claus A. Andersen - 2020 - Studia Neoaristotelica 17 (1):69-107.
    For more than four decades around the middle of the sixteenth century, Giacomino Malafossa from Barge held the Scotist chair of metaphysics at the University of Padua. In his A Question on the Subject of Metaphysics, in Which Is Included the Question, Whether Metaphysics Is a Science, he developed a remarkable stance on the subject matter of metaphysics. Metaphysics has two objects: being qua being and God. However, only when it deals with the latter object can it be (...)
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