The Classical Tradition: Greek and Roman Influences on Western LiteratureOxford University Press, 1949 - 763 Seiten |
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... political sense . Even after the Roman empire dissolved and barbarian kingdoms succeeded it , the western church retained Roman law for its own use . This is clearly laid down in an early Germanic law of the sixth century , and although ...
... political sense . Even after the Roman empire dissolved and barbarian kingdoms succeeded it , the western church retained Roman law for its own use . This is clearly laid down in an early Germanic law of the sixth century , and although ...
Seite 326
... political implications . Since Ciceronian style was that of the church , of the universities , of the Jesuits , of the foreign offices , and of orthodoxy generally , this Senecan and Tacitean manner was associated with unorthodoxy and ...
... political implications . Since Ciceronian style was that of the church , of the universities , of the Jesuits , of the foreign offices , and of orthodoxy generally , this Senecan and Tacitean manner was associated with unorthodoxy and ...
Seite 397
... political oratory in France , so that there were no French patterns to follow . Besides , as the great orator of an endangered republic , Cicero made the ideal model . In Britain there was a long tradition of noble political rhetoric ...
... political oratory in France , so that there were no French patterns to follow . Besides , as the great orator of an endangered republic , Cicero made the ideal model . In Britain there was a long tradition of noble political rhetoric ...
Inhalt
ITALY | 5 |
Christianity enriched by GrecoRoman folklore | 9 |
physical | 11 |
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