Jean Baptiste Racine - BlueRider.com Jean Baptiste Racine listen domain availability French advocate ofJansenism; tragedian who based his works on Greek and Roman themes (1639-1699) http://jean_baptiste_racine.bluerider.com/wordsearch/jean_baptiste_racine
Molière -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article JeanBaptiste Poquelin, better known as Molière (January 15, tragedian whobased his works on Greek and Roman themes (1639-1699)) Jean Racine. http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/m/mo/molière.htm
Extractions: Jean-Baptiste Poquelin , better known as Molière (A building where theatrical performances or motion-picture shows can be presented) theatre writer, (Someone who supervises the actors and directs the action in the production of a show) director and (A theatrical performer) actor , one of the masters of (A professional performer who tells jokes and performs comical acts) comic (Witty language used to convey insults or scorn) satire The son of a (A resident of Paris) Parisian artisan, Poquelin lost his mother when still a child and entered the prestigious (A member of the Jesuit order) Jesuits (Click link for more info and facts about Collège de Clermont) Collège de Clermont , to complete his studies. There are many stories about his time at the college: It is said that his father was very demanding of him, that he met the prince of Conti, or that he was a pupil of the philosopher (Click link for more info and facts about Pierre Gassendi) Pierre Gassendi , but none of these seem to have any foundation.
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Europe Online Book Catalog Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... In Depth Information New Search Help on this page Data Creator Racine, Jean Baptiste (1639-1699) Editor Spiers, I.H.B. Title Esther EText-No. Release Date No Base Directory Read this eBook online (experimental feature) Download this eBook Edition Format Encoding Compression Size Download Links Plain text iso-8859-1 none 197 KB rastko.net Plain text iso-8859-1 zip 76 KB rastko.net If you are located outside of the U.S. you may want to download from a mirror site located near you to improve performance. Select a mirror site. If you need a special character set, try our new recode facility (experimental) Most recently updated: 2004-12-19 17:39:39.
Extractions: Fame is fleeting indeed, or sometimes just costly: When this page was originally created, one or more links for each of the playwrights listed here were active. They have now "fled" fron the Internet, moved without leaving a forwarding address, moved to a site where a charge is made to read them, or simple disappeared altogether.It is beyond my available time to search the web continually for new references, and in any event, search engines like Google, which can produce an array of current links in an instant, are probably making lists like this one obsolete. However, should any visitor to this page know of links which should be included here, kindly email me and I will add it.. Thanks. DBM
Spectacles Du Grand Siècle Translate this page Racine, Jean (1639-1699)(Acad. fr., 1673) Poète admiré, Racine ne fut Raisin,Jean-Baptiste (dit le cadet). (1656-1693) Acteur dans la troupe du Dauphin http://www.georgetown.edu/organizations/opsis/auteurs/frauteursR.htm
MSN Encarta - Racine, Jean-Baptiste Racine, JeanBaptiste (1639-1699), French dramatist, considered the greatestwriter of French classical tragedy. Related Items. -, Comédie-Française http://uk.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761569177/Racine_Jean-Baptiste.html
MSN Encarta - Search Results - Racine Jean-Baptiste Racine, JeanBaptiste (1639-1699), French dramatist, considered the greatestwriter MSN Encarta Premium. Get more results for Racine Jean-Baptiste http://uk.encarta.msn.com/Racine_Jean-Baptiste.html
Extractions: fdbkURL="/encnet/refpages/search.aspx?q=Racine+Jean-Baptiste#bottom"; errmsg1="Please select a rating."; errmsg2="Please select a reason for your rating."; MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Search ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta Exclusively for MSN Encarta Premium Subscribers Join Now Searched Encarta for ' Racine Jean-Baptiste' Articles Racine, Jean-Baptiste Racine, Jean-Baptiste (1639-1699), French dramatist, considered the greatest writer of French classical tragedy. ... French writers of the 17th century, however, carefully observed the dictates of Aristotle and his Renaissance interpreters, in part at the wishes of... See all search results in Articles (141) Multimedia Jean-Baptiste Racine Jean Baptiste Perrin Jean-Baptiste Colbert ... Jean-Baptiste Dumas See all search results in Multimedia (48) Maps Racine Lac St-Jean See all search results in Maps (3) MSN Encarta Premium Get more results for "Racine Jean-Baptiste" 60 results on MSN Encarta 192 results on MSN Encarta Premium Click here to join today!
French For Sinologues | Mots Français (17c) Jean Racine (16391699) We may usefully regard the theater as a pretext, a pretextin tableau form, Molière (Jean Baptiste Poquelin, 1622-1673) http://www.umass.edu/wsp/french/mots/17c.html
Extractions: Here is something new under the sun; something manmade. Descartes' immortal invention, analytic geometry, confers the power to convert back and forth from algebra to geometry, giving two faces from which difficult problems may be approached. Like Villon, Descartes was also concerned with ultimate questions of existence: to what undeniable minimum can life and its perplexities be reduced? Here is the French version of what he hoped was a fundamental and undeniable assertion (usually quoted in the parallel Latin form cogito ergo sum Je pense, donc je suis I think, therefore I am It's nice, but a skeptic might argue that by the same test we could equally prove the non existence of a granite boulder. From the same work, a more mundane and in the end perhaps more useful thought, with a telling shift from adjective bon to adverb bien Ce n'est pas assez d'avoir l'esprit bon, mais le principal est de l'appliquer bien
Unit 10 Timeline 16061667 Life of Rembrandt van Rijn. 1619-1683 Life of Jean-Baptiste Colbert.1622-1673 Life of Molière. 1639-1699 Life of Jean Racine. http://college.hmco.com/history/west/mosaic/timelines/unit10_period1630.html
Unit 10 Timeline 16191683 Life of Jean-Baptiste Colbert. 1639-1699 Life of Jean Racine.1640-1688 Reign of Frederick William, the Great Elector, of Prussia http://college.hmco.com/history/west/mosaic/timelines/unit10_period1680.html
WHKMLA : History Of France, Intellectual Life 1661-1715 portraied a caricature of the influential, yet unpopular JeanBaptiste Colbert.Other celebrated writers of the time include Jean Racine (1639-1699), http://www.zum.de/whkmla/region/france/france16611715int.html
Extractions: Louis XIV., by moving the court from Paris to VERSAILLES, ostensibly established a new cult and cultural tradition, focussing on the person of the king. The palace of Versailles, constructed between 1661 and 1668 by architect LOUIS LE VAU, was admired and imitated by monarchs all over Europe. The palace had 200 rooms (no toilets) and a large garden, where trees and bushes were cut to form precise geometric shapes. In 1700, around 10,000 men lived in the palace respectively adjacent facilities. Portraits, particularly of the monarch and other high standing persons, were the typical objects of painters. Architects built palaces, opera houses, theatres to facilitate the court life; operas were commissioned by the king or persons at the court; a rich court culture or official culture developed.
Adler And Van Doren. How To Read A Book Thoughts Concerning Education; Jean Baptiste Racine (16391699) Tragedies (esp.Andromache, Phaedra); Isaac Newton (1642-1727) http://www.interleaves.org/~rteeter/grtadler.html
Extractions: by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren For more on Adler's ideas about the Great Books, see his essay, "Why Read the Great Books" See the heading above and the credit below to find out who wrote this list. If you don't like the selections in this list or the arrangement, take it up with the author(s). This list may not include your favorite author, but he or she may be on other Great Books lists. Check the author index to see. See the Great Books FAQ for more about the Great Books and these lists of them. Homer (9th Century B.C.?)
Music History Resources Jean Racine (16391699) 3. Tragedie lyrique a. Blend of ballet and drama 4.Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632-1687) a. First important composer of French opera b. http://www.geocities.com/papandrew/outlines/grout10.html
Reading Rat 1601-1700 JeanBaptiste Racine (1639-1699); Criticism Rexroth Andromache (1668)Phaedra (1677) Britannicus Athaliah; P U Sung-ling (1640-1715); Criticism Ward http://terrenceberres.com/read1601.html
Extractions: John MILTON Oakes CCEL Creamer IMHS ... Muir To the Lord Generall Cromwell (May 1632) L'Allegro Il'Penseroso Areopagitica subtitled A Speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicenc'd Printing, in the Parliament of England Paradise Lost CCEL Adler, et al. [I]t is because he understood that people live each day within a variety of value systems that he could write a great poem about how two people could allow appetite, seemingly rational argument and love to lead them to disobey a divine command. The Economist Lycidas On the Morning of Christ's Nativity Sonnets Samson Agonistes Paradise Regained Comus Apology for Smectymnus Arcades At a Solemn Musick Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce Of Education On Shakespeare On Time The Ready and Easy Way The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates When I consider how my life is spent
Notre Dame Archives Index DML001 UDML 1/01 Subject Racine, Jean, 16391699. UDML 1/02 Author Millett, Robert M . UDML 1/06 Subject David, Jean Baptiste Mary, 1761-1841. http://archives.nd.edu/findaids/ead/index/DML001.htm
Scapin Play Notes JeanBaptiste Poquelin was the oldest son of a prosperous upholsterer in Paris and The man who most directly ties PHÈDRE author Racine (1639-1699) and http://www.courttheatre.org/home/plays/0203/scapin/playnotes.shtml
Extractions: Play Notes Welcome to Playnotes Online - the research web resource of Court Theatre. Playnotes includes a distilled version of the rich investigative process involved in every Court production. They are, in essence, the "greatest hits" of our research into the context, history, critical thinking and development process that fuels our work. At this time, Naples was a big international port. Like Marseilles or New York or New Orleans or Miami or Havana (pre-Castro) port cities are all uniquely dangerous and threatening, while also being diverse and exciting. Because there is little control of who lives there, and itinerants move freely, the possibility of gangs and violence is right around the corner. So Scapin is again weaving excellent lies based on a probable reality. Jean-Baptiste Poquelin was the oldest son of a prosperous upholsterer in Paris and grew up as part of the rising bourgeoisie. His bourgeoisie roots and childhood would appear to great comic effect in many of his mature plays. When Jean-Baptiste was nine, his father purchased a post as an upholsterer to King Louis XIII, which provided an annual pension and the high social honors gained from royal service.
Untitled 1677 Jean Baptiste Racine, playright (16391699), PhËdre. 1678 Vivaldi is bornin Venice. HYPERLINK http//home.kc.rr.com/vivaldi/VIVtimeline.htm http://www.augie.edu/lil'Elvis/musi.html
ADLER AND VAN DOREN'S READING LIST Jean Baptiste Racine (16391699), Tragedies (Andromache, Phaedra). IsaacNewton (1642-1727), Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy, Optics. http://home.comcast.net/~dwtaylor1/adler.html
Extractions: READING LIST In their How to Read a Book (1940, 1972), Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren append "A Recommended Reading List." They write: "On the following pages appears a list of books that it would be worth your while to read. We mean the phrase 'worth your while' quite seriously. Although not all of the books listed are 'great' in any of the commonly accepted meanings of the term, all of them will reward you for the effort you make to read them. All of these books are over most people's heads - sufficiently so, at any rate, to force most readers to stretch their minds to understand and appreciate them. And that, of course, is the kind of book you should seek out if you want to improve your reading skills, and at the same time discover the best that has been thought and said in our literary tradition." In some instances where a general title for an author is cited, e.g. Works, Tragedies, the particular titles recommended by the authors are shown in parentheses.