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         Renaissance Art:     more books (100)
  1. History of Italian Renaissance Art 6th Ed: Sixth Edition by David G. Wilkins, David Wilkins, 2006-10-19
  2. Northern Renaissance Art by James Snyder, Larry Silver, et all 2004-09-12
  3. Italian Renaissance Art by Laurie Schneider Adams, 2001-02
  4. Renaissance Art Reconsidered: An Anthology of Primary Sources
  5. Art in Renaissance Italy: 1350-1500 (Oxford History of Art) by Evelyn Welch, 2001-05-17
  6. Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America by Mary Schmidt Campbell, 1994-02-01
  7. Art in Renaissance Italy by John T. Paolettii, Gary M. Radke, 2005-08
  8. Making Renaissance Art (Renaissance Art Reconsidered Open University)
  9. Art and Life in Renaissance Venice (Reissue) by Patricia Fortini Brown, 2005-03-20
  10. The Virtue and Magnificence: Art of the Italian Renaissance (Abrams Perspectives) by Alison Cole, 1995-03-01
  11. Art of Renaissance Rome 1400-1600, The by Loren Partridge, 1996-10-04
  12. High Renaissance Art in St. Peter's and the Vatican: An Interpretive Guide by George L. Hersey, 1993-07-01
  13. Renaissance Siena: Art for a City (National Gallery Company) by Luke Syson, Alessandro Angelini, et all 2008-01-04
  14. The Moment of Self-Portraiture in German Renaissance Art by Joseph Leo Koerner, 1997-02-15

181. Musée Toulouse - Fondation Bemberg Location De Salle Toulouse
Abrite des collections de peinture de la renaissance et de l'©cole fran§aise moderne. Toulouse, HauteGaronne, Midi-Pyr©n©es, France.
http://www.fondation-bemberg.fr/
Fondation Bemberg
31000 TOULOUSE
E-mail : accueil@fondation-bemberg.fr
x

182. The Grand Duchy Of Cronallis
Reenactment society recreates life in the renaissance period with feasts, fencing, guilds and Court. Newsletter, contact information, events schedule.
http://kingdomcorinthia.tripod.com
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The Grand Duchy of Cronallis

183. Early Music Directory UK
Early Music News UK events listings, concerts, festivals for Baroque, Choral, renaissance, and early music generally
http://www.earlymusic.org.uk/
hold mouse here for: Performer's Directory hold mouse here for: Promoter's Directory Introduction We hope that we can continue to make it as easy as possible to enable you to book musicians, and I take this opportunity to remind you that this Directory is also available in paper format by calling me on 0208 743 0302. When booking it is useful if you inform the artists or agents that you have found them in this Directory. Glyn Russ
Administrator, The Early Music Network Home Page Contact us Links FAQs Play Music Search The Early Music Directory using the Google search engine below:
To search for a specific group or person enter their name eg. The York Waits
To search for a type of music enter eg. baroque , or medieval
Or carry out a general search for a composer eg. Bach , or a place eg. Warwick
Or try combinations of words to tighten up your search eg Bach Warwick , or London , or North East

The Early Music Directory Home Page A to B C to Col Com to D ... other EM promoters

184. For Sale Deluxe Unique High Quality Halloween Costumes, Renaissance Costumes And
Products include Halloween and renaissance costumes and accessories.
http://costumesbypartyprops.com/
Costumes by Party Props has a large selection of deluxe, unique, and high quality Halloween costumes, Renaissance costumes, plus any costume you may need thru out the year. SHIPPING IS FREE! minimum order for free shipping is $25.00 and WITHIN THE UNITED STATES using priority mail (call or email the professionals, advice is free COSTUMES MAKE-UP WIGS HATS ... SPECIAL LINKS Costumes by Party Props also carries a nice selection of the popular at home party game call How to Host a Murder For a list of titles please call (562) 987-1505. Costumes by Party Props 5114 E. 2nd. Street (Belmont Shore) Long Beach, California 90803 Call (562) 987-1505 EMAIL: Party.props@verizon.net

185. Renaissance
A listing of the most important woman thinkers of the period. From Historical Women of Philosophy.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/9974/ren.html
Women Philosophers
of the
Renaissance
Catherine of Siena Home Introduction Ancient Women The Middle Ages · The Renaissance · Bibliography Links to More Women of Interest
Birgitta of Sweden Birgitta of Sweden lived during the 14th century. Birgitta, a mystic who did not withdraw herself from social and political activities, addressed some of the most significant philosophical, theological, and political issues of her day. Furthermore, she used her personal fortune to benefit the indigent, and she personally founded hospitals and a double monastery. Julian of Norwich Julian of Norwich was born in late 1342, and may have died around 1412. Known as "the first English woman of Letters," she is considered by some as, "more metaphysical than other English mystics." Julian’s real name is not known. At some point in her life she became an anchoress a vowed solitary who lived a life devoted to prayer and meditation confined to a cell adjoining the church of St. Julian in Norwich; from this came her pseudonym. Virtually nothing is known about her aside from what she writes and she reveals little about herself, preferring instead to talk only about God. In May 1373, at the age of 30, Julian became deathly ill, and while on her supposed deathbed she received sixteen visions in which God's love was revealed to her. Following her recovery from her illness, she wrote two books about her experience: a short text presumably written not long after the experience, and a longer text, written twenty years later, which reveals the maturing of her deeply reflective mind. Julian is best known for her optimism ("All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well"), and for her repeated insistence of naming both God and Christ as "mother."

186. Renaissance Wedding Ceremonies
Describes wedding traditions, marriage laws, and ceremonies during the renaissance, with commentary on social relations and romantic love and the evolution of modern Western customs from those of the Middle Ages.
http://www.renaissance-weddings.net/
Renaissance Wedding Ceremonies
Renaissance bridal customs originated during the Middle Ages. Wedding customs and fashions developed as increased foreign trade brought new ideas to Europe from far away places. Renaissance marriages were often held at the bride's house. Couples belonging to the nobility would have their weddings in medieval castles.
During the later Middle Ages, the Catholic Church dominated culture and as a consequence, Renaissance wedding ceremonies were most likely to take place in a chapel or at the church door. Renaissance marriage ceremonies and celebrations depended largely on the social class of the bride and groom. Inheritance and property rights were usually two reasons why marriages were often arranged. Agreements or contracts were drawn up describing the rights of both the bride and groom. Often a title of nobility together with land ownership was conveyed with the nuptials.

187. INDEX
UK based company directed by Madeleine Inglehearn. Information about baroque and renaissance dance classes, hiring the company, and their publications.
http://www.geocities.com/companieofdansers/
THE COMPANIE OF DANSERS
Welcome to the Companie of Dansers website, please use the following menu to explore the site. About the Companie of Dansers Example dance programmes Publications Price list ... Contact us
If you have any comments about this website send them to aminglehearn@yahoo.co.uk
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188. HOASM: The Early Renaissance (1350-1500)
Summary of the period linked to biographies of composers from the period from the Here Of A Sunday Morning radio program.
http://www.hoasm.org/PeriodIII.html
III. The Early Renaissance (1350-1500)
Only a little later than the rise of the Ars Nova , but probably independently, a secular musical art of great vitality arose in Upper and Central Italy, linked with the growth of a vernacular literature, which had its centre in the Florence of Dante and his successors. The leading figure of this period was Francesco Landini (died 1397) who was a poet as well as a composer. This Italian style was imitated in Germany by Oswald von Wolkenstein , 'the last of the Minnesingers,' who had visited Italy in the entourage of King Rupert in 1401. In Germany, where the chief interest was given to polyphonic settings of folksongs, the Mastersingers flourished as a bourgeois echo of the Minnesingers. In England a further development of the Florentine style led to a climax in the group of composers centred around John Dunstable (died 1453). After them came the Netherlander or Burgundian masters, who dominated European music for several generations. The two leading composers, among the first two generations of these Netherlanders were Guillaume Dufay (died 1474) and Johannes Ockeghem (died 1495).

189. Early Modern Colloquium
Early Modern and renaissance literature and culture.
http://www.umich.edu/~earlymod/

190. Gratiae Ludentes / A Renaissance Jestbook / Introduction
Prepared by students from the Department of English, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
http://www.ucs.mun.ca/~wbarker/gratint.html
Gratiae Ludentes,
or Jestes from the University

A Renaissance Jestbook
Prepared by a Group of Students
from the Department of English
Memorial University of Newfoundland For George Story, in memory Go directly to the text [100k]
Introduction
Little is known about this jest book. It is part of a long tradition of collections of jests, a tradition which found its origins in classical antiquity and which, in England, began to flourish in printed form in the 16th century; this tradition is still very much alive today in joke books (including series of Newfoundland joke books available in our local stores). Gratiae Ludentes seems to be the only jest book still remaining from the early modern period that has not been edited or reprinted in a 19th or 20th century edition. It is however, so far as we know, the first of these jestbooks to be published electronically. Perhaps its obscurity is deserved. Most of the jokes are lame, though very much in the contemporary style; one may compare the contemporary Wit and Mirth by the well-known popular writer John Taylor the "Water-Poet," a few of whose jokes are reused in our collection. The feeble puns, obvious misreadings or mis-takings of certain phrases, all contribute to a sense of the low end of a certain kind of humour in the early 17th century, a kind of humour still familiar to modern readers.

191. Harlem Renaissance Women
Links to biographical material on women who were part of the movement, from the About.com Guide to Women's History.
http://womenshistory.about.com/library/bio/blbio_list_harlem.htm
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FREE Newsletter
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Search Women's History Women of the Harlem Renaissance An ever-expanding list of biographies of notable women in the Harlem Renaissance, both those who are well-known and those who should be better-known: Related pages on About include: You'll find information throughout this site on hundreds of other notable women. If you can't find someone by checking the categories on the

192. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Erasmus & Renaissance Humanism
Extensive bibliography compiled by Fr. William Harmless, S.J., Spring Hill College.
http://camellia.shc.edu/theology/Erasmus.htm
Compiled by Fr. William Harmless, S.J.
With special emphasis for books in the collection of Byrne Library,
Spring Hill College
1. The Later Middle Ages
1. THE LATER MIDDLE AGES
  • Norman Cohn, The Pursuit of the Millennium , Oxford (paperback, $12). An entertaining study of the wildest of the fringe (and often heretical) groups that made headlines in the late Middle Ages and the early Reformation. See especially the chapter on the bizarre Anabaptist experiment in Munster.
    Steven Ozment, The Age of Reform, 1250-1550: An Intellectual and Religious History of Late Medieval and Reformation Europe (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980) paperback, $16. Ozment helps re-join what is too often separated: medieval studies and reformation studies. He offers summaries on a broad range of figures and questions. It is widely acclaimed, but I must confess that I find myself quibbling with some of his judgments and interpretations.
    Alister E. McGrath, The Intellectual Origins of the European Reformation (Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1986) paperback, $20.

193. Web Page Of Celestin J. Walby
Exploration of subjectivity into renaissance literature.
http://www.umd.umich.edu/~cjwalby

194. Backgr
A lecture on how literature developed from the reign of Henry VII until the reign of Charles I.
http://athena.english.vt.edu/~jmooney/renmats/backgr.htm
H istorical B ackgrounds
to R enaissance L iterature
(A Brief Literary Timeline) Note:
This lecture contains links to
pages outside our course website,
primarily to illustrations of each
notable figure mentioned.
It also includes or will include
links to appropriate pages
within our website (lectures, etc.)
when available.
The history of Renaissance literature is essentially the history of the development of a literature in English or the vernacular, a revolutionary change arising simultaneously withand in truth, made possible bytwo related things:
  • The Protestant Reformation , which in England vested authority not only in a national church but in the sovereign as its head and which led eventually to an English Bible and to services in English; and The arrival in England of Humanism , an intellectual movement which developed in 14th Century Italy and emphasized the dignity of man and his perfectibility, placed reason above revelation, and stressed education as the avenue for self-development.
Together, the Reformation and humanism combined to make possible a national literature, whichto quote Roger Ascham, writing in

195. [EMLS 2.1 (April 1996: 11.1-5] Review Of The Image Of America In Montaigne, Spen
Donna C. Woodford reviews the William M. Hamlin book.
http://www.shu.ac.uk/emls/02-1/rev_woo1.html
William M. Hamlin. The Image of America in Montaigne, Spenser, and Shakespeare: Renaissance Ethnography and Literary Reflection. New York: St. Martin's P, 1995. xx + 234 pp.
Donna C. Woodford
Washington University at St Louis
dcwoodfo@artsci.wustl.edu
Woodford, Donna C. "Review of The Image of America in Montaigne, Spenser, and Shakespeare: Renaissance Ethnography and Literary Reflection." Early Modern Literary Studies http://purl.oclc.org/emls/02-1/rev_woo1.html
  • Fortunately, Hamlin's book improves considerably in its later chapters. He argues convincingly that the often noted uncertainty of the latter parts of The Faerie Queene
  • Responses to this piece intended for the Readers' Forum may be sent to the Editor at EMLS@UAlberta.ca
    1996, R.G. Siemens (Editor, EMLS
    (April 19, 1996)

    196. Cupola's Renaissance And Mannerist Architecture Gallery One
    Howard Partridge provides a gallery of his photographs of 15th and 16th-century buildings in France, Denmark and Italy, including works of Palladio. Part of the Cupola Collection.
    http://www.cupola.com/html/bldgstru/renaissa/renais01.htm
    Renaissance and Mannerist Architecture
    Gallery One
    (click on any image to enlarge) ? Architect, Louis XII
    Wing, Château Blois

    1498-1503. Blois, Fr.
    Doge's Palace, 1404 ...
    1444. Florence, Italy
    "Sir, the type of woman currently favored in France are toothless crones who just cackle insanely."
    "Oh, ignore that. They're just playing hard to get."
    "By removing all their teeth, going mad and ageing forty years?"
    "That's right, the little teasers!" - Edmund and George, from the "Nob and Nobility" episode of Black Adder Go to Renaissance and Mannerist Gallery:
    or Back to Building Galleries var sc_project=786029; var sc_partition=6; var sc_security="88614392"; var sc_invisible=1;
    Site Index Back to Cupola Home Next Gallery by Cupola Consulting

    197. Poison Pen Press
    Books for the reenactor and Faire patron on medieval cookery, costuming, and domestic aspects of the Middle Ages and renaissance; on line catalog and ordering information.
    http://www.poisonpenpress.com
    Books on medieval cookery, costuming, domestic aspects of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Poison Pen Press sells books, specializing in medieval cookery, costuming, and other material relating to the domestic aspects of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. We have the finest list of in-print cookery titles in The Known World. A few interesting books relating to later historical periods have recently been added to our list, as well as a few on historical gardening; well, that's domestic, isn't it? Our secondary specialty is hard-to-find juvenile fantasies, in particular reprints of such author as D W Jones. In addition, we carry a select list of historical murder mysteries, and a few books written by our friends. I am very happy to be offering Changeover , a paperback reprint of Diana Wynne Jones’ first published novel ($20). According to the cover blurb, "It is the 1960s, and the small African country Nmkwami is preparing for independence from Britain. The prime minister is looking forward to being the first president. The last colonial governor is looking forward to a quiet retirement. The ordinary people are just looking forward to a good party. Into this peaceful scene comes the shadowy figure of Mark Changeover. Is he an international terrorist? A bomb-throwing anarchist? Or, perhaps, nobody at all? As the police hunt for Changeover, as the army mobilizes, as students come out both for and against him, a passing military plane chooses an unfortunate time to lose a nuclear bomb…" The book includes a three-page introduction by Diana Wynne Jones, discussing the origins of the book.

    198. Renaissance Astrological Magic
    Introduction to theory and history of traditional magical astrology.
    http://www.renaissanceastrology.com/astrologicalmagic.html
    SERVICES PAYMENT COURSES BOOKS ... SEARCH
    Christopher Warnock, Esq.
    Renaissance Astrological Magic HOME
    Ficino Venus Talisman Example
    Agrippa "Rats Begone!" Example Planetary Rings from the ...
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    Mansions of the Moon in Picatrix
    55 Astrological and Magical
    Aphorisms from Picatrix
    ...
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    F or this is the Harmony of the World, that things Supercelestial be drawn down by the Celestial and the Celestial by the Supernatural, because there is One Operative Virtue that is diffused through all Things...
    Cornelius Agrippa Introduction to Renaissance Astrological Magic Timing Ritual and Magical Ceremony Curse Detection
    Introduction to Renaissance Astrological Magic
    A strology, magic and alchemy are the three occult (in the original sense of hidden) Hermetic sciences. All three are interconnected in practice and share the Neoplatonic/Hermetic worldview M agic, says

    199. E-Ren: Pictures
    Pictures. Nota bene Most of the pictures listed are actually at other sites. Sometimes the links between here and there will be down, other times they may
    http://www.idbsu.edu/courses/hy309/pics/pics.html
    Pictures
    Nota bene: Most of the pictures listed are actually at other sites. Sometimes the links between here and there will be down, other times they may be slow. These artists are provided courtesy of Nicholas Pioch and his wonderful collection at the Louvre. Click here to visit the home page for the Louvre. Botticelli
    Duerer

    da Vinci

    Michelangelo
    ... Some photos of Roman and Greek architecture Here are some pictures that are kept locally. They are in no sort of order at the moment, but I'll group them by and by.
    David , c. 1408-1412 (9k)
    Donatello. Marble. Bargello, Florence.
    St. George
    Donatello. Marble. Bargello, Florence.
    David , c. 1435 (9k)
    Donatello. Bronze. Bargello, Florence.
    same as above
    This is a larger and better-quality picture
    Gattamelata (Erasmo Narni), 1447-1453 (6k)
    Donatello. Bronze with marble base. Piazza del Santo, Padua.
    Bartolommeo Colleone , c. 1479 (8k)
    Andrea del Verrocchio. Bronze. Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo, Venice.
    Pieta
    Michelangeo. Marble. St. Peter's, Rome.
    Tomb of the Cardinal of Portugal
    Antonio and Barnardo Rossellino. Marble. San Miniato al Monte, Florence.
    Perseus
    Cellini. Bronze. Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence.

    200. Rhapsodies In Black

    http://www.iniva.org/harlem/index2.html

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