Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_R - Renaissance Art
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 8     141-160 of 200    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Renaissance Art:     more books (100)
  1. Raphael: 1483-1520 (Basic Art) by Christof Thoenes, 2005-11-01
  2. Art and the Augustinian Order in Early Renaissance Italy (Church, Faith and Culture in the Medieval West)

141. Amboise - Association Renaissance Des Orgues
Pr©sentation de cette association et de ses activit©s d'entretien et de promotion de l'orgue de la Coll©giale SaintDenis d'Amboise.
http://www.orgues-amboise.org

142. The Medieval & Renaissance Wedding Site
Information, links, stories, and a message board for people planning or participating in a medieval or renaissance wedding.
http://www.midnightgarden.com/wedding/index.html
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT:
I'm sorry about the missing message board. I moved to a new server and didn't move the board before the DNS change took effect. I have put up a new message board running on entirely different software. I think this board will be a better resource in the future. I will try to get the old board up as an archive, but I don't know how soon that will happen. The new board is located at http://www.midnightgarden.com/wedding/board/YaBB.cgi What's New My Medieval Wedding Journal The Medieval Wedding Message Board ... The Medieval Wedding of Pamela and Dale This site is owned by Pamela Riley Would you like to join the Previous 5 Sites Previous Next Next 5 Sites ... Random Site This Medieval and Renaissance site is owned by Pamela Riley
Want to join the Medieval and Renaissance Ring Skip Prev Prev Next ... Well Dressed Wench

143. The Renaissance
Introduces the era, the changes it brought, and some of its leaders. Created for middle school students.
http://www.mrdowling.com/704renaissance.html
Home E-Mail Download Lessons Interactive Quiz ... South America The Dawn of a New Age The Renaissance began in northern Italy and then spread through Europe. Italian cities such as Naples, Genoa, and Venice became centers of trade between Europe and the Middle East. Arab scholars preserved the writings of the ancient Greeks in their libraries. When the Italian cities traded with the Arabs, ideas were exchanged along with goods. These ideas, preserved from the ancient past, served as the basis of the Renaissance. When the Byzantine empire fell to Muslim Turks in 1453, many Christian scholars left Greece for Italy. The Renaissance was much more than simply studying the work of ancient scholars. It influenced painting, sculpture, and architecture. Paintings became more realistic and focused less often on religious topics. Rich families became patrons and commissioned great art. Artists advanced the Renaissance style of showing nature and depicting the feelings of people. In Britain, there was a flowering in literature and drama that included the plays of William Shakespeare. Learning and the Arts began to flourish during the Renaissance Crusaders returned to Europe with a newfound understanding of the world.

144. L'Eclat Des Muses
Ensemble contemporain de musique et danse anciennes. Compagnie Christine Bayle. Cours et stages de danse Baroque et renaissance   Paris. Informations sur leurs concertsspectacles.
http://membres.lycos.fr/cbayle/
Un ensemble contemporain de musiques et danses anciennes L'Eclat des Muses Cie Christine BAYLE Un Ensemble en découverte Christine Bayle a participé à la création du style de la Belle-Dance avec F.Lancelot et à celle de Ris et Danceries, comme interprète, enseignante et chorégraphe. Elle crée l'Eclat des Muses en 1983, pour:
  • aller vers la danse de théâtre, la musique vivante, l'Opéra réaliser des oeuvres dûes au travail de Lully, Molière, Quinault faites selon le maître à danser qui a façonné la Belle-Dance, Pierre Beauchamp. découvrir ce qu'est le Ballet de Cour et initier des créations d'auteur avec des danseurs, musiciens, chanteurs et acteurs.
Les nouvelles "pistes"

145. Jean Toomer
Full text of four poems.
http://www.nku.edu/~diesmanj/toomer.html
Jean Toomer
Cotton Song
Evening Song

Georgia Dusk

Reapers
Cotton Song Come, brother, come. Lets lift it;
come now, hewit! roll away!
Shackles fall upon the Judgment Day
But lets not wait for it. God's body's got a soul,
Bodies like to roll the soul,
Cant blame God if we dont roll,
Come, brother, roll, roll! Cotton bales are the fleecy way, Weary sinner's bare feet trod, Softly, softly to the throne of God, "We aint agwine t wait until th Judgment Day! Nassur; nassur, Hump. Eoho, eoho, roll away! We aint agwine to wait until th Judgment Day!" God's body's got a soul, Bodies like to roll the soul, Cant blame God if we dont roll, Come, brother, roll, roll! Evening Song Full moon rising on the waters of my heart, Lakes and moon and fires, Cloine tires, Holding her lips apart. Promises of slumber leaving shore to charm the moon, Miracle made vesper-keeps, Cloine sleeps, And I'll be sleeping soon. Cloine, curled like the sleepy waters whtere the moonwaves start, Radiant, resplendently she gleams

146. Explorations In Renaissance Culture
Biannual scholarly journal edited by Tita French Baumlin of the English Department of Southwest Missouri State University.
http://www.smsu.edu/English/eirc/eirc.html

147. Revue Conférence
Certains articles de cette publication semestrielle ©rudite sont consultables, en g©n©ral au format PDF; on y trouve des traductions du latin de la renaissance, sp©cialement de P©trarque.
http://www.revue-conference.com/sommaires.html
Sommaire Accueil Présentation Sommaires des numéros parus (textes choisis) Auteurs publiés T hèmes traités Dernier numéro paru Numéros disponibles A paraître Où trouver Conférence Commandes Cahier d' images Recherche (sur le site) Liens T élécharger ce texte ? English version Sommaires des numéros parus. Nº I , automne 1995. Nº , printemps-automne 2000. Nº , printemps 1996. Nº , printemps 2001. N° , automne 1996. Nº , automne 2001. Nº , printemps 1997. Nº , printemps 2002. Nº , automne 1997. Nº , automne 2002. Nº , printemps 1998. Nº , printemps 2003. Nº , automne 1998. Nº , printemps 1999. Nº , automne 1999. Commandes de numéros
Order issues.
Conférence, Nº I, automne 1995. Liminaire. Le clair-obscur. Le clair-obscur, l'histoire et le tableau. Christophe Carraud. La fête et le dévoilement. Christian Doumet (sur Don Giovanni.). Entretien avec Claude Garache , peintre. Transfigurations du rouge. Richard Stamelman. (Claude Garache, Yves Bonnefoy.) (Traduction Philippe Blanc.) Le noir ou l'absence incarnée. Patrice Giorda. Saenredam et le clair-obscur.

148. St. Wolfgang's Bavarian Guild - Welcome One And All
Fifty member Guild portrays the renaissance Period Wittelsbach Family, who ruled Bavaria. Based in Portland, Oregon, photo gallery of events, contact and membership information.
http://www.st-wolfgangs.org
Each summer fair season, our guild represented a different year in history at Faires throughout California and the Pacific Northwest area. Our guild was named after St. Wolfgang of Regensberg (pictured on the left), born in Bavaria in 924, and canonized by Pope Leo IX in 1052. He is the patron saint of education and children. His memorial day is October 31, commemorating his de ath in 994. St. Wolfgang's Bavarian Guild News Dear Friends, These pages are now a time capsule recording of a few of the events
St. Wolfgang' performed
in the Portland, Oregon area of from 1999 - 2004. We would like to thank all of those wonderful people we met at all of the events pictured here. The memories we have will be treasured forever. Thank you from all of us, Marty Richmond
Webmaster To visit our photo page listing.
Please click here
Sir Dan DeMoy
Guildmaster
Sir Steven M. Overton
Artistic Director
Sir Marty Richmond
Webmaster
Sir Ken
Bobbi Overton Th To view puppets from Steven M. Overton's Olde World Puppet Theatre Click on Ping Pong the Panda below To visit our Puppet Museum, featuring exhibits, projects

149. New Renaissance Home
New renaissance is a network of sites devoted to Early Music in the UK, including the renowned Chapelle du Roi and Signum Records.
http://www.newrenaissance.co.uk
Welcome to the New Renaissance Home Page. New Renaissance hosts the websites for several music organisations - all based in the United Kingdom and all specialising in Early Music. Chapelle du Roi is a vocal ensemble specialising in the performance of sacred music from the Renaissance. Following their appearances at the York Early Music Festival, Utrecht Early Music Festival and their tour of the USA they are rapidly gaining an enviable reputation for their interpretations of English and Spanish music. Signum Records Ltd is a new record label that has been launched world-wide to promote the finest music that artistic endeavour can produce. Be it 16th century sacred vocal music or contemporary music the aim is to achieve performances that are as close to the intentions of the composer as possible. Artists on the Signum label include Chapelle du Roi, The Clerks' Group, charivari agréable, Musica Antiqua, Hausmusik London, Lucy Carolan and Cordaria. The Cantiones Press provides attractive and authoritative editions of Renaissance choral music. The majority of works have either not previously been published at all, or cannot be obtained in formats which are financially viable for choirs and consorts.

150. Costumes, Wigs, Masks, Makeup, Accessories, And More...
Costumes for all ages. Sizes XSmall XXXXL). Medieval and renaissance Costumes, wigs, masks, makeup and props.
http://www.frankbeecostume.com/
All sales are final on costumes and accesories. Next day, second day, and third day shipping does not include weekends.
Welcome To Our Online Costume Center.
Doing business in the same location since Why go fishing for any other company? THE LARGEST COLLECTION OF COSTUMES, THOUSANDS TO SELECT FROM We specialize in Infant Costumes,
Children's Costumes, Adult Costumes (All Sizes: XSmall XXXXL), Medieval costumes, Renaissance Costumes, Wigs, Masks, Makeup and Props.
TAKE A LOOK AT OUR HOT ITEMS!
NEW COSTUMES!
(click here)
CHILDREN'S COSTUMES!
(click here) FAMOUS HEROES! (click here) QUALITY ADULT COSTUMES (click here)
SALE ITEMS
(click here)
We Do Business With Integrity.
We don't make money doing business with you once, we are here to make you a H a P P Y customer!
If you are interested in purchasing an item that is not on this site, please give us a call toll free at 1-877-9FRANKBEE or 1-877-937-2652 or Fax at (718) 824-2979 or CLICK HERE Affiliate Program For a more detailed view click on item's picture Call us Toll Free at 1-877-937-2652 for help or more information ALL SALES ARE FINAL ON COSTUMES AND ACCESSORIES www.costumeman.com

151. Renaissance Philosophy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
An encyclopedia entry.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance_philosophy
Renaissance philosophy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Renaissance By topic Architecture Dance Literature Music ... Painting Philosophy Science Warfare By Region Italian Renaissance Northern Renaissance French Renaissance German Renaissance ... English Renaissance In his book The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy Jacob Burckhardt argued that, beginning in the 14th century a transformation in outlook and ideas began in Italy which would later cover all of Europe. The period is now generally thought to begin around , with several figures, notably Dante Alighieri Petrarch and Giovanni Boccaccio being seen as being part of the Renaissance, despite being much earlier. As with all periods, there is a wide drift of dates, reasons for catagorization and boundaries. In particular the Renaissance, more than later periods, is thought to roll through Europe. The "Renaissance" in England is often thought to include Shakespeare, at a time when Italy is thought to have passed through Mannerism and to the Baroque. As importantly the 16th century is split (see lumpers/splitters ) differently. Some historians see the Reformation and Counter-Reformation as being separated and more important for philosophy, while others see the entire era as one sweeping period.

152. Table Of Contents (Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library & Renaissance Culture)
Top/Society/History/By_Region/Europe/renaissance
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/vatican/toc.html
The Library of Congress Exhibitions
Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library
A Library of Congress Exhibition
January 8 - April 30, 1993

153. Historical Dance Group Plaisir Courtois - Welcome
Dance group from Groningen, The Netherlands. Includes background information on renaissance, baroque and Viennese dance.
http://www.plaisircourtois.nl/cgi-bin/index.cgi?language=en

154. Internet Public Library: Music History 102
Internet Public Library entry categorizes according to musical period, including Middle Ages, renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and Twentieth Century. Includes Real Audio RAM files.
http://www.ipl.org/div/mushist/
dqmcodebase = "/javascript/"
Subject Collections

Business

Computers

Education
... Music History 102 This collection All of the IPL Advanced
Music History 102
a Guide to Western Composers and their Music
from the Middle Ages to the Present
The sound files that form a part of Music History 102 are encoded using RealAudio. To be able to access and play these files, you will need to download a copy of RealAudio Player software on your computer. This software is available free of charge via the RealAudio Web Page Just follow the instructions on the page to download. You will need to provide your name and email address, and will need to know your operating system platform, processor type, and connection speed.
CONTENTS of Music History 102:
As is usual with information on the history of Western music,
this site has been organized according to the eras of history:
The Middle Ages
Around 500 A.D., western civilization began to emerge from the period known as "The Dark Ages," the time when invading hordes of Vandals, Huns, and Visigoths overran Europe and brought an end to the Roman Empire. For the next ten centuries, the newly emerging Christian Church would dominate Europe, administering justice, instigating "Holy" Crusades against the East, establishing Universities, and generally dictating the destiny of music, art and literature. During this time, Pope Gregory I is generally believed to have collected and codified the music known as Gregorian Chant , which was the approved music of the Church. Much later, the University at Notre Dame in Paris saw the creation of a new kind of music called

155. Sixteenth Century Renaissance English Literature (1485-1603)
Guide to English literature of the renaissance with over 100 original pages and biographies, with links.
http://www.luminarium.org/renlit/

Anniina Jokinen
. All Rights Reserved. Created April 3, 1996. Last updated June 3, 2005.
Norton Topics Online

Sandro Botticelli: Primavera . Detail, The Three Graces. 1481. Galleria degli Uffizi, Firenze, Italia.
If your browser does not support image maps, click here

156. Literary Resources -- Renaissance (Lynch)
Jack Lynch's index of resources for the study of renaissance and seventeenthcentury English literature.
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/ren.html
This page is part of the Literary Resources collection maintained by Jack Lynch Comments and suggestions are welcome.
Renaissance Literature
The later Renaissance is also covered in my eighteenth-century pages.
Calls for Papers
From Penn's list. The best set of links.
CERES: Cambridge English Renaissance Electronic Service
A good set of links and a newsletter on Renaissance scholarship.
Claire's Seventeenth Century (Claire George, Univ. of Durham)
A discussion board for 17th-c. studies and news.
Early Modern England Source (EMES)
Plentiful information on meetings and seminars.
Early Modern English Dictionaries Database (EMEDD)
Information on the searchable database.
Early Modern Literary Studies (Sheffield Hallam)
Extensive and authoritative information on all aspects of Renaissance studies.
EDICTA: Early Dictionaries/Dictionnaires Anciens (Toronto)
Information on the project "to publish electronic and computer-assisted editions of early dictionaries of English, French and Latin" and research on them.
Elizabethan Authors (Robert Brazil and Barboura Flues)
A good collection of annotated E-texts, with some links to related sites.

157. Humanism (Rome Reborn: The Vatican Library & Renaissance Culture)
renaissance humanists (Christian) and Catholicism. From the Library of Congress, US.
http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/vatican/humanism.html
The Library of Congress Exhibitions
HOME
Exhibition Sections: Introduction The Vatican Library Archaeology
Humanism
... Credits
HUMANISM
The great intellectual movement of Renaissance Italy was humanism. The humanists believed that the Greek and Latin classics contained both all the lessons one needed to lead a moral and effective life and the best models for a powerful Latin style. They developed a new, rigorous kind of classical scholarship, with which they corrected and tried to understand the works of the Greeks and Romans, which seemed so vital to them.
Seeking the Wisdom of the Ancients
Costanzo Felici, Historia de coniuratione Catilinae (History of the Catilinarian Conspiracy)
In Latin
Dedication copy for Leo X
Early sixteenth century Pius II (Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini), Commentaries
In Latin
Autograph
Fifteenth century Although humanists had thronged the papal court since the beginning of the century, Pius II was the first real humanist to sit in the chair of Peter. Born in Siena as Enea Silvio Piccolomini, he acquired a reputation as a diplomat, belletrist, and womanizer, and was crowned poet laureate by the Emperor Frederick in 1442. After serving the emperor and the anti-Roman Council of Basel, Piccolomini joined the Roman camp in 1446. He became a cardinal in 1456 and in 1458 was elected pope. As pope, the only work of scholarship he was able to continue was his "Commentaries," a remarkably frank autobiography in which he put his passions and prejudices on full view. In the passage shown here, Pius expresses his bitter contempt for the French, who had been unwilling to join his crusade against the Great Turk.

158. Renaissance Forum
Electronic Journal of EarlyModern Literary and Historical Studies.
http://www.hull.ac.uk/renforum/index.html
RENAISSANCE forum
An Electronic Journal of Early-Modern Literary and Historical Studies
ISSN 1362-1149
The Journal
Information
Conferences
Notices
Other resources
Technical problems or queries about Renaissance Forum editorial policy should be addressed to the Technical Editor: ambutler@enterprise.net
Counter started 4 December 2000. Renaissance Forum 1995-2005. ISSN 1362-1149.
Technical Editor: Andrew Butler . Updated 24 December 2004.

159. History Of Prose Style 3 -- 16th C.
Part of a prose work detailing in simple text how the style of prose and poetry changed through the renaissance.
http://www.towson.edu/~tinkler/prose/3ren.html
HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF PROSE STYLE
Part 3: The Renaissance Sixteenth Century
THOMAS MORE. The History of King Richard III. [1513]
Whereupon soon after, that is to wit, on the Friday, the thirteenth day of June, many lords assembled in the Tower and there sat in council, devising the honourable solemnity of the king's coronation, of which the time appointed then so near approached that the pageants and subtleties were in making day and night at Westminster, and much victual killed therefor that afterward was cast away. These lords so sitting together commoning of this matter, the protector came in among them, first about nine of the clock, saluting them courteously, and excusing himself that he had been from them so long, saying merrily that he had been asleep that day. And after a little talking with them, he said unto the Bishop of Ely: "My lord, you have very good strawberries at your garden in Holborn; I require you, let us have a mess of them." "Gladly, my lord," quod he, "would God I had some better thing as ready to your pleasure as that." And therewith in all the haste he sent his servant for a mess of strawberries. The protector set the lords fast in commoning, and thereupon, praying them to spare him for a little while, departed thence. And soon, after one hour, between ten and eleven, he returned into the chamber among them, knitting the brows, frowning and frothing and gnawing on his lips, and so sat him down in his place, all the lords much dismayed and sore marvelling of this manner of sudden change, and what thing should him ail. Then when he had sitten still awhile, thus he began: "What were they worthy to have that compass and imagine the destruction of me, being so near of blood unto the king and protector of his royal person and his realm?"

160. Stoics Home Page
The selected materials reflect the texts that Shakespeare responds to in renaissance discourse. From Ben R. Schneider, Jr., Professor Emeritus of English at Lawrence University.
http://www.stoics.com/
Home Why Stoics Books FAQ ... Works Cited Materials for the Construction of
S HAKESPEARE'S M ORALS
The Stoic Legacy to the Renaissance Major Ethical Authorities,
Indexed According to Virtues, Vices, and
Characters from the Plays,
as well as Topics in Swift, Pope, and Wordsworth. The Full Texts in English Translation,
Scanned, Digitized, Commented on, and Annotated by
Ben R. Schneider, Jr.
Professor Emeritus of English at
L AWRENCE U NIVERSITY
Appleton, WI 54912
ben.r.schneider@lawrence.edu
B OOKS AT THIS SITE NOW INCLUDE Cicero's De Officiis, Seneca's Moral Essays (3 vols), Seneca's Moral Epistles (3 vols), Plutarch's Lives translated by North (3 vols of 8), 1 volume of Plutarch's Lives translated by Dryden, Castiglione's Courtier, Erasmus's Christian Prince, Elyot's Governour, Sidney's Arcadia Book I (index only), Spenser's Faerie Queene (Books I, II, and VI), Montaigne's Essays (3 vols) translated by Florio, James I's Basilikon Doron, and Hall's Characters. Site Activated April 23, 1999 Revised January 29, 2001

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 8     141-160 of 200    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

free hit counter