More than any other man he laid the foundations of the Byzantine literary and philosophical renascence of the 12th cent. |
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Perhaps the finest specimen of this hexametric renascence, however, was Charles Kingsley's mythopoetic epyllion Andromeda. |
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The society of the Rosati, which was established in 1778 and saw a renascence in 1877, was instrumental in reviving regional literature. |
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The precision of spring is, in my view, as much a statement of resolution as it is of renascence and thanks. |
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The exhibition analyses the cultural, geographical and artistic influence of these fathers of Rome's renascence art. |
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And as they get into this point of renascence, Ruth starts talking about this episode, and Bud says, now wait a minute, say that again? |
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It was tiled with the utmost care, and painted to a beautiful blend of Spanish, Indian, and renascence decor that blended only better with the richly coloured carpets. |
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A recent renascence of Baptist life in Britain has resulted in Baptist churches being among the limited number of churches that are growing rather than declining. |
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Within 20 years Czechs had won a majority on the City Council, and Czech cultural life was experiencing a renascence centred on Prague. |
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Although at first I was puzzles, I did not have to ponder long the mystery of this man's renascence. |
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Hecht was the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, and after attending high school in Racine, Wisconsin, he moved to Chicago, then in the midst of an artistic and literary renascence. |
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Ignored by her own time, Dickinson was sentimentalized in her renascence. |
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