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Word: burghers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...being transported into the very spirit of the most significant stages in the development of European culture. This effect of the building itself is heightened by the large collection of architectural views contained in a suite of smaller rooms, views of mediaeval cathedrals and castles, Renaissance city halls and burgher houses, and Baroque and Rococo mansions and palaces. This museum, therefore, by virtue of the fact that its architectural features are striking illustrations of the spiritual character of past epochs, is of interest not only to the student of architecture, but to the student of history and the student...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GERMANIC MUSEUM ILLUSTRATES ARTISTIC DEVELOPMENT OF EUROPE SINCE MIDDLE AGES | 5/8/1922 | See Source »

...cast of Adam Kraft's relief of the "Town Weigher" from the facade of the Wool Merchants' Guild Hall in that city. It portrays the town weigher standing in the midst of a group watching the balancing of his scales, thus rendering a graphic scene from primative German burgher life...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Gifts to the University from Germany | 10/3/1907 | See Source »

...neighbors. Now,' however, owing to her powerful army and navy and to a liberal policy, she can be fairly called the leading state in Europe. Another important factor in this resuscitation was the growth of national feeling. The Germans of all ranks and conditions-prince and burgher, wealthy and poor-all began to be filled with a desire for union, for a strong centralized government. The causes of the growth of nationality lie in the political events of 1858, when William came to the throne, when the reactionary ministry of Mannteuffel gave way to the liberal policy of Autin...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Villard's Lecture. | 2/14/1889 | See Source »

...paid the ambitious farmer for some grain which had been sold to him. This Philip Rogers was very likely the kinsman of the fair Katharine Rogers, whom Shakespeare might have seen before the altar in the parish church of Stratford, one morning in 1605, when her father, a substantial burgher of the town, gave her away to young Robert Harvard, of Southwark. Who knows but that the poet, just then at work upon his Lear, may have stood in the crowd of friends about that altar and have heard the sweet voice of Katharine Rogers repeat her vows; who knows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Gift of the Old Cambridge to the New. | 11/7/1886 | See Source »

...conviction that by so doing primary instruction is better secured. The higher education gave the tone and determined the character of the lower. The elementary schools in Germany were the best in the world, for the reason that they were the open doors to the real and burgher schools and the gymnasia. Primary schools in England have been a by-word because the chasm between the great endowed schools, colleges, and universities and the places for the instruction of the poor was as wide as that between Lazarus and Dives. Huxley had said that no system of public education...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY ENDOWMENT. | 1/21/1884 | See Source »

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