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The gutenberg bible also know as the 42-line was one of the earliest major books printed ... arts is a Latin language Bible, printed in Mainz, Germany.
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patron of art,letters
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patron of art, and letters
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written by Polish astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) and published just before his death, placed the sun at the center of the universe and argued that the Earth moved across the heavens as one of the planets
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Columbus received with the highest honors by the Spanish court, he was the first European to explore the Americans since vikings ..."discovered america" and he led the three ships.. "Nina the pinia and santa mairia.
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David is a masterpiece of Renaissance sculpture created in marble between by the Italian artist Michelangelo. David
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comes from a description by Renaissance art historian Giorgio Vasari, who wrote "Leonardo undertook to paint, for Francesco del Giocondo, the portrait of Mona Lisa, his wife."
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The Prince. ... The Prince (Italian: Il Principe [il ˈprintʃipe]) is a 16th-century political treatise by the Italian diplomat and political theorist Niccolò Machiavelli.The Prince. Machiavelli's most famous work, The Prince, was written in 1513 but only published after his death (1532; trans. 1640)
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he wrote the disputation on the power also called the 95 theses a list of questions and propositions for debate, art's? nailed a copy of the 95 theses to the church door.
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The Jesuit movement was founded by Ignatius de Loyola, a Spanish soldier turned priest, in August 1534. The first Jesuits–Ignatius and six of his students–took vows of poverty and chastity and made plans to work for the conversion of Muslims. ...
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Institutes of the Christian Religion. Institutes of the Christian Religion, Latin Christianae Religionis Institutio, French Institution de la Religion Chrétienne,a summary of biblical theology that became the normative statement of the Reformed faith.
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Shakespeare's early classical and Italianate comedies, containing tight double plots and precise comic sequences, give way in the mid-1590s to the romantic atmosphere of his most acclaimed comedies.
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In 1593, Galileo Galilei discovered that the density of liquids (how much they contract and expand) reacts predictably to changes in temperature. Although named after the 16th–17th-century physicist Galileo, the thermometer described in this article was not invented by him. Galileo did invent a thermometer, called Galileo's air thermometer arts?The object known as the Galileo Thermometer is a vertical glass tube filled with a liquid in which are suspended a number of weighted glass balls.