| Jacob Burckhardt - 1904 - 584 lehte
...uomo singolare ' and ' uomo unico ' for the higher and highest stages of individual development. I thousand figures meet us each in its own special shape and dress. Panto's great poem would have been impossible in any other country of Europe, if only for the reason... | |
| Alfred Biese - 1905 - 394 lehte
...peculiar look of irony, and the elaborate savant-physiognomy of Aristotle. (HELBIG.) And Burckhardt says : At the close of the thirteenth century Italy began...figures meet us each in its own special shape and dress. .... Despotism, as we have already seen, fostered in the highest degree the individuality, not only... | |
| Frank Pierrepont Graves - 1910 - 360 lehte
...recognized himself as such. In the same way the Greek had once distinguished himself from the barbarian. At the close of the thirteenth century Italy began...meet us, each in its own special shape and dress." Thus there was a return to the ideals of individualism that existed in the classical civilization,... | |
| Frank Pierrepont Graves - 1910 - 358 lehte
...from the barbarian. At the close of the thirteenth century Italy began to swarm with individitality ; the charm laid upon human personality was dissolved...meet us, each in its own special shape and dress." Thus there was a return to the ideals of individualism that existed in the classical civilization,... | |
| Herschel Baker - 1947 - 392 lehte
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