Modern Europe, Volume 4 |
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Page xiii
... August 10th Murder of Mandat 400 man Sovereigns . Louis declares War against The King takes Refuge in the Assembly 401 Francis I .. 387 Capture of the Tuileries . 403 CHAPTER LV . Progress of the Revolution from the Insurrection of August ...
... August 10th Murder of Mandat 400 man Sovereigns . Louis declares War against The King takes Refuge in the Assembly 401 Francis I .. 387 Capture of the Tuileries . 403 CHAPTER LV . Progress of the Revolution from the Insurrection of August ...
Page 32
... ascribes the foundation of the Pietists to August Herman Franke , instead of Spener . Franke , a much younger man , was one of Spener's followers . CHAP . XLII . ] PIETISTS AND MORAVIAN BRETHREN . Religious Sects The Pietists.
... ascribes the foundation of the Pietists to August Herman Franke , instead of Spener . Franke , a much younger man , was one of Spener's followers . CHAP . XLII . ] PIETISTS AND MORAVIAN BRETHREN . Religious Sects The Pietists.
Page 41
... , he flattered the Parliament , by demanding beforehand " the wise admonitions of that august assembly . " When he had thus predisposed the mind of the Parliament in his favour , the will of 42 THE REGENT'S POLICY . [ CHAP . XLIII .
... , he flattered the Parliament , by demanding beforehand " the wise admonitions of that august assembly . " When he had thus predisposed the mind of the Parliament in his favour , the will of 42 THE REGENT'S POLICY . [ CHAP . XLIII .
Page 45
... August , Dubois went to Hanover , where the alliance was finally arranged . The States - General , fearful of offending the Emperor , manifested at first great reluctance to accede to the treaty ; but these scruples being at length ...
... August , Dubois went to Hanover , where the alliance was finally arranged . The States - General , fearful of offending the Emperor , manifested at first great reluctance to accede to the treaty ; but these scruples being at length ...
Page 47
... August , 1717 ; and , with the aid of the discontented in- habitants , got possession of the whole island in less than three months.1 One of the first effects of this attack on the Emperor's western possessions was to hamper him in his ...
... August , 1717 ; and , with the aid of the discontented in- habitants , got possession of the whole island in less than three months.1 One of the first effects of this attack on the Emperor's western possessions was to hamper him in his ...
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Common terms and phrases
acceded Alberoni alliance allies Ambassador army Assembly attack August Austrian Bavaria Bohemia Britain Cabinet campaign Catharine caused CHAP Charles Charles VI command compelled concluded Convention Count Crown death declared despatched Diet dominions Don Carlos Duchy Duke Duke of Orleans Dutch election Elector Elector of Bavaria Elector of Saxony Elizabeth Emperor Empire Empress endeavoured England English entered Europe favour Ferdinand fleet France Frederick Frederick II French Gesch Government Grand Hanover Hist Imperial Joseph Kaunitz King of Prussia Kingdom Leopold Lorraine Louis XV March Maria Theresa Marshal Menzel Minister nations negotiations nobles obtained Paris Parma peace Peace of Passarowitz Peter Philip Polish political Porte possessions Pragmatic Sanction pretended Prince provinces Queen of Hungary reign restored Revolution Royal Russian Sardinia Saxony September Silesia Sovereign Spain Spaniards Spanish Bourbons Stadholder Stanislaus States-General success Sweden throne tion took treaty troops Turkish Turks Wallachia Wenck
Popular passages
Page 369 - Assembly required the clergy to take an oath of fidelity to the nation, the law, and the King, and to maintain the Constitution.
Page 310 - Fontenelle was their precursor, whose long life, extending from the middle of the seventeenth to the middle of the eighteenth century, rendered him the connecting link between the literature of the two periods.
Page 18 - words of art" as he calls them, which Philemon Holland, a voluminous translator at the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth century...
Page 327 - I foresee, that, before the end of this century, the trade of both king and priest will not be half so good a one as it has been.