Seventeenth century

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        Every century has its own poetry; poetry has its own personality and aspects, especially love poems.  In the sixteenth century, poems about love were more about the court than the lover.  In the next century (the seventeenth), the poems of love were more about courting the lover.  An author from the sixteenth century, Sir Thomas Wyatt the Elder, is well known for his lyrics pertaining to love.  An author from the seventeenth century is John Donne, who

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    that significantly influenced the development of magic and witchcraft persecution. Edward Peters formed his timeline beginning with early Christianity and ending with the sixteenth century. The study argued that these people, events, and documents led to the persecution and burning of witches in the seventeenth century. The timeline began with the explanation of harsh Greek and Roman laws against magos. The laws were harsh because magic was a disruption of society and the cause of political instability

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    4314 Midterm: October 12, 2014 Isser Woloch suggests that the key forces that transitioned Europe toward modernity are associated with four different developments which “coincided with and reinforced each other in final decades of the eighteenth century: (1) rising population; (2) increased agricultural productivity; (3) a vast increase in commerce, particularly in the exploitation of their colonies by Britain and France; and (4) the expansion of textile manufacturing and the beginnings of its structural

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    (Laudner, V, 2010, p, 28). In recent history however, from the twentieth century to the present day, the corset has been revived repeatedly. Paul Poiret banished corsets in 1909 after "centuries of tyrannical reign over women's fashion". (N/A. (N/A). The Corset in Late 20th-Century Fashion. Available: http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/t/the-corset-in-late-20th-century-fashion/. Last accessed 9th Dec 2015) In the 1920s, flat and square dresses came into fashion and became

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    Behind the Zoo

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    What makes an object worth collecting? Curiosity is an important aspect of collecting. With the spread of colonies, there was an affinity to discover the unknown, or rather, the different. The nineteenth century paved the way for many sponsored expedition, looking for curios. Found object; vases, pots and pans, tools of everyday use, gained an importance, as curios. Nature has captivated the human cognizance since man first acquired tools, it would only be natural for the curiosity to extend to the

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    Vermeer’s Hat: the Seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World Review Essay Brook, Timothy. Vermeer’s Hat: The seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2008). 272pp. $17. Reviewed by: Holly Spacht December 16, 2013 In Vermeer’s Hat: The seventeenth Century and the Dawn of the Global World, Timothy Brook uses Vermeer’s paintings to show the effects of trade on the world and the overall globalization occurring. Brook argues that this

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    The Canterbury Cathedral For at least fourteen hundred years the worship of God has been offered on the site of this Cathedral, and through the prayers of the Church his power and grace have shaped human lives. Ever since the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in the Cathedral in 1170, Canterbury has attracted thousands of pilgrims. This tradition continues to this day, and a large team of Welcomers, Guides, Cathedral Assistants and Chaplains are there to give all visitors a warm welcome

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    Johannes Vermeer was a seventeenth century painter residing in Delft, Amsterdam, in a time which Timothy Brook considers the dawn of the global world . Recognizable for his painting Girl with a Pearl Earring, Vermeer is the subject of Brooks book Vermeer’s Hat, in which Brook explains that the beginnings of globalization can be traced back to the seventeenth century and that evidence for his thesis can be found in Vermeer’s paintings . Brook focuses on five Vermeer paintings, a decorative plate,

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    The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were a period of many changes in world of sciences. Usually the philosophes and researchers of the sciences were either supported or reprimanded by many aspects of life in these centuries. The work of scientists was affected by governments promoting, but also preventing, research of the sciences, religious bodies promoting or condemning the outcomes of experiments and theories and even merging outcomes to religious ideas, and also new relationships between

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    The concept of the salon, originating in Italy during the Renaissance, was introduced to France in the seventeenth century and evolved into a three-hundred-year-old tradition built exclusively on the strength of “feminocentric” rule. One of the most fascinating things about the institution of the salon is that its female leadership flourished during a period of history when women were not permitted to be involved in activities outside the boundaries of domesticity. According to Wolf, this “paradoxical”

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