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- Renaissance (14795 bytes)
5: ... ancient classical texts and learning and their applications in the arts and sciences. Second, it mean...
7: ...[[Leonardo da Vinci]]'s [[Vitruvian Man]], an example of the blend of art and science during the Renai...
9: ===Multiple Renaissances===
10: ...e [[periodization|periodisation]], [[Lumpers and splitters]])
19: ...aces for when the Middle Ages ended. The starting place of the Renaissance is almost universally ascri... - List of people by name: Q (4474 bytes)
1: {{List_of_people}}
3: == People named Q ==
71: ...nn, Niall]], (born 1966), Irish football (soccer) player
81: *[[Jacopo della Quircia|Quircia, Jacopo della]], (1374-1438), painter
88: *[[Quo Tai-chi]], (1889-1952), diplomat representing [[Republic of China|Nationalist ... - List of painters (54090 bytes)
1: The following list is an incomplete '''list of painters'''.
281: *[[John Singleton Copley]] ([[1737]]-[[1815]])
616: *[[Leon Kaplinski]] ([[1826]]-[[1873]])
958: *[[Stefan Planinc]] ([[1925]]-)
959: *[[Jan Bogumil Plersch]] ([[1732]]-[[1817]]) - Giovanni Boccaccio (10149 bytes)
2: ...hor and poet, the greatest of [[Petrarch]]'s disciples, an important [[Renaissance humanism|Renaissanc...
5: ...been largely depreciated as a romanticism and his place of birth is more likely to have been in [[Tusc...
7: ...hieri|Dante]]. Around 1327 Boccaccio moved to [[Naples]] when his father was appointed to head the Neo...
11: In Naples Boccaccio began what he considered his true voc...
13: ...s ''Ameto'') a mix of prose and poems in 1341, completing the fifty canto allegorical poem ''Amorosa v... - Leonardo Bruni (2706 bytes)
2: '''Leonardo Bruni''' ([[1374]] - [[1444]]) was a leading [[humanism|humanist]]...
10: ...st notable work is ''History of the Florentine People'' which has been called the first modern history...
14: ...runi was essential in translating many works of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]]. His use of [[Tacitus]]'s ...
17: * ''History of the Florentine People,'' Latin text and English translation, 2001 - IS...
20: ...atti/bruni_web.pdf ''History of the Florentine People''] (PDF), Excerpts and excellent 'Editor Introdu... - Petrarch (10447 bytes)
3: ...''' ([[July 20]], [[1304]] – [[July 19]], [[1374]]) was an [[Italy|Italian]] scholar, [[poet]], an...
8: ...s that their ancestors had produced by toil and application, to perish through insufferable neglect. A...
12: ..., they joined Petrarch in [[Venice]], to flee the plague then ravaging parts of Europe. A second grand...
14: ...[[Arqu? in the [[Euganean Hills]] on [[July 18]], 1374.
24: ...y Land"), a distant ancestor of Fodors and Lonely Planet; a number of invectives against opponents suc... - List of philosophers (79981 bytes)
391: *[[Frederick Copleston]], (1907-1994)
896: *[[David Kaplan (philosopher)|David Kaplan]], (born 1933){{fn|O}}
897: *[[Mordecai Kaplan]], (1881-1983){{fn|R}}
907: *[[Johannes Kepler]], (1571-1630){{fn|C}}{{fn|R}}
973: *[[Pierre-Simon Laplace]], (1749-1827){{fn|C}}{{fn|O}} - Knights Hospitaller (26158 bytes)
5: ...in Christian pilgrims traveling to visit the birthplace of [[Jesus]]. It was served by [[Benedictine]]...
9: ...s in the Holy Land were the work of either the Templars or Hospitallers, at the height of the Kingdom ...
15: ...His successor [[Fulkes de Villaret]] executed the plan, and on [[August 15]], [[1309]] after over two ...
17: ...] in [[1480]], who after the [[fall of Constantinople]] made the Knights a priority target.
25: After seven years of moving from place to place in [[Europe]], the Knights were re-established...
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