Search results for "Pre-Romanesque" - New World Encyclopedia

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  • The term pre-Columbian is used to refer to the cultures of the Americas in the time before significant European influence. While technically ...
    20 KB (2,974 words) - 22:17, 30 November 2022
  • The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (also known as the Pre-Raphaelites) was a group of English painters, poets, and critics, founded in 1848, by John ...
    16 KB (2,149 words) - 00:32, 12 April 2023
  • Category:Public Pre-Socratics or pre-Socratic philosophers were the earliest Western philosophers, active during the fifth and sixth centuries ...
    21 KB (3,010 words) - 22:19, 30 November 2022

Page text matches

  • The term "Pre-Romanesque art" is sometimes applied to architecture ... *Pre-Romanesque art *Ottonian architecture *Gothic architecture ...
    63 KB (10,037 words) - 21:37, 16 April 2023
  • A basilica, in the Catholic and Orthodox traditions, is a church building that is especially honored either because of its antiquity, association ...
    21 KB (3,233 words) - 03:32, 1 January 2022
  • A relief is a sculptured art work in which figures are either carved into a level plane or, more typically, the plane is removed to create images ...
    15 KB (2,307 words) - 03:37, 8 December 2022
  • Iconography is the branch of art history which studies the identification, description, and the interpretation of the content of images. The ...
    18 KB (2,613 words) - 15:30, 12 February 2024
  • Category:Public [[Image:Illustrerad Verldshistoria band I Ill 107.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Thales]] Thales (in Greek: Θαλης) of Miletus (ca ...
    7 KB (978 words) - 15:05, 30 April 2023
  • Principle in philosophy and mathematics means a fundamental law or assumption. The word "principle" is derived from Latin "principium ...
    9 KB (1,192 words) - 22:57, 30 November 2022
  • Category:Public[[Image:Leucippus.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Leucippus]] Leucippus or Leukippos (first half of the fifth century b.c.e.) was a pre-Socratic ...
    5 KB (714 words) - 22:04, 25 October 2022
  • Category:Public Xenophanes of Colophon (c. 570 B.C.E.- c. 478 B.C.E.) was a pre-Socratic philosopher, poet, and social and religious critic. Xenophanes ...
    7 KB (1,024 words) - 14:28, 20 May 2023
  • The Common Rule is a federal policy governing the protection of human research subjects as uniformly codified in separate regulations of numerous ...
    16 KB (2,313 words) - 18:58, 25 July 2021
  • Anaximenes (in Greek: Άναξιμένης) of Miletus (c. 585 – 528 b.c.e.) was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher, the third of the philosophers ...
    7 KB (1,024 words) - 19:08, 26 July 2023
  • The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (also known as the Pre-Raphaelites) was a group of English painters, poets, and critics, founded in 1848, by John ...
    16 KB (2,149 words) - 00:32, 12 April 2023
  • Category:Public Tabula rasa (Latin: "scraped tablet," though often translated "blank slate") is the notion, popularized by ...
    9 KB (1,406 words) - 02:05, 27 February 2023
  • Anaxagoras (c. 500 – 428 b.c.e.) was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher. Anaxagoras conceived the origin of the cosmos as the pre-existing, undifferentiated ...
    9 KB (1,342 words) - 19:07, 26 July 2023
  • Category:Public Protagoras (in Greek Πρωταγόρας) (c. 481 B.C.E. – c. 420 B.C.E.) was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher born in Abdera ...
    6 KB (889 words) - 08:16, 2 December 2022
  • Realism is a widely used term in the arts. In literature, it came into being as a response to Romanticism. While Romanticism focused on the inner ...
    18 KB (2,918 words) - 01:40, 8 December 2022
  • Gabriel Charles Dante Rossetti, later Dante Gabriel Rossetti (May 12, 1828 – April 10, 1882) was an English poet and painter who is considered ...
    11 KB (1,622 words) - 22:13, 25 January 2024
  • Democritus was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher. He was born at Abdera in Thrace and lived from around 460 B.C.E. to 370 B.C.E. Democritus developed ...
    8 KB (1,214 words) - 09:28, 28 January 2024
  • Octave Mirbeau (February 16, 1848 in Trévières – February 16, 1917) was a French journalist, art critic, pamphleteer, novelist, and playwright ...
    14 KB (2,130 words) - 23:51, 17 November 2022
  • Cologne (Köln in German) is Germany's fourth-largest city after Berlin, Hamburg and Munich. A key inland port of Europe, it lies on the ...
    26 KB (3,818 words) - 22:35, 7 January 2024
  • the only client of major construction; with all pre-Romanesque architectural styles borrowing from Roman construction with its semicircular arch. Due ...
    55 KB (8,185 words) - 23:26, 18 March 2024

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