These, then, were the two great elements of which the Spanish character was compounded. Loyalty and superstition; reverence for their kings and reverence for their clergy were the leading principles which influenced the Spanish mind, and governed the... History of Civilization in England - Сторінка 27автори: Henry Thomas Buckle - 1864Повний перегляд - Докладніше про цю книгу
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1861 - 648 стор.
...Voyage, vol. ii. pp. 256, 257. 71 " And Olivarez had been heard to censure very severely the duke's These, then, were the two great elements of which...consequences. Such an examination of results will be the more important, not only because nowhere else in Europe have these feelings been so strong,... | |
| Marie Adelaide Shipley - 1887 - 254 стор.
...superstition, operating more decisively to further its introduction than even the zeal of the Dominicans. " These, then, were the two great elements of which...mind, and governed the march of Spanish history," states Buckle succinctly. The popes and bishops of the fourth century had profited of the circumstance... | |
| Marie Adelaide Brown Shipley - 1887 - 246 стор.
...superstition, operating more decisively to further its introduction than even the zeal of the Dominicans. " These, then, were the two great elements of which...kings and reverence for their clergy were the leading principb-s which influenced the Spanish mind, and governed the march of Spanish history," states Buckle... | |
| Marie Adelaide Shipley - 1888 - 274 стор.
...as we well know, describes the state of things there with absolute correctness in this passage : " These, then, were the two great elements of which the Spanish character was compounded—loyalty and superstition ; reverence for their kings and reverence for their clergy were... | |
| American Friends' peace conference - 1902 - 520 стор.
...and blind, unthinking, parrot-like devotion? Buckle, the historian, says: " Loyalty and superstition, reverence for their clergy, were the leading principles...Spanish mind and governed the march of Spanish history." Leaving Buckle, may we not conclude that time has shown that mere loyalty to a machine is not the stuff... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1904 - 976 стор.
...monstrous crime ; " " submissive reverence to their princes being a vital part of their religion." 7a These, then, were the two great elements of which...march of Spanish history.* The peculiar and unexampled a Dios,' frasse que denota estado Religioso." Flores, Memorias de las Reynas Catholicas, Madrid, 1761,... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward, George Walter Prothero, Sir Stanley Mordaunt Leathes - 1908 - 1042 стор.
...of the country, of which the reasons are not far to seek. "Loyalty and superstition," writes Buckle, "were the leading principles which influenced the...Spanish mind and governed the march of Spanish history." "When there were able sovereigns," he says again, "the country prospered; when there were weak Princes... | |
| Francis W. Halsey - 2006 - 209 стор.
...of his eloak embroidered with flower de luces? CAUSES OF THE RAPID DECLINE* BY HSNET THOMAS BITCKLB Loyalty and superstition; reverence for their kings...mind, and governed the march of Spanish history. The results of this combination were, during a considerable period, apparently beneficial, and certainly... | |
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