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Word: italians (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...Italian 1 (anticip...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Make-up Final and Anticipatory Examinations | 10/5/1908 | See Source »

From Mrs. John Markoe, of Philadelphia, the Library has received a gift of $50, to be spent for books on the Italian Risorgimento. The money will be spent through Mr. H. N. Gay, of Rome, Curator of Italian History in the College Library, through whose efforts the Library's collection in this department has been already remarkably enriched...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Gifts to University Library | 9/30/1908 | See Source »

...front of the Hemenway Gymnasium there is a new bronze statue, a replica of the "Discobolus" of the Vatican. A handsome pedestal of Italian marble completes the gift, which came from E. W. Longfellow '65, a nephew of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow '59. The arch at the entrance of Appleton Chapel has been adorned with a small fragment of an archway from St. Saviour's Church in Southwark, England, in which John Harvard was baptized...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOLYOKE HOUSE IMPROVED | 9/29/1908 | See Source »

There have been various accessions to the print collections, and 670 additions to the collection of photographs, including illustrations of Italian architecture and sculpture and works by the English Pre-Raphaelites. To the collection of slides 84 additions have been made, including illustrations of Greek sculpture, the discoveries at Delphi, and mosales in Ravenna. To the Museum library 37 volumes have been added by gift, purchase, and transfer from the University Library...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Report of Fogg Art Museum | 6/17/1908 | See Source »

...survey of the North Italian Painters extends from Altichiero to Correggio, with a postscript on the Electics and the Teneloists. He analyzes with equal patience and skill the works of scores of lesser men. He seems to have overlooked nothing. And he brings all, down to the most modest specimen, into his system. Of chief interest to the American reader, who has not the pictures before him to refer to, are Mr. Berenson's generalizations--the pages in which he sets forth his main ideas, or sums up some really important master, like Montegna or Corrreggio. His remarks...

Author: By W. R. Thayer ., | Title: "North Italian Painters of the Renaissance" | 6/12/1908 | See Source »

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