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...architecture which originated in Italy with the Lombards, said Mr. Cummings, and spread during the Dark Ages, and afterwards, over Europe, is neither the Asiatic, Byzantine, nor Roman; but combines features of them all. It is a style which lies between the Roman and the Gothic. Until 1820 it was variously termed; but that year a French architect named it Romanesque...
...received, among which is an exhaustive collection of Venetian photographs. Dr. Richardson. of the American School of Classical Study at Athens is now collecting photographs of everything of interest in that city. When these two collections arrive the facilities of the Fine Arts Department for illustrating Greek, and Roman architecture will be unequalled in this country. Within a few days about two hundred lantern slides, illustrating classical subjects, have been received...
...painting together, because at that period these now separate branches were closely united. The architecture of the Middle Ages was primarily that of church edifices. The Gothic system, the distinctive style of the Middle Ages, was developed from the architecture of the early Christian Church. It was the Roman "basilica" which, in all probability, furnished the first model. Professor Moore then traced the growth of church architecture through the early Roman forms, as shown by the churches of St. Paul and St. Lorenzo at Rome, down to the Byzantine form, as shown in the church of St. Sophia, at Constantinople...
LATIN B, C, D.- Professor Morgan will lecture on the Roman Theatre in Harvard 1 at 4.30 Wednesday. Regular recitations of Wednesday and Thursday will be omitted...
...results of foreign missions previous to the present century justify their continuance.- (a) Foreign missionaries Christianized the Roman Empire (N. A. Rev. p. 22, Jan. 1896).- (b) Missionaries Christianized the barbarian nations.- (1) St. Irenaeus in Gaul.- (2) Boniface in Germany.- (3) St. Patrick in Ireland.- (4) St. Augustine in England (N. A. Rev. Jan. 1896, p. 22 ff.).- (c) America was Christianized by missionaries.- (1) Jesuits (Francis Parkman "The Jesuits in N. America...