Alien Tongues

Alien Tongues
Author: Elizabeth Klosty Beaujour
Publisher:
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1989
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN:

Prince of Europe

Prince of Europe
Author: Philip Mansel
Publisher: Orion Publishing Company
Total Pages: 414
Release: 2005
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780753818558

The Habsburg courtier Charles-Joseph Prince de Ligne seduced and symbolized eighteenth-century Europe. Speaking French, the international language of the day, he travelled between Paris and St Petersburg, charming everyone he met. He stayed with Madame du Barry, dined with Frederick the Great and travelled to the Crimea with Catherine the Great. But Ligne was more than a frivolous charmer. He participated in and recorded some of the most important events and movements of his day: the Enlightenment; the struggle for mastery in Germany; the decline of the Ottoman Empire; the birth of German nationalism; and the wars to liberate Europe from Napoleon. He had surprisingly radical views, believing for example in property rights for women, legal rights for Jews and the redistribution of wealth. He was also a highly respected writer and his books on gardens, his letters from the Crimea and his epigrams are considered minor classics of French literature.

Definiteness Effects

Definiteness Effects
Author: Susann Fischer
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 475
Release: 2016-08-17
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1443898007

This volume explores in detail the empirical and conceptual content of the definiteness effect in grammar. It brings together a variety of relevant observations from a typological, diachronic and a bilingual/second language acquisition perspective, and provides a general overview of different approaches concerned with the syntactic, morphological, semantic, and pragmatic properties of the Definiteness Effect in a series of European and non-European languages.

Queenship in Europe 1660-1815

Queenship in Europe 1660-1815
Author: Clarissa Campbell Orr
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 456
Release: 2004-08-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780521814225

Publisher Description

The Uses of Humanism

The Uses of Humanism
Author: Gábor Almási
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 408
Release: 2009-11-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 9004183647

This book is a novel attempt to understand humanism as a socially meaningful cultural idiom in Late Renaissance East Central Europe. Through an exploration of geographical regions that are relatively little known to an English reading public, it argues that late sixteenth-century East Central Europe was culturally thriving and intellectually open in the period between Copernicus and Galileo. Humanism was a dominant cluster of shared intellectual practices and cultural values that brought a number of concrete benefits both to the social-climber intellectual and to the social elite. Two exemplary case studies illustrate this thesis in substantive detail, and highlight the ambivalences and difficulties court humanists routinely faced. The protagonists Johannes Sambucus and Andreas Dudith, both born in the Kingdom of Hungary, were two of the major humanists of the Habsburg court, central figures in cosmopolitan networks of men learning and characteristic representatives of an Erasmian spirit that was struggling for survival in the face of confessionalisation. Through an analysis of their careers at court and a presentation of their self-fashioning as savants and courtiers, the book explores the social and political significance of their humanist learning and intellectual strategies.