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  • av William Stearns Davis
    329,-

    This book has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations. We havent used any OCR or photocopy to produce this book. The whole book has been typeset again to produce it without any errors or poor pictures and errant marks.

  • av William Stearns Davis
    385 - 495,-

  • - A Story of Boston and Harvard College on the Eve of the Revolutionary War 1770-1775
    av William Stearns Davis
    345,-

    William Stearns Davis (1877-1930) was an American educator, historian, and author. cited as one who "contributed to history as a scholarly discipline, . . . [but] was intrigued by the human side of history, which, at the time, was neglected by the discipline." 1927's Gilman of Redford is a fictionalized novel describing events in pre-Revolutionary War Massachusetts, including the Boston Tea Party and the Battle of Bunker Hill.

  • av William Stearns Davis
    415,-

  • av William Stearns Davis
    445,-

  • - Ancient Athens
    av William Stearns Davis
    215,-

  • av William Stearns Davis
    289,-

  • av William Stearns Davis
    245,-

    A story of the demon-haunted forests of Germany in the 13th century, complete with a witch whose twin ravens speak of Satan, robber barons, outlaws, a maiden in distress, and the mysterious Saint of the Dragon's Dale, a powerful, enigmatic figure with a dark secret.

  • - A Picture of Athenian Life
    av William Stearns Davis
    355,-

    This book tries to describe what an intelligent person would have witnessed in ancient Athens if by some legerdemain he were translated to the fourth century B.C. and conducted about the city under competent guidance. The year 360 B.C. has been selected as the hypothetical time of this visit, not because of any special virtue in that date, but because Athens was then architecturally almost perfect, her civic and her social life seemed at their best, the democratic constitution held its vigor, and there were few outward signs of the general decadence which was to set in after the triumph of Macedon. At the time of original publication in 1925, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

  • - A Picture of Roman Life
    av William Stearns Davis
    445,-

    This book tries to describe what an intelligent person would have witnessed in Ancient Rome if by some legerdemain he had been translated to the Second Christian Century, and conducted about the imperial city under competent guidance. The year 134 after Christ has been chosen as the hypothetical time of this visit, not from any special virtue in that date, but because Rome was then architecturally nearly completed, the Empire seemed in its most prosperous state, although many of the old usages and traditions of the Republic still survived, and the evil days of decadence were as yet hardly visible in the background. The time of the absence of Hadrian from his capital was selected particularly, in order that interest could be concentrated upon the life and doings of the great city itself, and upon its vast populace of slaves, plebeians, and nobles, not upon the splendid despot and his court, matters too often the center for attention by students of the Roman past. At the time of original publication in 1925, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

  • - A Tale of the Fall of Babylon
    av William Stearns Davis
    299,-

    Historical fiction about the fall of Babylon. The author has not been unmindful that certain record tablets give a narrative of the capture of Babylon, in some points differing from the Bible account in the Book of Daniel. It is not improper to point out that the "Chronicle Tablets" were written with a political end to serve,--to soothe the feelings of the conquered Babylonians, by representing that Babylon surrendered voluntarily to Cyrus. This is hardly likely; but it is very probable that the city was taken by treachery among the priests and not by assault. At the time of original publication in 1902, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

  • - A Picture of a Typical Feudal Community in the Thirteenth Century
    av William Stearns Davis
    355,-

    CONTENTSThe Fief of St. Aliquis; Its History and DenizensThe Castle of St. AliquisHow the Castle Wakes. Baronial HospitalityGames and Diversions. Falconry and Hunting. The Baroness's GardenThe Family of the Baron. Life of the WomenThe Matter of Clothes. A Feudal WeddingCookery and MealtimesThe Jongleurs and Secular Literature and PoetryThe Feudal Relationship. Doing HomageJustice and PunishmentsThe Education of a Feudal NoblemanFeudal Weapons and Horses. Dubbing a KnightThe TourneyA Baronial Feud. The Siege of a CastleA Great Feudal Battle-BouvinesThe Life of the PeasantsCharity. Care of the Sick. FuneralsPopular Religion. Pilgrimages. Superstitions. Relic WorshipThe Monastery of St. Aliquis: Buildings, Organization. An Ill-Ruled AbbeyThe Monastery of St. Aliquis: The Activities of Its Inmates. Monastic LearningThe "Good Town" of Pontdebois: Aspect and OrganizationIndustry and Trade in Pontdebois. The Great FairThe Lord Bishop. The Canons. The Parish ClergyThe Cathedral and Its Builders

  • - A Tale of the Days of Xerxes, Leonidas and Themistocles
    av William Stearns Davis
    345,-

    "A really moving narrative, with figures of flesh and blood in it, and a broader vitality that touches the reader's imagination. The thing is astonishingly human... and as unaffectedly dramatic as though he had drawn his material from the modern world."--- The New York Tribune"The novel reproduces Greek life, and the events of the Persian invasion brilliantly and with correctness... Mr. Davis has even surpassed his previous efforts in highly imaginative work."--- Boston BudgetAt the time of original publication in 1907, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

  • - An Historical Romance of the French Revolution
    av William Stearns Davis
    445,-

    René, Chevalier de Massac, insists upon marrying Virginie Durand --though she is not of noble birth-- gives up his position at the court at Versailles, and throws himself heart and soul into the cause of the people. This book tells the eventful story of De Massac's part in the Revolution and the equally dangerous and courageous part played by his wife. De Massac, who is a friend of Danton and Robespierre, takes part in the capture of the Bastille, the storming of the Tuileries, and the battle of Wattignies, and with difficulty saves his own children from an attack by the peasants. The author's aim has been to picture life as it really was lived in and around Paris during the Revolution. He shows with historical truth the French Court with all its glitter and its rottenness, and the life of the people in the homes and streets of Paris and in the little villages outside. Many famous characters appear in the story --Louis XVI and his Queen, Danton, St. Just, Mirabeau, and Robespierre-- and the book is alive with the conflicting passions of the time. At the time of original publication in 1929, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

  • - A Tale of the Youth of St. Louis, King of France
    av William Stearns Davis
    345,-

    A novel about the childhood of the man who became King of France and was later canonized.William Stearns Davis (1877-1930) was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota, and the author of a number of highly-accurate historical novels.

  • - A Story of Boston and Harvard College on the Eve of the Revolutionary War 1770-1775
    av William Stearns Davis
    345,-

    The author of this narrative was of course the well-known Boston merchant (founder of the State Street firm of Gilman, Slater and Peabody) who at the close of the Revolution did so much to solidify the commercial prosperity of Massachusetts. As is herein suggested he served through the War for Independence, rising to the rank of colonel, and if his ambitions had carried him into politics he might have advanced far. As it was he served three times in the State House of Representatives and twice in the State Senate. He was counted a very moderate member of the Jeffersonian Republicans, probably on account of his marriage and a natural sympathy with France, but he always retained the good will of the Federalists, and enjoyed the personal friendship of John Adams during that veteran statesman's long retirement at Quincy. During the later part of his life Colonel Gilman was a valued member of the Harvard Board of Overseers, and was also a very active deacon of the Old South Church. This story of his life during the years 1770-75 was apparently written during the presidency of John Quincy Adams, at the instigation of Colonel Gilman's gift daughter Deborah. It will be recalled that her husband was the distinguished jurist, Justice Peltiah Gridley of the Massachusetts Supreme Court, and that her second son, General Roger Gridley, command a Union division in the Five Forks-Appomattox campaign and subsequently had a conspicuous part in the building of the Union Pacific Railroad. Colonel Gilman speaks frequently of the town of Bedford, which, it may be complained, cannot be found upon modern maps of Middlesex County. It is certain, however, that it cannot have been far from Lexington, Concord and Billerica, and indeed it may perhaps be identified with a town known at present under a slightly different name. In preparing this manuscript the editor has sometimes modernized the diction slightly, also he has omitted certain theological observations, which Colonel Gilman probably introduced for the benefit of his own family. Otherwise Roger Gilman is allowed to tell his own story, as a vivid reminder of "The times which tried men's souls." At the time of original publication in 1912, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

  • - A Picture of a Typical English Community at the End of the Sixteenth Century
    av William Stearns Davis
    325,-

    This book describes life in the England of Queen Elizabeth in terms of the concrete. Perhaps no Boroughport or Hollydean Hall can be discovered on the maps of the 1550's, but there were scores of towns and hundreds of rich manors in which the things discussed in this study were wholly typical. The Hollydeans were not wiser, more cultivated or better than a great many contemporaries among the wealthier gentry; the episodes laid in Boroughport could be duplicated in almost any chartered town near the seaboard. At the time of original publication in 1930, William Stearns Davis was Professor of Ancient History, University of Minnesota.

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