Ave Roma Immortalis


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Reproduction of the original: Ave Roma Immortalis by Francis Marion Crawford




Ave Roma Immortalis: The History of Eternal Rome (Vol. 1&2)


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"Ave Roma Immortalis" in tells us the story of Rome, presented by regions, sections, streets, villas, archeological remains and monuments one would see by walking thrugh the roads of the eternal city. _x000D_ Contents:_x000D_ The Making of the City_x000D_ The Empire_x000D_ The City of Augustus_x000D_ The Middle Age_x000D_ The Fourteen Regions:_x000D_ Monti_x000D_ Trevi_x000D_ Colonna_x000D_ Campo Marzo_x000D_ Ponte_x000D_ Parione_x000D_ Regola_x000D_ Sant' Eustachio_x000D_ Pigna_x000D_ Campitelli_x000D_ Sant' Angelo_x000D_ Ripa_x000D_ Trastevere_x000D_ Borgo_x000D_ Leo the Thirteenth_x000D_ The Vatican_x000D_ Saint Peter's




Ave Roma Immortalis


Book Description

"Ave Roma Immortalis" in tells us the story of Rome, presented by regions, sections, streets, villas, archeological remains and monuments one would see by walking thrugh the roads of the eternal city. _x000D_ Contents:_x000D_ The Making of the City_x000D_ The Empire_x000D_ The City of Augustus_x000D_ The Middle Age_x000D_ The Fourteen Regions:_x000D_ Monti_x000D_ Trevi_x000D_ Colonna_x000D_ Campo Marzo_x000D_ Ponte_x000D_ Parione_x000D_ Regola_x000D_ Sant' Eustachio_x000D_ Pigna_x000D_ Campitelli_x000D_ Sant' Angelo_x000D_ Ripa_x000D_ Trastevere_x000D_ Borgo_x000D_ Leo the Thirteenth_x000D_ The Vatican_x000D_ Saint Peter's







British Books


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LIBRARY CATALOGUE


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The Publisher


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A Decade of Italian Women (Vol. 1&2)


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This book features the biographical accounts of ten women selected by the author not so much with any intention of bringing together the best, greatest, or most admirable, nor even the most remarkable women Italy has produced, as with a view of securing the greatest amount of variety, in point of social position and character. Each figure of the small gallery was intended to illustrate a distinct phase of Italian social life and civilization: the canonized Saint, that most extraordinary product of the "ages of faith," highly interesting as a social, and perhaps more so still as a psychological phenomenon; the feudal Châtelaine, one of the most remarkable results of the feudal system, and affording a suggestive study of woman in man's place; the high-born and highly-educated Princess of a somewhat less rude day, whose inmost spiritual nature was so profoundly and injuriously modified by her social position; the brilliant literary denizen of "La Bohème", etc. All these were curiously distinct manifestations of womanhood, and if any measure of success has been attained in the endeavor to represent them duly surrounded by the social environment which produced them, while they helped to fashion it, some contribution will have been made to a right understanding of woman's nature, and of the true road towards her more completely satisfactory social development. Volume 1: St. Catherine of Siena (1347-1380) Caterina Sforza (1462-1509) Vittoria Colonna (1490-1547) Volume 2: Tullia D'Aragona (c. 1510 - c. 1570) Olympia Morata (1526-1555) Isabella Andreini (1562-1604) Bianca Cappello (1548-1587) Olympia Pamfili (1594-1656) Elisabetta Sirani (1638-1665) La Corilla (1740-1800)