"Hemos creído de la mayor oportunidad, con motivo de los 360 años de la fundación del Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Señora del Rosario, publicar este texto, editado inicialmente por la Academia Colombiana de Historia y que hoy se encuentra agotado, por cuanto con el rigor propio de su autor se narran en él todos los hechos que condujeron a dotar a nuestar institución de ese símbolo fundacional, grato a propios y extraños.
Das Glück der Familie Rougon Emile Zola - Menschliche Schicksale und historische Ereignisse so kunstvoll wie in keinem anderen Werk des großen Naturalisten ist hier beides miteinander verwoben.
Death Comes for the Archbishop Willa Cather - Willa Cather described the result of her bold experimentation into advancing the art of the novel in Death Comes for the Archbishop as "e;altogether a new kind of thing.
Sir Kenneth Clark made his name as a scholar of Leonardo da Vinci by a Critical Catalogue of Leonardo's drawings at Windsor Castle, published in 1935, which was recognized as establishing the subject on a firmer chronological basis.
E K P H R A S I S is a rhetorical device, in which one medium of art relates to another medium by describing its essence and form, and indoing so, connects more directly to the audience.
As we, human beings, know how to the American standard of culture is expressed by the gift when we would like to give individual attention to community, to a people, and to a special one.
Avivamiento y EvangelismoA travs de los dos brazos de la iglesiaEl avivamiento es el Seor trabajando en la iglesia; el evangelismo es la iglesia trabajando por el Seor.
I want to introduce you to my third book of photographs, Farewell to Valparaiso, that describes my feelings at the time to say good-bye to a loved city where I lived in my adolescence and young adult life.
VISITORS TO THE PAST is not intended to give you a detailed map to the places featured within its pages, or give you suggestions to the best local cafes, shops or other trendy treats.
This book consists of fifteen cartoons inspired by an 1866 Harpers Weekly article about the hypothetical length of the Thirty Years War at different periods in time and extending into the future when both sides had developed the ultimate weapons to end all wars.