definition
An instance of an exclamation attracting attention or injunction to be silent.
definition
An utterance used to discreetly attract someone's attention.
definition
An injunction to be silent and/or to pay attention to what is being said or can be heard.
For the Latin translations see Teuffel-Schwabe, Hist.
Many sources for the history of the Normans were collected by Andre Du Chesne in his Hist.
For the Italian nobility see the eight magnificent folio volumes of Count Pompeo Litta, Celebri famiglie italiane, continued by various editors (Milan, 1819-1907); for Spanish, Fernandez de Bethencourt, Hist.
We note in this connexion the form of a sacred bark represented in Meyer's Hist.
Chevallier, Repertoire des sources hist.
With wide learning and keen critical insight he wrote a number of historical works of which the most important is his Institutiones Hist.
Protestants were granted full civil rights and protection, and were permitted to hold their ecclesiastical assemblies - consistories, colloquies and synods, 1 Lindsay, Hist.
See Bede, Hist.
For a comprehensive bibliography, including monographs and published documents, see Ulysse Chevalier, Repertoire des sources hist.
He was anxious that Mary Stuart's death 1 Hist.
The editio princeps of the original appeared at Augsburg (1471); that of Haverkamp (Leiden, 1738 and 1767) has now been superseded by C. Zangemeister, who has edited the Hist.
Dupuy in 1777, and also appeared in 1786 in the fortysecond volume of the Hist.
Alexanderzuges, 1903); whilst on the other hand attempts were made to acclimatize the plants of the motherland in the foreign soil (Theophr., Hist.
See Tacitus, Histories; Suetonius, Vespasian; Dio Cassius, lxvi.; Merivale, Hist.
Laing (1846-1864); John Spottiswoode, archbishop of St Andrews, Hist.
The chief authorities for Willibrord's life are Alcuin's Vita Willibrordi, both in prose and in verse, and Bede's Hist.
See C. Revillout, E tude hist.
See C. Remusat, Hist.
Bodin (Paris, 1876); for the political philosophy of Bodin, see P. Janet, Hist.
Chevalier, Repertoire des sources hist.
Dummler is in the Monumenta Germaniae hist.
For a bibliography of Walafrid's historical works, and of writings dealing with them, see Potthast, Bibliotheca hist.
Society, p. 302; Grant, Hist.
Astronomy, p. 377; Marie, Hist.
Doebner ((Leipzig, 1886); Lettres et memoires, edited by Countess Bentinct London, 1880); duke of Portland, Hist.
In March 1715 he in vain attempted to defend the late ministry in the new parliament; and on the announcement of Walpole's intended attack upon the authors of the treaty of Utrecht he fled in disguise (March 28, 1715) to Paris, where he was well received, after having addressed a letter to Lord Lansdowne from Dover protesting his innocence 2 Hist.
For other accounts see Carlyle, Cromwell's Letters and Speeches, letter cxl.; Hoenig, Cromwell; Baldock, Cromwell as a Soldier; and Gardiner, Hist.
See the accounts prefixed to the first edition of Spottiswoode's History of Scotland and to that published by the Spottiswoode Society in 1851; also David Calderwood's Hist.
Breasted, Hist.
Montalembert's Monks of the West gives the early history very fully; the later history, to the beginning of the 18th century, may be found in Helyot, Hist.
See Tacitus, Hist.
This period might no doubt be reduced to 480 years by the supposition, in itself not improbable, that some of the judges were local and contemporaneous; the suggestion has also been made that, as is usual in Oriental chronologies, the years of foreign domination were not counted, the beginning of each judge's rule being reckoned, not from the victory which brought him into power, but from the death of his predecessor; we should in this case obtain for the period from the Exodus to the foundation of the Temple 440+x+y years,' which if 30 years be assigned con 1 Petrie, Hist.
On the relation of Neoplatonism to Christianity, and the historical importance of Neoplatonism generally, see the leading church histories, and the Histories of Dogma by Baur, Nitzsch, Harnack, &c. Compare also Loffler, Der Platonismus der Kirchenvater (1782); Huber, Die Philosophie der Kirchenvdter (1859); Tzchirner, Fall des Heidenthums (1829), pp. 574618; Burckhardt, Die Zeit Constantin's des Grossen (1853); Chastel, Hist.
The most important works on Manichaeism are Beausobre, Hist.
See P. Helyot, Hist.
But the first notice of the silkworm in Western literature occurs in Aristotle, Hist.
The chief passages are collected in Petrie's Monumenta Hist.
See Sandys, Hist.
Schanz, Geschichte der romischen Litteratur (2nd ed., 1899), ii., where all that is known of Timagenes is given; Teuffel-Schwabe, Hist.
For fragments see Ritter and Preller, Hist.
See especially the Reports of the Hist.
Among authorities not actually contemporary but written within a century of Mary's death are David Calderwood's Hist.
Thus St Augustine 54 ad Januar.) mentions it as having been kept from time immemorial and as probably instituted by the apostles Chrysostom, in his homily on the ascension, mentions a celebration of the festival in the church of Romanesia outside Antioch, and Socrates (Hist.
Ribbeck, Scenicae romanorum poesis fragmenta (1897-1898); see Mommsen, Hist.
See Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, edited by Earle and Plummer (Oxford, 1892-1899); Bede, Hist.
See Le Pere Anselme, Hist.
Of general works on Louis Philippe's reign may be mentioned Louis Blanc, Hist.
See Tillemont, Hist.
On October 22, 1669, he was sent for by the delegates of the press, "that whereas he had taken a great deal of paines in writing the Hist.
See Helyot, Hist.