"Halle" Quotes from Famous Books
... welche 4 Theil in sich begreifft, oder in 4 Theil abgetheilet ist. 1. der bedeckte (Porticus) Gang, dessen Waende mit Marmelstein biss auff die Helffte bekleidet sind. Der Obertheil, da die Schwibboegen (Laquearia) anheben, hat er wie auch die Schwibboegen selber die Gemaehlde. In diesem Gang oder Halle (porticu) stehen die Weiber, und kommen nicht in die Kirchen hinein, wie auch in andere Kirchen nicht, als wann sie zum Abendmahl gehen. 2. ist die Kirche fuer sich so mit Tuerckischen Deppichen (aoreis) beleget und hat nur ein Thor. ... — Byzantine Churches in Constantinople - Their History and Architecture • Alexander Van Millingen
... Professor Halle has said a terrible thing: "Woman is the nervous part of humanity, man the muscular." Humboldt himself, that serious thinker, has said that an invisible atmosphere surrounds ... — Child of a Century, Complete • Alfred de Musset
... university men was not confined to Berlin; at Leipsic, Halle, Giessen, Heidelberg, and elsewhere, I also found delightful professorial circles. In my favorite field, I was especially struck with the historian Oncken. As a lecturer he was perfect; and I have often advised American historical students to pass a semester, if not more, at Giessen, in order ... — Volume I • Andrew Dickson White
... the ocean, and in a place where we might least have expected him. Some ten years after the events above sketched while residing at Berlin as minister of the United States, I one day received from an American student at the University of Halle a letter stating that he had been requested by no less a personage than the eminent Dr Schlottmann, instructor in Hebrew in the theological school of that university,—the successor of Gesenius in that branch of instruction,—to write me for information regarding the Phenician ... — Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White Volume II • Andrew Dickson White
... a pastoral, which might be taken from the works of another poet of the same period, whose acquaintance no one can neglect to make—Adam de la Halle, a Picard, of Arras. Adam lived, it is true, fifty years later than the date imagined for Aucassins, but his shepherds and shepherdesses are not so much like, as identical with, those of the Southern poet, and all have so singular an air of life that the conventional courteous knight ... — Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres • Henry Adams
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