The American Historical Review, Volume 14John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler American Historical Association, 1909 American Historical Review is the oldest scholarly journal of history in the United States and the largest in the world. Published by the American Historical Association, it covers all areas of historical research. |
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Halaman 3
... character , time was left free for smaller receptions and for the more intimate hospitality of many of the university professors . Especial praise should be given to the excellent arrangements which were made for the reception and ...
... character , time was left free for smaller receptions and for the more intimate hospitality of many of the university professors . Especial praise should be given to the excellent arrangements which were made for the reception and ...
Halaman 5
... character of the congress was excellently ex- emplified by a number of papers which dealt with international rela- tions , using that term in its broadest sense and not limiting it to the diplomatic and military contact of states . Thus ...
... character of the congress was excellently ex- emplified by a number of papers which dealt with international rela- tions , using that term in its broadest sense and not limiting it to the diplomatic and military contact of states . Thus ...
Halaman 10
... character . But the same tendencies of mind that stimulated imagination in the saga and the legend continued to act , and imparted even to written documents the quality of uncon- scious falsification . Until this tendency was restrained ...
... character . But the same tendencies of mind that stimulated imagination in the saga and the legend continued to act , and imparted even to written documents the quality of uncon- scious falsification . Until this tendency was restrained ...
Halaman 12
... character of the edifice he constructs . There is , however , so much the greater necessity for exactly comprehending the essential nature of historic truth and distinguish- ing it as far as possible from the great body of conceptions ...
... character of the edifice he constructs . There is , however , so much the greater necessity for exactly comprehending the essential nature of historic truth and distinguish- ing it as far as possible from the great body of conceptions ...
Halaman 17
... character . But this inference re- sults from a failure to recognize the fact that , as we have shown , the sciences of quantity and the sciences of quality , though fun- damentally different in conception and procedure , are co ...
... character . But this inference re- sults from a failure to recognize the fact that , as we have shown , the sciences of quantity and the sciences of quality , though fun- damentally different in conception and procedure , are co ...
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