| Albert Shaw - 1901 - 954 頁
...is far less American in opinion, on many matters which during the last half of the seventeenth, all of the eighteenth, and the first half of the nineteenth centuries were deemed as essential to Americanism, than are the Southern States or the States of the Mississippi Valley... | |
| Henry Woldmar Ruoff - 1902 - 712 頁
...is far less American in opinion, on many matters which, during the last half of the seventeenth, all of the eighteenth, and the first half of the nineteenth centuries were deemed as essential to Americanism, than are the Southern states or the states of the Mississippi valley... | |
| 1909 - 416 頁
...COMMUNITY AT BETHEL, MISSOURI, AND ITS OFFSPRING AT AURORA, OREGON. WILLIAM G. BEK, Ph. D. THE last decades of the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries were marked by concentrated action on the part of various organizations to establish communistic settlements.... | |
| Arnold Wright, Thomas H. Reid - 1912 - 444 頁
...are a mine of information upon the social and political conditions that obtained in the latter part of the seventeenth, the whole of the eighteenth, and the first half of the nineteenth centuries. On some phases of Straits history, more especially in regard to the events which immediately preceded... | |
| Leslie Clarkson, Margaret Crawford - 2001 - 338 頁
...Great Famine, 'though unprecedented in extent, was not unique in kind. The truth is that, throughout the whole of the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries, Ireland had been living on the very border of famine, and the border was not unfrequently crossed.'4... | |
| Cem Behar - 2003 - 248 頁
...that option, many vakifi are said to have had a much longer life span. 17 However that may be, the end of the eighteenth and the first half of the nineteenth centuries were periods of high rates of inflation in the Ottoman Empire. The debasement of metallic currency, especially... | |
| Society for Horticultural Science (U.S.) - 1905 - 922 頁
...over a greater period of time than most people reali/e. It probably continued through the latter part of the seventeenth, the whole of the eighteenth, and the first half of the nineteenth centuries. The present day historians of these early efforts at grape growing are fond of saying that it was not... | |
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