The original version of Spider-Man has gone through something of a renaissance, in recent times. |
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Some have argued that the activities of these reforming scholars indicate a renaissance of Chinese public morality. |
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One of the dreams I had is that it would inspire the interest of the media and bring about a renaissance of calypso. |
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After a period in the critical wilderness, Bacharach has of late been enjoying something of a renaissance. |
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Ghosts have enjoyed a renaissance of sorts in literary and cultural criticism. |
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Pottery is enjoying a renaissance as potters combine modern techniques with traditional designs. |
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These little plastic freaks have achieved quite a renaissance on the Web, with almost a dozen pages devoted to them. |
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Popular culture has enjoyed a renaissance, and artists struggle to support themselves. |
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Britain's woodlands are enjoying a renaissance in private purchasing by those who want to own their very own piece of nature. |
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It could even be that this contract will be viewed in five years' time as having led to a renaissance of general practice. |
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Your love life is sure to have a renaissance long before you reach middle age. |
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In recent years there has been a renaissance of traditional music throughout the Andes. |
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It's also behind what may be a renaissance in traditional north Vietnamese cooking. |
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The medium has reason to feel triumphant, as it is currently enjoying a renaissance. |
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Vietnam has experienced a renaissance in popular religious activity in recent years. |
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What isn't widely known is that there is another Italian renaissance going on, a renaissance in dance music. |
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Despite now being aged 51, former world champion Karpov has seen a renaissance in his play. |
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Over the past decade we have enjoyed a renaissance in the appreciation of historic performances. |
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The late renaissance had little experience of pack-ice and polar seas, but they did have plenty of glaciers in the alps. |
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In the first half of 19th century the German missionaries undertook a renaissance of the language. |
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In the funkadelic era between the flower power '60s and the electronic '80s, there lived a renaissance man by the name of Glen Larson. |
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The importance of Neoplatonic ideas in renaissance visual representation of and intervention in the physical world has been well documented. |
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With the development of Nollywood, we're beginning to see a resurgence of movie going culture, some sort of a renaissance for the movie industry. |
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The social economic renaissance of the continent will be much dependent on the resoluteness and steps in this direction. |
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They decided to explore renaissance consort music in the form of recorder trio with lute. |
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The Riesling renaissance started years ago, yet most British drinkers remain curiously indifferent to this noble grape's charms. |
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The report also details how new technologies promise to create a renaissance in the already energized field of vaccinology. |
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West Wales is leading the renaissance in Welsh farmhouse cheesemaking according to an influential cookery writer. |
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When her eyes adjusted, she gaped in awe to see tons of renaissance artworks and statues. |
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This edition will thus serve as a valuable point of comparison to the study of witchcraft and renaissance occultism. |
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Eastern Europe is now undergoing a marked renaissance in the Western European tourist industry. |
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His appointment signaled a renaissance of the warrior ethic throughout the services. |
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But we're now seeing a reaction against mass production in the renaissance of organic farming and farmers' markets. |
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So I went to the uni and I did medieval history and renaissance history and ancient history. |
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His style is almost synonomous with the idealism of beauty and peace in renaissance art. |
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It's true potential, however, has always been there and recently it has begun to be realised in yet another vinous renaissance! |
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The humble gas station is undergoing something of an architectural renaissance. |
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The aquamanile eventually evolved for secular use during the renaissance and these items found their way onto the dinner tables of the rich. |
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German renaissance drawings are often enchantingly unstuffy, and frequently treat subjects that would never have been painted. |
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One typically Tuscan form of revival with roots in the renaissance was the cloister lunette fresco cycle. |
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Well before the renaissance, the new men were buying up land, seizing cities, glorifying themselves with new titles and heraldic blazons. |
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Traditional music has undergone a renaissance in the last few decades. |
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Maria's single-minded rise through the company's ranks mirrors the renaissance of the German postwar economy. |
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While the idea of human improvement may be implicit in notions of renaissance, he was anything but an apostle of the idea of progress. |
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A quarter of a century passed before renaissance ideas finally took root, with the arrival of Dutch and Ligurian potters. |
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Our data shows that, far from dying a death, the package holiday is experiencing something of a renaissance. |
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The '80s pirate renaissance also demonstrated that pirates love nothing more than a boisterous sea chantey. |
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And, while it is no longer in its original location, Cotton Club has seen a jazz revival with the renaissance of the Harlem neighborhood. |
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Here, I stood face-to-face with magnificent structures in 17 architectural styles, including Gothic, renaissance and classical. |
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The renaissance of Down football began in style at a sun-baked Casement Park as the minors gave a glimpse of the glorious future that lies ahead. |
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Orientalism inspired him in his adulthood the way Italian renaissance and Greek paganism inspired him as a youth. |
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Lucia Nuti makes a clear distinction in her essay between renaissance geography and chorography. |
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A bilbo is a finely tempered rapier design first made in Bilboa during the middle ages and the renaissance. |
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Now, over ten years later, shoegaze is enjoying something of a renaissance. |
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Based in Amsterdam, The Fortuna Consort is an early music group exploring renaissance consort music in the form of recorder trio and lute. |
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The plaque illustrated here may show the influence of Liomges enamels, demonstrating Rodin's interest in renaissance art. |
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By the close integration of text, commentary, and illustration, he gave the renaissance world a definitive anatomical thesis. |
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Under his direction, wares in the style of the French renaissance Limoges enamels were executed. |
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This more primitive expression of womanhood is fused with the typically reclining posture of renaissance figures, such as Michelangelo's Dawn. |
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After languishing in an anti-fashion no man's land for a good 10 years, the cocktail enjoyed a renaissance in the early Nineties. |
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It must postdate Sir Thomas's award of the Garter in 1503, and the use of renaissance ornament in English glass occurs from about 1515 onwards. |
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The renaissance of Gagauz culture and language is of important status in the new autonomy within Moldova. |
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This little known renaissance play deals with tragedy which befalls two houses once a lady's honour has been compromised. |
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Other than music, there should be a renewed interest in theatre especially with theatre houses having undergone a renaissance this year. |
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Here was this person who was having a renaissance or a metamorphosis and seemed really joyous. |
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The very nature of the urban renaissance in Bristol was to exclude rustics from participation rather than to transform them into citified wannabes. |
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And the New Swindon Company the organisation charged with kick-starting the renaissance of Swindon town centre has said a change of culture must start now. |
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But from 2007 onward, shepherding the International Monetary Fund through the worst crisis in living memory was his renaissance. |
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So they had to make me this waterproof renaissance gown and I would have to descend into the hot tub for rehearsal. |
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His first pictorial works were in the tradition of the renaissance. |
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Look, your observation has been that research into psychedelics like Mescaline, like DMT, like the magic mushrooms, has recently undergone something of a renaissance. |
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These which form a renaissance laboratory include eight hundred relics, including triangular crucibles, shallow scorifiers, bone-ash cupels, aludels, and other artifacts. |
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In a veritable Mapplethorpe renaissance, two exhibitions have launched in tandem dedicated to his work. |
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These chance meetings take place in front of the general buzz of rich collectors, some of whom puff on cigars, tycoon-like, only a few steps from renaissance oils. |
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It is implicit in this roll-call of composers that the idea of a renaissance in music is not to do with a common style, but rather with shared ideals. |
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I need to ask one of my choristers tonight what it is about renaissance madrigals that he likes so much, and what about other music he dislikes, or is neutral to. |
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There are wonderful drawings demonstrating how the variety of graphic style which Rubens commanded surpassed that of arty high renaissance artist. |
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Spring in Tuscany means clouds of golden mimosa and an instinct to head south over the Ponte Vecchio to see Italian renaissance landscaping at its best in the Boboli Gardens. |
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According to Menninghaus, Darwinian theory, which like biologism is undergoing a renaissance, states that beauty solely serves biological selection. |
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By opening our eyes to the crucial role the city's artists played in the transition from medieval to early renaissance Tuscan art, this major exhibition does just that. |
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If city hall was then to make an exception to the ridiculous but rigid policy of only deck chairs and no sun beds you would I am sure witness a renaissance in that area. |
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As a reaction to the Middle Ages, in the early renaissance, there was a strong focus on a classical education consisting of Greek, Latin, the classics, and art. |
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Economists have discovered the renaissance in Manchester and other northern cities has reversed the traditional southward trend of the migrating workforce. |
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Human civilisation has developed at an exponential rate since the renaissance, during a time when the environment has been in a relatively benign state. |
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While Chicago is humping herself in the interests of literature, art and the sciences, vain old Boston is frivoling away her precious time in an attempted renaissance of the cod fisheries. |
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Thus, the museum began to acquire European sculpture and old master drawings and purchased an important collection of medieval and renaissance illuminated manuscripts. |
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He is a phoenix rising from mediocrity, an actor in perpetual renaissance. |
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The cyclic nature of history demands a renaissance after every Dark Age. |
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The new renaissance in television would never have happened without this commitment to excellence. |
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But linear perspective itself is probably a renaissance not an antique invention, and Durer's approach to ancient architecture is remarkably free and unlearned. |
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Milton showers his poem with thousands of allusions to Hebraic, medieval, and renaissance culture, and his syntax may strike a modern reader as twisted. |
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His most notable acquisitions include a jade flask belonging to Clive of India, and a newly rediscovered renaissance Mantuan roundel of Vulcan and Venus. |
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After World War II, the Village went through an enormous renaissance as the Bohemian beatnik art place. |
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A four-storey tower or turret, containing large circular rooms, rises out of the ground floor, and is adorned with friezes of classical and renaissance detail. |
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Instead of acquiring or commissioning full-size marble sculptures, he concentrated on a 'miniature' sculpture gallery of renaissance bronzes in his ground-floor library. |
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The new renaissance and baroque galleries at the Waiters Art Museum, Baltimore, include rooms that resemble those of a seventeenth-century Dutch nobleman. |
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Nijinsky's modern physicality created a renaissance of male dancing, a revolution that rivaled the supremacy of the diva, the prima donna, the ballerina. |
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During the late 1880s a Piero della Francesca cost only half as much as renaissance majolica or Palissy ware. |
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Yet while foreclosures soared and residential construction withered, downtown Greeley has been undergoing a quiet renaissance. |
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As part of British India, the region was influenced by the Bengali renaissance and played an important role in anti colonial movements. |
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Traditional Newfoundland heritage enjoyed a renaissance in the arts and crafts. |
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In 1909 the industrialist Dr Ludwig Mond gave 42 Italian renaissance paintings, including the Mond Crucifixion by Raphael, to the Gallery. |
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Following the renaissance and the end of the Middle Ages, Baroque architecture replaced the traditional Gothic style. |
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During the renaissance Portuguese painting was highly influenced by north European painting. |
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As Emperor, he saw himself as the new Augustus, an enlightened despot destined to guide the Roman Empire into a new era of Flavian renaissance. |
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The renaissance which led to the modern Greek theatre, took place in the Venetian Crete. |
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During the 12th century, the Byzantines provided their model of early humanism as a renaissance of interest in classical authors. |
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By the time of the Sasanians, Iranian art came across a general renaissance. |
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During this era, a renaissance in Philippine culture occurred, with the expansion of Philippine cinema and literature. |
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Just look at the penultimate symbol of urban renaissance, Brooklyn. |
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On the Continent in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, there was a renaissance in all learning, especially in legal concepts and writing. |
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There are however some recent developments which may lead to a renaissance of the technology. |
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Woolwich started to enjoy the beginning of a renaissance with the residential redevelopment of the former Royal Arsenal. |
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Its towers and some of its churches were built by Italian architects, lending the city some of the aura of the renaissance. |
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Following the redevelopment of the flagship Kingfisher Shopping Centre in 2002 Redditch is undergoing an economic and cultural renaissance. |
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In their Introduction, Aud Sissel Hoel and Ingvild Folkvord evoke the idea of a renaissance of Cassirer studies. |
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Young homeowners, au fait with the flat-pack ideals, are prompting a renaissance in prefabricated housing. |
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The era saw a reform and renaissance of public schools, inspired by Thomas Arnold at Rugby. |
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Other renaissance icons included Michael Madhusudan Dutt and Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay. |
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The 1931 formation of the Clarsach Society kickstarted the modern harp renaissance. |
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Only in recent decades has the country enjoyed something of a cultural and economic renaissance. |
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Also key to Morillo's renaissance is the return of his all-conquering record label Subliminal. |
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Marlowe's subject matter is different from Shakespeare's as it focuses more on the moral drama of the renaissance man than any other thing. |
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He writes from a classicising impulse, treating Chaucer as the renaissance humanists treated the classical writers. |
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Sensations like these are why the childhood treehouse is currently enjoying a full-grown renaissance. |
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Despite Glasgow's economic renaissance, the East End of the city remains the focus of social deprivation. |
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The commission's plan for an industrial renaissance has started a debate on deindustrialisation and its harmful results for the European economy. |
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Meanwhile, ethnic nationalism experienced a renaissance in the 1980s, after violence broke out in Kosovo. |
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He also adapted work by Scottish renaissance poets such as MacDiarmid, Sorley Maclean and William Soutar. |
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The revival in both Scotland's indigenous languages is partly drawn from the renaissance. |
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Other people connected with the Scottish renaissance, not mentioned previously, are listed below. |
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Cecilia Vicuna's stirring introduction sets the tone to perceive the Mapuche renaissance of ul, or song, in what follows. |
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The Djiboutian guest hailed the modern Omani renaissance under the leadership of His Majesty Sultan Qaboos Bin Said. |
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Another example of renaissance planned cities is the walled star city of Palmanova. |
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After Italy, Hungary was the first European country where the renaissance appeared. |
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Charles Moore created the exuberant Piazza d'Italia in New Orleans, Louisiana, a public square filled with recreated pieces of Italian renaissance architecture. |
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It emulates Virgil's Eclogues of the first century BCE and the Eclogues of Mantuan by Baptista Mantuanus, a late medieval, early renaissance poet. |
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In the late renaissance various writers began to question the medieval and classical understanding of knowledge acquisition in a more fundamental way. |
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But they lost their appeal when city living enjoyed a renaissance in the yuppified 1980s, and suburbia came to represent a safe and boring existence. |
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Clockmakers of the Middle Ages and renaissance men such as Leonardo da Vinci helped expand humans' technological milieu toward the preconditions for industrial machine tools. |
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Maggot therapy is enjoying a renaissance as a means of treating not only MRSA infections, but patients with other wounds and sores that have become infected. |
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Violent downswings in wholesale fuel prices have delivered an Autumn renaissance to companies that traditionally struggle for any profit in the retail gasoline space. |
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He began as a breakdancer during the rap music renaissance era of the 1980s and along with mix tapes, he became recognised in the streets and industry as the Mix Tape King. |
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The finest tungsten chucker to ever grace the planet has enjoyed something of a summer renaissance by winning the UK Open in Bolton and the Golden Harvest in North America. |
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But according to Elie Mmari, an oenologist and export manager for Ksara, that could soon change as pomegranate wine is enjoying somewhat of a renaissance internationally. |
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But law in Francia was to experience a renaissance under the Carolingians. |
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An example is one of those renaissance Annunciations whose connection with the Villa Medici, Fiesole, for which it is the big illustration, is not explained. |
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After 1965 the original medieval city experienced a renaissance. |
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Mr Kalaba said the challenges that the continent is currently experiencing have become a barrier towards the realisation of Pan-Africanism and African renaissance. |
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Jan van Eyck, among other renaissance painters, made great advances in oil painting, and perspective drawings and paintings had their earliest practitioners in Florence. |
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Kuwait was the pioneer in the literary renaissance in the Arab region. |
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Low Latin passed from the heirs of the Italian renaissance to the new philologists of the northern and Germanic climes, where it became a different concept. |
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After World War II, the segregationist approach modeled in Morocco had been discredited by its connections to Vichyism, and assimilationism enjoyed a brief renaissance. |
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Since circa 1990 the elm has enjoyed a renaissance through the successful development in North America and Europe of cultivars highly resistant to the new disease. |
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Folk is experiencing a UK renaissance and RACHEL UNTHANK AND THE WINTERSET are far more accessible than the stereotypical bearded blokes associated with the genre. |
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In 1994, the branch began what may be seen as a renaissance, with through trains introduced to Manchester Airport, which are now run by TransPennine Express. |
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