Janua) could carry it, was indeed agreed withal, by our Mr. Winthrop in his travels through the low countries, to come over into New England, and illuminate this Colledge and country, in the quality of a President, which was now become vacant. But the... The Orbis Pictus of John Amos Comenius - Page iiby Johann Amos Comenius - 1887 - 194 pagesFull view - About this book
| Czechoslovakia - 1921 - 374 pages
...languages (whereof everyone is indebted unto his Janua) could carry it, was indeed agreed withal, by our Mr. Winthrop in his travels through the Low Countries,...that incomparable Moravian became not an American." Great as is the fame of Comenius as the greatest educational reformer of all times, equally famous... | |
| Gabriel Compayré - Education - 1918 - 696 pages
...'Wmthrop in his travels through the low countries, to come over into New England, and illuminate this Colledge and country, in the quality of a President,...American." This was on the resignation of President Punster, in 1051. (P.) contain the general principles of the pedagogy of Comenius, and the applications... | |
| Thomas Capek, Anna Vostrovský Čapek - Bohemia (Czech Republic) - 1918 - 314 pages
...to come over into New England and Illuminate this Colledge and Country in the Quality of President: But the Solicitations of the Swedish ambassador, diverting...that Incomparable Moravian became not an American." Biographers are not agreed as to the number of Komensky's works. FJ Zoubek has enumerated 137 of them;... | |
| Paul Rankov Radosavljevich - Slavs - 1919 - 586 pages
...to come over into New .England and Illuminate this College and Country in the quality of President: But the Solicitations of the Swedish ambassador, diverting...that Incomparable Moravian became not an American." It is interesting to see that the Germans claim Comenius (and even Copernicus and Hus) as Germans.... | |
| Thomas Goddard Wright - History - 1920 - 366 pages
...come over into New-England, and illuminate this Col ledge and country, in the quality of a President: But the solicitations of the Swedish Ambassador, diverting...that incomparable Moravian became not an American." Cf. Albert Matthews, Comenius and Harvard Col" lege, Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts,... | |
| Université de Paris. Institut d'études slaves - 1928 - 316 pages
...corne over into New-England, and Illuminate this Colledge and Country. in the Quality of a President : But the Solicitations of the Swedish Ambassador, diverting...that Incomparable Moravian became not an American. » Et p. 140, Matthews cite James P. Munroe qui écrivait en 1896 : « If Comenius had yielded to our... | |
| Anna Heyberger - Education - 1928 - 318 pages
...corne over into New-England, and Illuminate this Colledge and Country. in the Quality of a President : But the Solicitations of the Swedish Ambassador, diverting...that Incomparable Moravian became not an American. » Et p. 140, Matthews cite James P. Munroe qui e'crivait en 1896 : « If Comenius had yielded to our... | |
| Johann Amos Comenius - Religion - 1998 - 276 pages
...into New England and illuminate this College [ie, Harvard] and country in the quality of a President. But the solicitations of the Swedish Ambassador, diverting...that incomparable Moravian became not an American." Cited in Matthew Spinka,yoAn Amos Comenius: That Incomparable Moravian (Chicago, 1943), vi. 19. Labyrinth,... | |
| Paul F. Grendler - Arts, Renaissance - 2008 - 390 pages
...accessed 19 February 2007. ''9Quoted by Spinka, John Amos Comenius, iii and (an exact duplicate) 85: "But the solicitations of the Swedish Ambassador,...that incomparable Moravian became not an American. " Spmka cites Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana, II.iv.10. 7"Lewalski, "Milton and the Hartlib Circle"... | |
| Nicholas Murray Butler, Frank Pierrepont Graves, William McAndrew - Education - 1896 - 540 pages
...come over into New England, and Illuminate this College and Country, in the Quality of a President: But the Solicitations of the Swedish Ambassador, diverting...that Incomparable Moravian became not an American" In the introduction to my edition of the School of Infancy* I have expressed a doubt as to the call... | |
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