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  1. The twelfth century was a time of new ideas and creative innovation spurred on by patron-monarchs like King Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine, poets like Mar...

  2. Education - Carolingian Renaissance, Aftermath: Charlemagne (742/743–814) has been represented as the sponsor or even creator of medieval education, and the Carolingian renaissance has been represented as the renewal of Western culture. This renaissance, however, built on earlier episcopal and monastic developments, and, although Charlemagne did help to ensure the survival of scholarly ...

  3. The motte of Ewyas Harold Castle, one of the handful of castles probably built before the Norman invasion. The English word “castle” derives from the Latin word castellum and is used to refer to the private fortified residence of a lord or noble. The presence of castles in Britain and Ireland dates primarily from the Norman invasion of 1066.

  4. The 'long twelfth century' (1075–1225) was an era of seminal importance in the development of the book in medieval Europe and marked a high point in its construction and decoration. This comprehensive study takes the cultural changes that occurred during the 'twelfth-century Renaissance' as its point of departure to provide an overview of manuscript culture encompassing the whole of Western ...

  5. 3 de ago. de 2012 · The twelveth century wall paintings belong to the Comnenian style emanating from Constantinople, like those of the Crypte of Haghios Neophytos and of Panaghia tou Arakou. The colours are soft and harmonious, the face expressions are calm and majestic, the anatomy of the bodies is correct and the draperies undulate gracefully and vividly around the lithe bodies.

  6. the term by Charles Homer Haskins in his The renaissance of the Twelfth Century (1927). Haskins maintained that the term ‘renaissance’, in the sense of an enthusiasm for classical literature, was an important feature of the twelfth century and that this cultural renewal was the ancestor of subsequent civilizational progress in early modern ...

  7. Twelfth Night is considered one of Shakespeare’s last three great comedies ( Much Ado About Nothing , As You Like It, and Twelfth Night) before he moved into the next stage of his writing career—the stage that produced his great tragedies. Twelfth Night was first performed in the Middle Temple Hall in London in 1602. Middle Temple Hall, London.