Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Meric Casaubon (14 August 1599 in Geneva – 14 July 1671 in Canterbury), son of Isaac Casaubon, was a French-English classical scholar. He was the first to translate the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius into English.

  2. Isaac Casaubon (/ k ə ˈ s ɔː b ən /; French:; 18 February 1559 – 1 July 1614) was a classical scholar and philologist, first in France and then later in England. His son Méric Casaubon was also a classical scholar.

  3. Isaac Casaubon (Ginebra, 18 de febrero de 1559 - † Londres, 1 de julio de 1614) fue un erudito clásico y filólogo, primero en Francia y después en Inglaterra, [1] [2] considerado por muchos en su tiempo como el más ilustrado de Europa.

  4. Abstract. By the time he came to oppose the Royal Society and the new philosophy in the 1660’s, Meric Casaubon was already out of date. He was part of an older tradition of Anglican scholarship, being left behind by the new rationalism of the Church.

    • Michael R. G. Spiller
    • 1980
  5. Méric Casaubon (14 Aug 1599 - 14 Jul 1671) French-English classical scholar and son of the famous Isaac Casabuon. John Bargrave acquired his coin collection, which now is part of the collection at Canterbury Cathedral.

  6. Casaubon, Méric a Swiss Calvinistic theologian and critic, son of Isaac Casaubon, was born at Geneva, Aug. 14, 1599. He commenced his studies at the Protestant academy of Sedan, then went with his father to England, where he became distinguished, under the protectorate of Cromwell, by his attachment to the Stuarts.

  7. Isaac Casaubon (born Feb. 18, 1559, Geneva [Switzerland]—died July 1, 1614, London, Eng.) was a French classical scholar and theologian who was one of the leading scholars of the era. Casaubon was born to French Huguenot refugees. Three years after his birth, the family returned to France and settled at Crest in Dauphiné.