enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Renaissance in the Low Countries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance_in_the_Low...

    Before 1500, the Italian Renaissance had little or no influence above the Alps. After this Renaissance influences moved northward, but unlike the Italian Renaissance, Gothic elements remained important. The revival of the classical period is also not a central theme like in Italy, the "rebirth" shows itself more as a return to nature and ...

  3. Art of the Low Countries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_the_Low_Countries

    The art of the Low Countries includes the traditions of Early Netherlandish painting and the Renaissance in the Low Countries, before the political separation of the region. After the separation, a protracted process lasting between 1568 and 1648 , Dutch Golden Age painting in the north and Flemish Baroque painting , especially the art of Peter ...

  4. Low Countries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_Countries

    The Low Countries as seen from NASA space satellite. The Low Countries (Dutch: de Lage Landen; French: les Pays-Bas), historically also known as the Netherlands (Dutch: de Nederlanden), is a coastal lowland region in Northwestern Europe forming the lower basin of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta and consisting today of the three modern "Benelux" countries: Belgium, Luxembourg, and the ...

  5. Scotland in the early modern period - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotland_in_the_early...

    Most farming was based on the lowland fermtoun or highland baile, settlements of a handful of families that jointly farmed an area notionally suitable for two or three plough teams, allocated in run rigs to tenant farmers. They usually ran downhill so that they included both wet and dry land, helping to offset the problems of extreme weather ...

  6. Burgundian Netherlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burgundian_Netherlands

    The Burgundian Netherlands (Latin: Burgundiae Belgicae, French: Pays-Bas bourguignons, Dutch: Bourgondische Nederlanden, Luxembourgish: Burgundesch Nidderlanden, Walloon: Bas Payis borguignons) were those parts of the Low Countries ruled by the Dukes of Burgundy during the Burgundian Age between 1384 and 1482.

  7. Scotland in the Late Middle Ages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scotland_in_the_Late...

    However, by the 15th century lowland writers were beginning to treat Gaelic as a second-class, rustic and even amusing language, helping to frame attitudes towards the highlands and to create a cultural gulf with the lowlands. [111] It was Scots that emerged as the language of national literature in Scotland.

  8. Agriculture in Scotland in the early modern era - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Scotland_in...

    A Scottish Lowland farm from John Slezer's Prospect of Dunfermline, published in the Theatrum Scotiae, 1693. Agriculture in Scotland in the early modern era includes all forms of farm production in the modern boundaries of Scotland, between the establishment of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in the mid-eighteenth century.

  9. Agriculture in Scotland in the Middle Ages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Scotland_in...

    Threshing and pig feeding from a book of hours from the Workshop of the Master of James IV of Scotland (Flemish, c. 1541). Agriculture in Scotland in the Middle Ages includes all forms of farm production in the modern boundaries of Scotland, between the departure of the Romans from Britain in the fifth century and the establishment of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century.