How To Use Padua In A Sentence
-
Padua was famous for its medical school and while he was there Copernicus studied both medicine and astronomy.
-
The frescoes in the Arena Chapel in Padua are among the most celebrated works in the history of art.
-
A previously mentioned curandera, a mestiza called la Gachupina, working in Tepeji del Río in the late eighteenth century used prayers and orations to solicit the help of Jesus, the Virgin of Guadalupe, and San Antonio de Padua among others when applying herbal remedies.
Pestilence and Headcolds: Encountering Illness in Colonial Mexico
-
It is well known that persons who use the Spa waters or those of La Madonna, in the territories of Padua, or others of an acidulous or vitriolated nature, or who simply swallow drinks by the gallon, pass all off again within an hour or two by the bladder.
On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals
-
The tragedy, recalling the ending of Romeo and Juliet, took place in Padua, 60km (40 miles) from Verona, the setting of Shakespeare's play.
Archive 2005-01-01
-
This is a head-to-toe exfoliation which is good for removing dead skin, says Navarce-Padua.
Undefined
-
The stipend was small, his agent in Padua was a swindler, and most of the revenue from Seltz was seized by French Jesuits at Strasbourg.
Was (Not Was)
-
The cities of Padua and Verona were wiped from the face of the earth; and the last glories of Venice sank for ever beneath the sea as the waters of the Adriatic came - thundering landwards after the hammer-blow from space.
Rendezvous With Rama
-
In short, we parted, nor held a correspond-ence in absence: but afterwards meeting, by acci — dent, at Padua, and Jeronymo having, in the interim, been led into inconveniences, he avowed a change of principles, and the friendship was renewed.
Sir Charles Grandison
-
And then there's the symphony's scherzo, which is based on a separate piece Mahler wrote using an excerpt about St. Anthony of Padua from the German folk poems "Des Knaben Wunderhorn".
Chicagoist
-
How many of today's children know what a periwig is, let alone a waistcoat made of paduasoy?
-
They'll-get-you-coming-and-going, from his Grove entry: Apart from [his appointment as Abbot of] Löpsingen, he had three sources of income — a stipend from the Sacra Congregatio de Propaganda Fide in Rome, the abbacy of San Stefano in Carrara, near Padua, and a provostship in the Rhenish town of Seltz.
Archive 2009-03-01
-
In 1243 a Ferrara writer was at Padua, and while attending vespers at the tomb where the sainted body of the Minorite
Three Thousand Years of Mental Healing
-
At the same time, the first great modern neuroanatomists were doing forbidden human dissections at the new, secret amphitheater at the University of Padua medical school.
-
A gigantic instance of his scheming was the coup-de-main by which he succeeded in entrapping 11,000 Paduan soldiers, only 200 of whom escaped the miseries of his prisons.
Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) The Age of the Despots
-
Madonna, in the territories of Padua, or others of an acidulous or vitriolated nature, or who simply swallow drinks by the gallon, pass all off again within an hour or two by the bladder.
The Harvard Classics Volume 38 Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology)
-
In the predella, which is very beautiful, and painted by him likewise in distemper, he depicted S. Francis receiving the S.igmata; S. Anthony of Padua, who, in order to convert some heretics, performs the miracle of the Ass, which makes obeisance before the sacred Host; and S. Bernardino of S.ena, who is preaching to the people of his city on the Piazza de 'S.gnori.
Lives of the most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects Vol. 06 (of 10) Fra Giocondo to Niccolo Soggi
-
No securely attributable paintings by Cennino are known, either in Florence or in Padua.
-
But the protection which the Paduan Doctor received from some friends of interest and consequence, enabled him to set these imputations at defiance, and to assume, even in the city of Edinburgh, famed as it was for abhorrence of witches and necromancers, the dangerous character of an expounder of futurity.
My Aunt Margaret's Mirror
-
Trithonius mentions an horologium presented in A.D. 1232 by Al-Malik al-Kámil the Ayyubite Soldan to the Emperor Frederick II: like the Strasbourg and Padua clocks it struck the hours, told the day, month and year, showed the phases of the moon, and registered the position of the sun and the planets.
Arabian nights. English
-
Cecil Gould has sustained that the altarpiece includes a self-portrait of the artist in the guise of his name saint, Saint Anthony of Padua.
-
In 1655, with a degree from Padua, he was ordained to the priesthood.
-
SCHOOLS OF FERRARA AND BOLOGNA: The painters of Ferrara, in the fifteenth century, seemed to have relied upon Padua for their teaching.
A Text-Book of the History of Painting
-
A transplanted Hollander, carried thither originally from China, seems to thrive particularly well in this part of the world; the little pug dog, or Dutch mastiff, which our English ladies were once so fond of, that poor Garrick thought it worth his while to ridicule them for it in the famous dramatic satire called Lethe, has quitted London for Padua, I perceive; where he is restored happily to his former honours, and every carriage I meet here has a _pug_ in it.
Observations and Reflections Made in the Course of a Journey through France, Italy, and Germany, Vol. I
-
How many of today's children know what a periwig is, let alone a waistcoat made of paduasoy?
-
His most famous miracles include bilocation, his rendering harmless of poisoned food by making the sign of the cross and his sermon to the fishes on the bank of the river Brenta near Padua.
-
I, for my part, was overwhelmed and exhausted, but really excited by the new people I had met and the information and ideas I was taking home ... and now I am considering how I can get to next year's Conference in Padua, Italy!
School Library: For the Love of Learning
-
They'll-get-you-coming-and-going, from his Grove entry: Apart from [his appointment as Abbot of] Löpsingen, he had three sources of income — a stipend from the Sacra Congregatio de Propaganda Fide in Rome, the abbacy of San Stefano in Carrara, near Padua, and a provostship in the Rhenish town of Seltz.
Archive 2009-03-01
-
His chief undertaking in Padua was a new high altar for the Santo, and its seven bronze statues and 22 reliefs were originally arranged beneath a baldacchino as a sacra conversazione.
-
Inspired by the legendary botanical gardens in Padua, Italy where the Medicis plotted the untimely, frothing ends of their enemies, an English duchess has created a garden dedicated entirely to flora deadly and/or narcotic.
Alnwick Poison Gardens
-
[1894] Padua in Italy they have a stone called the stone of turpitude, near the senate-house, where spendthrifts, and such as disclaim non-payment of debts, do sit with their hinder parts bare, that by that note of disgrace others may be terrified from all such vain expense, or borrowing more than they can tell how to pay.
Anatomy of Melancholy
-
BAINGIO PINNA a professor at the University of Sassari in Italy, received his undergraduate and graduate education at the University of Padua.
-
The farmer even has a halo formed by his tipped back sombrero, and the holiness of this revolutionary embrace is reinforced by its association with the embrace of Joachim and Anna in Giotto’s Arena Chapel in Padua.
Jose Clemente Orozco and Diego Rivera - The Murals
-
One of the psychics claimed that the general was held in a brick building with a red roof, and another guessed that the hostage was being held in Padua, a small city in the north.
-
They'll-get-you-coming-and-going, from his Grove entry: Apart from [his appointment as Abbot of] Löpsingen, he had three sources of income — a stipend from the Sacra Congregatio de Propaganda Fide in Rome, the abbacy of San Stefano in Carrara, near Padua, and a provostship in the Rhenish town of Seltz.
Was (Not Was)
-
And then there's the symphony's scherzo, which is based on a separate piece Mahler wrote using an excerpt about St. Anthony of Padua from the German folk poems "Des Knaben Wunderhorn".
Chicagoist
-
With a superb performance, Eric Stone has finished tenth in the world professional cyclo-cross championship near Padua, Italy.
-
The epitaph, written on a grave in Padua, gives the date of his death in June, 1945.
-
At the age of fourteen he left for Bologna, intending briefly to study canon law, but within two years he moved to Ferrara and shortly afterward to Padua, where he met one of his most important teachers, Elia del Medigo, a Jew and an Averroist Aristotelian.
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola
-
In truth, I myself have been generous in serving him, for the fellow is built as strong as Edinburgh Castle, and his anatomy would have matched any that is in the chirurgical hall of Padua.
The Fair Maid of Perth
-
At the same time, the first great modern neuroanatomists were doing forbidden human dissections at the new, secret amphitheater at the University of Padua medical school.
-
N. in prouincia Paduana decimo die, prout facti sibi fuir reuelatio, accepta communione, ipsoque ad Deum disponente, etiam corpore existens incolumis in Domino foeliciter requieuit: Cuius sacer obitus Domino summo Pontifici praefato sub manu Notarij publici transmittitur; qui sic scribet.
The Journal of Friar Odoric
-
Ia menjelaskan, paduan antara program hiburan yang diselingi tausiyah itu merupakan gabungan antara sayir yang akan dilantunkan oleh grup musik "Andra and The Backbone", grup "Alexa" dan penyanyi Afgan, yang kemudian dikombinasikan syiar yang disampaikan ustad Ahmad Al Habsyi, dengan bahasa yang ringan dan sederhana.
ANTARA - Berita Terkini
-
Gerardus Pomadellus (c. 1165), afterwards Bishop of Padua; furthermore, his predecessor, Bishop Carzo, was called sacrorum canonum doctor.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
-
It was called the Prato, and by the shocking discrepancy between its name and appearance added to my dejection, for the one recalled and the other mocked memories of that green and sunlit plain in Padua, that dear Pra della Valle, upon whose grassy dimples looked the house of Aurelia, and to whose wandering winds
The Fool Errant
-
A tailor and a haberdasher enter with new clothes and a new hat for the couple's return to her house in Padua.
-
The closest it comes to that, perhaps, is Marsilius of Padua's Defensor Pacis, where a defense of tyrannicide is justified as an act to restore civil society to naturally peaceful relations, not to change or revolutionize it.
-
The boy's thoughts drift to the tired old tailor sewing the Mayor's Christmas coat while Simpkin the cat captures mice dressed in waistcoats of paduasoy and taffeta and hides the last spool of cherry-coloured twist.
-
Standing in the arcade on the side of the "quad" opposite the entrance, if one looks on the ceiling immediately above the capital of the second column to the left there is seen the stemma which appears as tailpiece to this chapter, put up by a young Englishman, William Harvey, who had been a student at Padua for four years.
The Evolution of Modern Medicine
-
Using a new technique developed in Padua University, the trachea was decellularised over a six-week period so that no donor cells remained.
-
Thus I stared at balmacaans and surtouts, dolmans and jerkins of paduasoy, matelasse, and a hundred other costly fabrics without ever going into the places that displayed them, or even stopping to examine them.
The Shadow of the Torturer
-
Christine plans to attend the IASL conference this September in Padua, Italy.
Celebrating Summer- BC teacher-librarian professionalism
-
In the time of swords and periwigs and full-skirted coats with flowered lappets, when gentlemen wore ruffles, and gold-laced waistcoats of paduasoy and taffeta, there lived a tailor in Gloucester.
-
In the time of swords and periwigs and full-skirted coats with flowered lappets, when gentlemen wore ruffles, and gold-laced waistcoats of paduasoy and taffeta, there lived a tailor in Gloucester.
-
He studied at Padua and Bologna, received in 1529 from his older brother a canonicate at Trent and the parish of Tirol near
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
-
It takes its name from Patavium, or Padua, which was the birthplace of
Travels through France and Italy