| Saint Thomas More - 1808 - 334 páginas
...further distance asunder. None of the cities desire to enlarge the hounds and limits of their shires. For they count themselves rather the good husbands, than the owners of their lands. They have in the country, in a parts of the shire, houses or farms builded, well appointed and furnished... | |
| Thomas More - 1908 - 258 páginas
...farther distance asunder. None of the cities desire to enlarge the bounds and limits of their shires. For they count themselves rather the good husbands, than the owners of their lands. They have in the country in all parts of the shire houses or farms built, well appointed and furnished... | |
| Thomas More - 1908 - 294 páginas
...farther distance asunder. None of the cities desire to enlarge the bounds and limits of their shires. For they count themselves rather the good husbands, than the owners of their lands. They have in the country in all parts of the shire, houses or farms builded, well appointed and furnished... | |
| Niccolò Machiavelli - 1910 - 416 páginas
...farther distance asunder. None of the cities desire to enlarge the bounds and limits of their shires. For they count themselves rather the good husbands than the owners of their lands. They have in the country in all parts of the shire houses or farms builded, well appointed and furnished... | |
| Niccolò Machiavelli - 1910 - 420 páginas
...farther distance asunder. None of the cities desire to enlarge the bounds and limits of their shires. For they count themselves rather the good husbands than the owners of their lands. They have in the country in all parts of the shire houses or farms builded, well appointed and furnished... | |
| Roger L. Nichols, George R. Adams - 1971 - 310 páginas
...who incorporated whole phrases of Vespucci's account in his Utopia, wrote of his ideal commonwealth: "They count themselves rather the good husbands, than the owners of their lands." (Utopia, Bk. II) Even the lowly Indian (Irish) potato revolutionized European history. First, it banished... | |
| Niccolo Machiavelli, Thomas More, Martin Luther - 2005 - 405 páginas
...farther distance asunder. None of the cities desire to enlarge the bounds and limits of their shires. For they count themselves rather the good husbands than the owners of their lands. They have in the country in all parts of the shire houses or farms bailded, well appointed and furnished... | |
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