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  1. ‘Your astronomers and ours differ exceedingly’: the controversy over the ‘new star’ of 1572 in the light of a newly discovered text by Thomas Digges.Stephen Pumfrey - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (1):29-60.
    This article presents evidence that an anonymous publication of 1573, aLetter sent by a gentleman of England [concerning …] the myraculous starre nowe shyning, was written by Thomas Digges, England's first Copernican. It tells the story of how it arose out of research commissioned by Elizabeth I's privy counsellors in response to the conventional argument of Jean Gosselin, librarian to Henri III of France, that the star was a comet which presaged wars. The text is significant because it seems to (...)
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  • Spenser's fourth grace.Gerald Snare - 1971 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 34 (1):350-355.
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  • „Ryszard II to ja”. Teoria dwóch ciał króla i elżbietańska praktyka polityczna.Emilia Olechnowicz - 2020 - Civitas 26:71-99.
    The purpose of the article is to show how the doctrine of the King’s Two Bodies formulated by lawyer Edmund Plowden influenced political practice and its artistic representation. It is worth emphasising that the image of the king as a one-man corporation includes an immanent conflict resulting not only from the coexistence of conflicting identities in one person, but also from the need to constantly negotiate relations between them. Therefore, the concept of two bodies could simultaneously serve as a tool (...)
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