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Hayes, Carlton J. H., 1882-1964

"A Political and Social History of Modern Europe V.1."

The
physical welfare of the individual has been promoted to a greater
degree, or at all events preached more eloquently, within the last few
generations than ever before. This has doubtless been due to changes in
the commonplace everyday life of all the people. It must be remembered
that in the fifteenth century man did the ordinary things of life in
much the same manner as did early Romans or Greeks or Egyptians, and
that our present remarkable ways of living, of working, and of
traveling are the direct outcome of the Commercial Revolution of the
sixteenth century and of the Industrial Revolution of the nineteenth.
(3) _Intensification of political organization, with attendant public
guarantees of personal liberties_. The ideas of nationalism and of
democracy are essentially modern in their expression. The notion that
people who speak the same language and have a common culture should be
organized as an independent state with uniform laws and customs was
hardly held prior to the fifteenth century.


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print 'Aprilia 1171501805' . "\n"; print 'Cagiva 1171501804' . "\n"; print 'zabawki drewniane 1171501601' . "\n"; print 'usługi remontowe Katowice 1171501816' . "\n"; print 'domy Wrocław 1171501767' . "\n";