At the date of the Italian expedition, Charles viii. had been eleven years on the throne of France. The monarchy to which he succeeded was, perhaps, less controlled by constitutional checks than any other in Europe. The crown had earned popularity as the leader in the struggle against the English - a struggle which had created the French nation; and as the patron of the middle classes against the feudal nobles. The Estates-General, the deliberative assembly of the kingdom, had never succeeded in vindicating its claims. The class divisions which divided it, as they did the people, had prevented united action. The third estate did not adequately represent the middle classes; the knights of the shire, those valuable representatives of the country districts, who had formed the backbone of the English House of Commons, did not exist...
The Triumph of the Moon
Ronald Hutton
audiobookThe Witch Mania
Charles Mackay
bookThe Witch of the Middle Ages
J. Michelet
bookWitches and Witchcraft: Five Classic Books
J. Michelet
bookPrinces of the Renaissance
Mary Hollingsworth
audiobookThe Wolf Age
Tore Skeie
audiobookWitch, Warlock, and Magician : Historical Account of Magic and Witchcraft in England and Scotland
W. H. Adams
bookThe Civilization of Renaissance in Italy
Jacob Burckhardt
bookThe Renaissance
Jerry Brotton
audiobookThe German Genius: Europe's Third Renaissance, the Second Scientific Revolution and the Twentieth Century
Peter Watson
bookThe Sea Wolves
Lars Brownworth
audiobook1434 : The Year a Magnificent Chinese Fleet Sailed to Italy and Ignited the Renaissance
Gavin Menzies
audiobook