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Examples
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His brother, Ussher, who resided at Firmount, and his relatives at Edgeworthstown, proud of his fame and renown, were most anxious to see him in Ireland; and, in fact, he was on the point of revisiting the land of his birth when he was entrusted with confidential despatches for Louis XVIII, then at Blankenburg.
Fr. Henry Essex Edgeworth de Brantigny........................ 2007
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General Theory in two volumes from 1771 to 1774; especially in the expanded posthumous editions by Friedrich von Blankenburg in
18th Century German Aesthetics Guyer, Paul 2007
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His brother, Ussher, who resided at Firmount, and his relatives at Edgeworthstown, proud of his fame and renown, were most anxious to see him in Ireland; and, in fact, he was on the point of revisiting the land of his birth when he was entrusted with confidential despatches for Louis XVIII, then at Blankenburg.
Archive 2007-10-14 de Brantigny........................ 2007
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Elsewhere, he says "A large space will be needed for the Blankenburg collection as it will include some extremely large paintings measuring 100 meters long and 25 meters high."
Archive 2004-12-01 2004
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Elsewhere, he says "A large space will be needed for the Blankenburg collection as it will include some extremely large paintings measuring 100 meters long and 25 meters high."
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In: von Blankenburg, P. (ed.) (1982): Handbuch der Landwirtschaft und Ernhrung in Entwicklungslnder.
Chapter 9 1991
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Blankenburg, Germany, on the 26th January, 1911, the son of a clergyman.
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Merck, in the _Teutscher Merkur_, [61] says the imitation of Sterne is quite too obvious, though Blankenburg denies it.
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Blankenburg, the author of the treatise on the novel to which reference has been made, was regarded by contemporary and subsequent criticism as an imitator of Sterne in his oddly titled novel “Beyträge zur Geschichte des teutschen Reiches und teutscher Sitten,” [58] although the general tenor of his essay, in reasonableness and balance, seemed to promise a more independent, a more competent and felicitous performance.
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Yet in a footnote, prompted by some misgiving as to his theory, Blankenburg admits that much is possible to genius and cites English novels where a humorous character appears with success in the leading part; thus the theorist swerves about, and implies the lack of German genius in this regard.
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