Eustace 1814, 2, 325 (Q936): Difference between revisions

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(‎Created claim: text of the quotation (P4): the Ambrosian library, an establishment which, notwithstanding its appellation, has no connection with antiquity, and owes its existence entirely to the munificence of Cardinal Federigo Borromeo, nephew of St Charles, and his successor in the See of Milan. [...] It contains about forty thousand volumes, and more, it is said, than fifteen thousand manuscripts.)
(‎Changed claim: text of the quotation (P4): the Ambrosian library, an establishment which, notwithstanding its appellation, has no connection with antiquity, and owes its existence entirely to the munificence of Cardinal Federigo Borromeo, nephew of St Charles, and his successor in the See of Milan. [...] It contains about forty thousand volumes, and more, it is said, than fifteen thousand manuscripts.)
Property / text of the quotation: the Ambrosian library, an establishment which, notwithstanding its appellation, has no connection with antiquity, and owes its existence entirely to the munificence of Cardinal Federigo Borromeo, nephew of St Charles, and his successor in the See of Milan. [...] It contains about forty thousand volumes, and more, it is said, than fifteen thousand manuscripts. (English) / qualifier
 
Property / text of the quotation: the Ambrosian library, an establishment which, notwithstanding its appellation, has no connection with antiquity, and owes its existence entirely to the munificence of Cardinal Federigo Borromeo, nephew of St Charles, and his successor in the See of Milan. [...] It contains about forty thousand volumes, and more, it is said, than fifteen thousand manuscripts. (English) / reference
 

Revision as of 13:43, 26 July 2024

excerpt on the Ambrosiana library in Milan
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English
Eustace 1814, 2, 325
excerpt on the Ambrosiana library in Milan

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    the Ambrosian library, an establishment which, notwithstanding its appellation, has no connection with antiquity, and owes its existence entirely to the munificence of Cardinal Federigo Borromeo, nephew of St Charles, and his successor in the See of Milan. [...] It contains about forty thousand volumes, and more, it is said, than fifteen thousand manuscripts. (English)