Examples of "Golden Age" of Television in the following topics:
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- The prosperity of the Gupta Empire produced a golden age of
cultural and scientific advancements.
- This period became known as the Golden Age of India because it was marked by
extensive inventions and discoveries in science, technology, engineering, art,
dialectic, literature, logic, mathematics, astronomy, religion, and philosophy.
- Other scholars of the Golden Age helped create the first Indian
numeral systems with a base of ten.
- The cultural creativity of the Golden Age of India produced magnificent
architecture, including palaces and temples, as well as sculptures and paintings
of the highest quality.
- The Golden Age of India
produced many temples, decorated with various sculptures and paintings, such as
the Dashavatara Temple, also known as the Vishnu Temple, in central India.
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- Athens attained its Golden Age under Pericles in the fifth century BCE and flourished culturally as the hegemonic power of the Hellenic world.
- The fifth century BCE was a period of Athenian political hegemony, economic growth and cultural flourishing sometimes referred to as the Golden Age of Athens.
- The latter part of this time period is often called The Age of Pericles.
- With the empire's funds, military dominance, and its political fortunes as guided by statesman and orator Pericles, Athens produced some of the most influential and enduring cultural artifacts of Western tradition during what became known as the Golden Age of Athenian democracy, or the Age of Pericles.
- Pericles was
arguably the most prominent and influential Greek statesman, orator, and
general of Athens during its Golden Age.
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- The Spanish Golden Age is a period of flourishing in arts, coinciding with the political rise and decline of the Spanish Habsburg dynasty.
- The Spanish Golden Age is a period of flourishing in arts and literature in Spain, coinciding with the Baroque era and the political rise and decline of the Spanish Habsburg dynasty.
- Religion in the Art of the Spanish Golden Age: Francisco de Zurbarán
- The mysticism of Zurbarán's work—influenced by Saint Theresa of Avila—became a hallmark of Spanish art in later generations.
- His paintings of St.
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- Abbasid leadership cultivated intellectual, cultural, and scientific developments in the Islamic Golden Age.
- During the Golden Age, the major Islamic capital cities of Baghdad, Cairo, and Córdoba became the main intellectual centers for science, philosophy, medicine, and education.
- Ceramics, glass, metalwork, textiles, illuminated manuscripts, and woodwork flourished during the Islamic Golden Age.
- Scholars developed large encyclopedias of medical knowledge during the Islamic Golden Age, such as this one from a manuscript dated circa 1200.
- Identify the causes of, and developments during, the Islamic Golden Age
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- The 1920s are often referred to as the Golden Age of Hollywood,
with "Talkies" and the first all-color features replacing silent
films.
- At
the beginning of the 1920s, films were silent and colorless.
- By the end of the
decade, cinema had changed significantly with major leaps in technology that
marked the Golden Age of Hollywood and ended the era of the silent film, which
itself had ended the previous, widespread popularity of Vaudeville Theater.
- This release
arguably launched the Golden Age of Hollywood.
- American actress Louise Brooks was one of the box office stars who became famous in the 1920s at the outset of the Golden Age of Hollywood.
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- Despite outward indicators of prosperity, the Gilded Age (late 1860s to 1896) was an era characterized by turmoil and political contention.
- The term was coined by writers Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner in The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today, which satirized what they believed to be an era of serious social problems obscured by a thin veneer of prosperity.
- The Gilded Age was a time of enormous growth that attracted millions of European immigrants.
- Gilded Age politics, called the Third Party System, were characterized by rampant corruption and intense competition between the two parties (with minor parties coming and going), especially on issues of Prohibitionist, labor unions and farmers.
- Describe major economic and political developments during the "Gilded Age" of American history and identify what led to these developments
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- The Dutch Golden Age was a period in the history of Holland generally spanning the 17th century, during and after the later part of the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648) for Dutch independence.
- Although Dutch painting of the Golden Age comes in the general European period of Baroque painting and often shows many of its characteristics, most lacks the idealization and love of splendor typical of much Baroque work, including that of neighboring Flanders.
- The full development of this specialization is seen from the late 1620s, and the period from then until the French invasion of 1672 is the core of Golden Age painting.
- Hals was fond of daylight and silvery sheen, in contrast to Rembrandt's use of golden glow effects.
- Judith Jans Leyster (1609—1660) was one of three significant women artists in Dutch Golden Age painting.
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- During the Middle Ages, the trading towns of Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres made Flanders one of the richest and most urban areas in Europe.
- The late 16th century saw the end of late Renaissance and Mannerist styles in the Flanders region, and the beginning of the age of Rubens.
- In both Flanders and the Dutch Republic, this period is often known as the Dutch Golden Age, a time especially important for the arts.
- Flemish Baroque painting of the period is distinctive for its use of detailed realism as well as the separation of genres, where artists produced the majority of their work within a single genre.
- Distinguish Flemish art from Dutch art during the Dutch Golden Age
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- The West was most notably transformed through the railroads, increase in crime rates, and the rise of industry during the Gilded Age.
- The American West was vastly transformed during the Gilded Age.
- Six transcontinental railroads were built in total during the Gilded Age.
- The Golden Spike united the Central Pacific and Union Pacific railroad lines.
- Outline key issues in the transformation of the West during the Gilded Age
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- The Spanish Golden Age, a period of Spanish political ascendancy and subsequent decline, saw a great development of art in Spain.
- The most popular Spanish painter of the early 16th century was Luis de Morales (c. 1510–1586), called "The Divine" by his contemporaries, because of the religious intensity of his paintings.
- El Greco's most famous painting, The Burial of the Count of Orgaz (1586–88) blends his signature style with the classical revival of the Renaissance and medieval renderings of the body.
- However, the two high-ranking clergy members burying the body, as well as the one reading the sermon on the right, wear bulky garments that do not acknowledge the body, as figures were often depicted in the Middle Ages.
- Sacristy of the
Cathedral, Toledo.