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ESPEJO, PRINCESS AIRA M.

31-MGE-01

The Middle English literature is the literature written in the form of the English language from
the late 12th century until the 1470s. During the middle English literature, the Chancery
Standard, a form of London-based English became widespread and the printing press regularized
the language and the 90 years between the Baroque and the Romantic Periods are considered
the Classical Period. It began in about 1730 (some will say 1750) and fully transitioned to the
Romantic by 1820. Historically, the periods most associated with Classicism are the fifth and
fourth centuries BC in Greece with writers such as Aristotle and Sophocles; the first century BC
and first century AD in Rome with writers such as Cicero and Vergil; in late seventeenth-century
French drama; and in the eighteenth century. The classicism that flourished in the period 1750–
1830 is often known as “Neoclassicism,” from the Classical architecture of ancient Rome or of
the Renaissance. While Victorian era, in British history, the period between approximately 1820
and 1914, and characterized by a class-based society, a growing number of people able to vote,
a growing state and economy, and Britain's status as the most. The Victorian era saw
revolutionary breakthroughs in the arts and sciences, which shaped the world as we know it
today and these transformations led to many social changes with the birth and spread of political
movements, most notably socialism, liberalism and organised feminism.

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