Lexicographical Neighbors of Chartreuses
Literary usage of Chartreuses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Monks of the West from St. Benedict to St. Bernard by Charles Forbes Montalembert, Francis Aidan Gasquet (1896)
"... know whether anything of these two latter chartreuses, so rich in objects of
art, still remain. When I visited them in 1843, one was being demolished, ..."
2. The Century Cook Book by Mary Ronald (1895)
"chartreuses are made by lining a mold with rice, a vegetable, or a forcemeat,
and filling the center with ... Fruits are made into chartreuses by inclosing ..."
3. Theological and Semitic Literatureby William Muss-Arnolt by William Muss-Arnolt (1902)
"chartreuses de Dauphiné et de Savoie(i 084-1900). Marseille(i27) chartreuses de
Provence (1516- 1899). GOETZ. Jesuiten u. ..."