¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Revivers
1. reviver [n] - See also: reviver
Lexicographical Neighbors of Revivers
Literary usage of Revivers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Era of the Protestant Revolution by Frederic Seebohm (1901)
"These were the revivers of learning. But suddenly there arose amongst them quite
another kind of man—a religious Reformer. He came like a shell in Girolamo ..."
2. The Era of the Protestant Revolution by Frederic Seebohm (1894)
"(c) Savonarola's Influence on the revivers of Learning. Lorenzo had died in 1492,
and Savonarola, as we have said, was present at his death-bed. ..."
3. The Era of the Protestant Revolution by Frederic Seebohm, George Park Fisher (1891)
"Is martyred by (c) Savonarola's Influence on the revivers of Learning. Lorenzo had
died in 1492, and Savonarola, as we have said, was present at his ..."
4. A History of Italian Literature by Florence Trail (1903)
"The revivers of Learning. Giovanni da Ravenna (1355-1420) was the first teacher
of classical Latin in Italy, that is, in Europe. ..."
5. A History of the Three Cathedrals Dedicated to St. Paul in London: With by William Longman (1873)
"... >_ , '_ and the revivers of the art in Italy ventured generally Aic\ no further
than allowing it to spring from the entabla- from Atti ture of an order, ..."
6. The Nomenclature, and Expositor of the English Language: In which the by Hezekiah Burhans (1827)
"... Italians may be justly considered as the first revivers of literature,3 after
a long night of mental darkness throughout Europe. ..."