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  1. Charles Eliot Norton (November 16, 1827 – October 21, 1908) was an American author, social critic, and Harvard professor of art based in New England. He was a progressive social reformer and a liberal activist whom many of his contemporaries considered the most cultivated man in the United States.

    • October 21, 1908 (aged 80), Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
    • November 16, 1827, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
  2. Charles Eliot Norton (16 de novembro de 1827 - 21 de outubro de 1908) um famoso escritor, crítico e professor de arte dos Estados Unidos. [1] Era um militante idealista e reformador social progressivo.

    • Estados Unidos
    • 16 de novembro de 1827, Cambridge (Estados Unidos)
  3. 29 de mar. de 2024 · Charles Eliot Norton (born Nov. 16, 1827, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.—died Oct. 21, 1908, Cambridge) was an American scholar and man of letters, an idealist and reformer by temperament, who exhibited remarkable energy in a wide range of activity.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. A biography of Charles Eliot Norton, the first professor of fine arts at Harvard University and a prominent art historian and critic in the late 19th century. Learn about his life, influences, writings, and legacy in the field of medieval art and architecture.

  5. The Norton Lectures are Harvard's prestigious lecture series in the arts and humanities, endowed in 1925. They feature distinguished speakers on various topics related to poetry, such as space, time, architecture, and the origin of others.

  6. Charles Eliot Norton, the art historian and literary scholar, graduated from Harvard in 1846. He became professor of the history of art in 1873 and served until his retirement in 1898. He was a cousin of Harvard President Charles W. Eliot (1834-1926).

  7. THE LETTERS OF CHARLES ELIOT NORTON* A goodly heritage and a lot fallen in a fair ground were those given to Charles Eliot Norton, whose life, delightfully revealed in the Letters edited by his daughter, Sara Norton, and by Mr. M. A. DeWolfe Howe, covered almost three quarters of the nineteenth century and eight years of the twentieth, and linked