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Reviews
by Patrick Wormald
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Medieval points
by J.P. Gumbert
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Fiefs and Vassals: The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted
by Stephen D. White|Susan Reynolds
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King Alfred the Great.
by Michael Altschul|Alfred P. Smyth
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Alfred P. Smyth. <italic>King Alfred the Great</italic>. New York: Oxford University Press. 1996. Pp. xxv, 744. $35.00
by None
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ITALIAN STUDIES: HUMANISM AND THE RENAISSANCE
by Paolo Rossi|Geraldine Muirhead
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Zeno and Gallienus: Two Gentlemen of Verona
by Mark Humphries
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Frontmatter
by None
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Frontmatter
by None
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The Norman Conquest of Pious Neustria: Historiographic Discourse and Saintly Relics, 684-1090.
by Gabrielle M. Spiegel|Felice Lifshitz
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The Text of the Old Testament in Anglo-Saxon England. By Richard Marsden. Cambridge Studies in Anglo-Saxon England 15. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1995. xix + 505 pp. + 9 plates.
by Kevin Madigan
The Text of the Old Testament in Anglo-Saxon England. By Richard Marsden. Cambridge Studies England 15. Cambridge, U.K.: University Press, 1995. xix + 505 pp. 9 plates. - Volume 66 Issue 4
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Peter Brown. <italic>The Rise of Western Christendom: Triumph and Diversity AD 200–1000</italic>. (The Making of Europe.) Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell. 1996. Pp. xiii, 353. $24.95
by Warren Treadgold
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Felice Lifshitz. <italic>The Norman Conquest of Pious Neustria: Historiographic Discourse and Saintly Relics, 684–1090</italic>. (Studies and Texts, number 122.) Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. 1995. Pp. xii, 324. $63.50
by None
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Cinque Canti/Five Cantos by Ludovico Ariosto.
by Douglas D. McFarland|Ludovico Ariosto|Alexander Sheers|David Quint
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Daedalus: Summer 1997, Cambridge, Massachusetts
by Douglas McGray
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Dhuoda: Ninth Century Mother and Theologian.Marie Anne Mayeski
by John J. Contreni
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La Stanza della Memoria: Modelli Letterari e Iconografici nell'età della Stampa.Lina Bolzoni
by Mary Carruthers
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Rubens Reconsidered: Alpers and the Making of Artistic Authority
by Lisa Rosenthal
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Henry the Lion and his time. Lordship and representation of the Welf dynasty 1125–1235
by Benjamin Arnold
(1996). Henry the Lion and his time. Lordship representation of Welf dynasty 1125–1235. Journal Medieval History: Vol. 22, No. 4, pp. 379-393.
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Unity and Diversity in the Carolingian Church
by Rosamond McKitterick
With their steady series of conquests during the eighth century, adding Alemannia, Frisia, Aquitaine, Lombard kingdom in northern Italy, Septimania, Bavaria, Saxony, and Brittany to Frankish heartlands Gaul, Carolingians created what Ganshof regarded as an unwieldy empire. Was Carolingian Church too? Recent work, notably that Janet Nelson, has underlined not only political ideologies helped hold realms together, but also practical institutions actions individuals government administration. Can same be done for Church? Despite extraordinary diversity world its ecclesiastical traditions, can it described a unity? What sense ‘Frankish Church’ or institutions’ detected sources?
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Liturgy and musical composition
by Nils Holger Petersen
L'A. se propose d'eclairer une situation hermeneutique particuliere a partir des conceptions fondamentales d'Augustin d'Hippone sur la liturgie et de deux exemples messes musicales appartenant periodes historiques differentes: messe musicale Notre-Dame Paris vers 1200 composition Schubert analysee lumiere ce que l'on appele musique absolue periode romantique allemande. utilise typologie empruntee Claus Cluver: les textes multimedias, mixed-media intermedias
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Aestheticism — A challenge to christianity
by Geir Hellemo
Depuis le tout debut, l'art constitue un mode d'expression theologique pour christianisme. L'A. cherche a montrer quel point l'iconographie est utile lorsqu'il s'agit de recherche theologique. Il s'interesse l'attitude des chretiens face au monde, c'est dire domaine du sensible, la realite perceptible. Selon lui, revele d'une maniere unique les attitudes religieuses en transformation l'egard monde sensible. s'attache dans premier temps chretienne ancienne, puis l'esthetique medievale et enfin tradition protestante
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Trouvailles isolées de monnaies carolingiennes en Poitou : inventaire provisoire
by Olivier Jeanne-Rose
Summary. - Whereas Carolingians hoards brought to light in Poitou are fairly well- known, single-finds have never given rise a specific study. A canvassing business based on collecting information from archaeological excavations and fortuitous discoveries made by private individuals together with bibliographical archivistic perusals has enabled survey consisting at least 133 mentions of be set up. The use this corpus allowed the author come conclusion that real widespread money-making economy was established Carolingian times which would otherwise tend corroborate written documentation.
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THE "FEUDAL REVOLUTION": I
by Dominique Barthélemy
Journal Article THE “FEUDAL REVOLUTION”: I Get access Dominique Barthélemy University of Paris XII Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Past & Present, Volume 152, Issue 1, August 1996, Pages 197–205, https://doi.org/10.1093/past/152.1.197 Published: 01 1996
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Literature on archaeological remains of cultivated plants (1994/95)
by Helmut Kroll
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A NINTH-CENTURY LATIN TRANSLATION OK MARK THE HERMIT’S ΠЄΡΙ ΝΟΜΟΥ ΠΝЄΜΑΤΙΚΟΥ
by Bernice M. Kaczynski
None
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Manuscripts and Libraries in the Age of Charlemagne.
by John J. Contreni|Bernhard Bischoff|Michael Gorman
Foreword Preface List of abbreviations Map: writing centres and provinces in the age Charlemagne 1. Manuscripts early Middle Ages 2. 3. The court library 4. under Louis Pious 5. Libraries schools Carolingian revival learning 6. Palaeography transmission classical texts 7. Benedictine monasteries survival literature Bernhard Bischoff, bibliography, 1981-1993 Index manuscripts authorities cited General index.
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Recueil des actes de Louis VI roi de France (1108–1137), I: Actes antérieurs à l'avènement et 1108–1125; II: 1126–1137 et appendices; III: Introduction. Edited by Robert-Henri Bautier and Jean Dufour. (Chartes et diplômes relatifs à l'histoire de France.) Pp. xxvii + 497; 497; 233 incl. numerous ills + 5 plates. Paris: De Boccard/Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 1992
by G. W. S. Barrow
Recueil des actes de Louis VI roi France (1108–1137), I: Actes antérieurs à l'avènement et 1108–1125; II: 1126–1137 appendices; III: Introduction. Edited by Robert-Henri Bautier and Jean Dufour. (Chartes diplômes relatifs l'histoire France.) Pp. xxvii + 497; 233 incl. numerous ills 5 plates. Paris: De Boccard/Académie Inscriptions Belles-Lettres, 1992 - Volume 47 Issue 1
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The South Netherlands project
by N.G.A.M. Roymans
This article discusses the development of research strategy South Netherlands project conducted by Instituut voor Pre- en Protohistorische Archeologie (IPP) University Amsterdam. Its general objective is study long-term transformations in landscape and culture between ca 1000 B.C. 1200 A.D. flat sandy region southern adjacent part northern Belgium. area 100 140 km roughly bordered rivers Meuse, Demer Scheldt (= MDS-region; see figure 1). The has a history which started early 1970s. It evolved out ‘Kempenproject’ IPP Archeologisch van de Vrije Universiteit (AIVU) at At present it major programme IPP, with each year several large excavations dispersed over region, but concentration south-eastern half province North-Brabant (figure
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The Carolingians and the Ottonians in an Anglophone world
by Roger Collins
(1996). The Carolingians and the Ottonians in an Anglophone world. Journal of Medieval History: Vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 97-114.
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The Cathedral: The Social and Architectural Dynamics of Construction by Alain Erlande-Brandenburg
by Dale Kinney
684BOOK REVIEWS been crucified. ReUcs of St.VitaUs, the servant ofAgrícola, must have taken to MUan. These reUcs are precisely relevant for cult same martyr in Ravenna and Rome. St. VitaUs Ravenna, whom famous most beautiful basUica is dedicated, as independent miUtary officer MUan (not Bologna), evidently a forged personality, created by Ravennate sixth-century legend falsely attributed Ambrose (BHL, I, p. 524, n. 3514). This Passio S. SS. Gervasii etProtasii claiming be MUanese text makes from Bologna. But at beginning, Ui fifth century, original Bolognese brought Imperial court; Honorius, GaUa Placidia, Peter Chrysologus . Pope Innocent I (401-417) had exUed long period (KeUy, Popes, pp. 37-38); back Rome he dedicated Saints MUanRavenna (Gervasius, Protasius, andVitaUs) Titulus Vestinae (LP, Duchesne, 220-224; R. Krautheimer, Corpus, IV, 299-316, [Citta delVaticano 1976]). information added present volume which ties itself exclusively Bologna-Florence-MUan relationship. Somewhere supplement needed. Giovanni Montanari Archives oftheArchdiocese ofRavenna-Cervia Medieval The Cathedral: Social Architectural Dynamics Construction. By Alain Erlande-Brandenburg. Translated Martin Thorn. (New York: Cambridge University Press. 1994. Pp. xxii, 378; 161 black-and-white Ulustrations $89.95.) translation book simply titled La cathédrale, pubUshed 1989; more accurate subtitle would "The Development Urban Episcopal BuUdings France Fourth through Fifteenth Centuries." introduction traces creation "mythical" cathedral some writings architectural practice die nineteenth author opposes his own account ofthe cathedral's "real nature."The mythical Gothic, majesticaUy unitary structure that symboUzed coUaborative endeavor an idealized society, "French unity" according toVioUet-le-Duc (p. 1 1); real complex functionaUy interdependent buUdings originated Roman cities late antiquity, when it comprised one or two basUicas, baptistery, bishop's residence, hospice. Its origin conditioned Gothic outcome; thus know this "we consider long-term perspective, beginning with estabUshment ofepiscopal sees In ancient scrutinis[ing] each great periods foUowed, emphasizing whatever was its particular contribution" 26). Accordingly, organized first chronologicaUy successive BOOK REVIEWS685 chapters: "the bishop city" (late antiquity),"the dream" (Carolingian reforms), Gregorian reform," then, foUowing "Gothic construction ," topical chapters treating "men, finance administration," internal functional divisions proper, palace, canons' quarters, "hôtel-Dieu." BrutaUy reduced, thesis major urban agglomeration, city within city, whose configuration continual revision accommodate changing functions personnel. Thus cloisters schools were under Carolingians; eleventh twelfth centuries baptisteries second basUicas altered suppressed whUe remaining basilica enormously enlarged, domus became stone "palace," quarters also aggrandized. phase proper again rebuUt on gigantic scale; palace canonry made concomitantly grander luxurious, often fortified; hospitals enlarged sometimes relocated. simultaneous expansion aU components them—and theU constituencies—into conflict, whole increasingly encroached upon town. While designs cathedrals might existing municipal features—streets, defensive waUs, private housing—over time space-aggressive, tended rather engulf suppress them. French pubUcation reviewed Francis Salet, Bulletin monumental (CL-CLI [1992], 186-188). Salet praised providing synthetic overview topic previously been...
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The origins of humanism
by Nicholas Mann
Any account of the past is necessarily coloured by preconceptions, aspirations and, above all, knowledge or ignorance scholar who produces it. The terms and concepts that historians use to order explain objects their inquiry are neither fixed nor value-free, but evolving often highly subjective elements in process revealing gradually leads us a better understanding Labels such as Dark Ages Renaissance, which affixed whole periods European history, while they convenient for purposes historiographical exposition, may tell only part truth about those segments purport characterize. more we learn period following decline Rome, less dark uncultured it appears; inquire into what was reborn fourteenth fifteenth centuries, become aware vital continuities with past.
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All Nature Speaks of God. All Nature Teaches Man: The Iconography of the Twelfth-Century Capitals in the Westwork Gallery of the Church of St. Servatius in Maastricht
by Elizabeth den Hartog
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[Letter from Peter Jeffery]
by Peter Jeffery
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Marriage in the Western Church: The Christianization of Marriage during the Patristic and Early Medieval Periods.Philip Lyndon Reynolds
by Jean Truax
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsMarriage in the Western Church: The Christianization of Marriage during Patristic and Early Medieval Periods. Philip Lyndon Reynolds Jean A. TrauxJean Traux Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 71, Number 1Jan., 1996 journal Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2865250 Views: 1Total views on site Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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Creating French Culture: Treasures from the Bibliotheque nationale de France.
by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie|Marie-Hélène Tesnière|Prosser Gifford
From monastic cloisters in the time of Charlemagne to book-lined studies 20th-century authors, this study presents an overview literary and artistic world France. The Bibliotheque nationale de France, rich collections illuminated manuscripts, books, medals, maps prints, had its beginnings when Charles V established his library falcon tower Louvre. During Middle Ages, culture was handmaiden church government; during absolute monarchy, it became instrument propaganda; 18th century developed independent voice. This book explores changing relationship between power France as seen history national library. Four American scholars - Peter Gay, Orest Ranum, Elizabeth A.R. Brown, John J. Contreni write about connection French cultural expression political from medieval modern times. experts Florence Callu, Antoine Coron, Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, Marie-Helene Tesniere discuss more than 200 objects library, almost all which are pictured book, exploring their historical significance Among these are: a 9th-century liturgical manuscript, entirely written gold silver on purple parchment; bronze throne Dagobert Napoleon sat at founding Order Legion d'Honneur; Marguerite d'Orleans's 15th-century hours with delicate borders; heart shaped map, published 1536, showing newly discovered lands America; sonata composed by Mozart he seven years old dedicated daughter Louis XV; symphony Berlioz for inauguration Bastille column; Zola's J'accuse!; more. serves catalogue major exhibition Library Congress that selection France's treasures. opened September 1995.
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Elisabeth Springer, and Leopold Kammerhofer et al., eds. Archiv und Forschung. Das Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv in seiner Bedeutung für die Geschichte Österreichs und Europas. Wiener Beiträge zur Geschichte der Neuzeit, vol. 20. Munich: Oldenbourg Verlag; Vienna: Verlag für Geschichte und Politik, 1993. Pp. 424, 37 illus.
by William E. Wright
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Humanism in script and print in the fifteenth century
by Martin Davies
There was no humanism without books. They were the prime material on which movement founded and natural medium through it transmitted. All humanists consumers, usually also producers, of books in manuscript. Many first gained a reputation by seeking out accumulating Humanists early associated themselves with printing press when came into being mid-fifteenth century provided authors, editors market for its products. Some, preeminently Erasmus, so thoroughly harnessed great power print that they able to project European stage. In less controlled way, this had happened more before manuscript diffusion works Italian humanists. Throughout Renaissance, secular ecclesiastical princes cultural pretensions built up libraries as much any other trappings civilization. A book often vehicle an alliance between culture power, form translations or dedications original works, commissioned unsolicited.
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Whose Land? Whose Lordship? The New Translation of Otto Brunner
by Thomas A. Brady
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above information on how to content.
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Laïcs dans l'Église. Regards de Pierre Damien, Anselme de Cantorbéry, Yves de Chartres. By Michel Grandjean. (Preface by André Vauchez.) (Théologie Historique, 97.) Pp. xv + 445. Paris: Beauchesne, 1994. Fr. 120. 2 7010 1302 X
by Colin Morris
Laïcs dans l'Église. Regards de Pierre Damien, Anselme Cantorbéry, Yves Chartres. By Michel Grandjean. (Preface by André Vauchez.) (Théologie Historique, 97.) Pp. xv + 445. Paris: Beauchesne, 1994. Fr. 120. 2 7010 1302 X - Volume 47 Issue 1
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Prosimetrum: Tradition und Wandel Einer Literaturform Zwischen Spätantike und Spätmittelalter.Bernhard Pabst
by Danuta Shanzer
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviews Prosimetrum: Tradition und Wandel Einer Literaturform Zwischen Spätantike Spätmittelalter. Bernhard Pabst Danuta ShanzerDanuta Shanzer Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmailPrint SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 71, Number 3Jul., 1996 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2865840 Views: 7Total views on site Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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Introduction: The Merovingian Kingdoms, 450-751
by John J. Contreni
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Cranial variation in the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands: Inferences about the history of the population
by Carles Lalueza-Fox|Antonio González Martín|Sergi Civit
A multivariate analysis of four prehistoric and nine historic populations from the Iberian Peninsula Balearic Islands with large sample sizes (n > 30 individuals for neurocranium n 15 facial skeleton) is presented, considering 874 male 557 female skulls using 20 craniometric measurements. Cluster analyses have been undertaken squared Euclidean distance as a measure proximity average linkage between groups (UPGMA), neighbor-joining algorithms branching method, bootstrap was used to assess robustness clustering topology. The study complemented principal coordinate application Mantel test degree correspondence information furnished by samples. show that main source morphometric variability in Basque population. second variation provided two (Muslims Jews), different rest an archaeological cultural point view, can probably be attributed influences sub-Saharan Africa. massive deportations Jews 1492 Moors 15th 17th centuries may erased this present population Peninsula. remaining studied populations, including samples Castile, Cantabria, Andalusia, Catalonia Islands, are grouped together, showing notable morphological homogeneity, despite their temporal geographic heterogeneity. These results general agreement those obtained synthetic maps, analyzing multiple genetic markers. In such studies, described variability, not only Peninsula, but also Western Europe. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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The German Episcopacy and the Implementation of the Decrees of the Fourth lateran Council, 1216-1245: Watchmen on the Tower.
by Lawrence G. Duggan|Paul B. Pixton
This volume deals with the efforts by German episcopacy to implement reform decrees issued Pope Innocent III at Fourth Lateran Council in November 1215 within six ecclesiastical provinces of Bremen, Cologne, Magdeburg, Mains, Salzburg and Trier over three decades. Its primary focus is upon use provincial diocesan synods, episcopal visitations general chapters for regular clergy end that ...evils may be uprooted, virtues implanted, mistakes corrected, morals reformed, heresies extirpated, faith strengthened, ...and salutary enacted higher lower clergy. It examines methods personalities involved, relationships between leadership Germany Roman Curia, it assesses impact these a most opportune critical point history medieval Church.
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Communications and Power in Medieval Europe, 1: The Carolingian and Ottonian Centuries; 2: The Gregorian Revolution and Beyond.Karl Leyser , Timothy Reuter
by John B. Freed
None
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The Traditional Doctrine of Divine Simplicity
by Katherin A. Rogers
Traditionally God has been considered absolutely simple. Some contemporary philosophers argue that this means is His attributes and hence mere quality, all the divine name exactly same which incoherent. However, debate misunderstands tradition. not He act . Analogies from human experience can minimize initial implausibility. There are worrisome corollaries to doctrine, most troubling being God's nature somehow dependent on choices of free creatures. This conclusion, though radical, as shocking it appears.
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David Ganz, Corbie in the Carolingian renaissance
by Ursula Winter
None
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Central Politics: Kings, Their Allies and Opponents
by Patrick J. Geary
For over a decade, early medieval historians have eagerly awaited Ian Wood's detailed synthesis of Merovingian history. Since the death Michael Wallace-Hadrill in 1985, Wood has been leading British historian Francia and written two dozen finely tuned articles on late antique Gaul. Unlike his compatriot Edward James,' whose point departure is archaeological record, concentrated sources period, particularly narrative, epistolary, legal texts. Vorstudien distinguished him from most North American, British, Continental period ways. First, unlike vast majority, who take seductive histories Gregory Tours as their primary reference approaching history, cut teeth dissertation focusing Avitus Vienne Burgundian region.2 As result he able to present, for fifth sixth centuries, an image crucial first generation Frankish kingdom not primarily derived very highly constructed versions Gregory. Second, studies precise, text-critical examinations circumstances within which rare narrative texts were composed, relating contents specific contexts composition. The often cast into doubt only facile conclusions previous but possi-
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The Ancient Near East C. 300–30 B.C.: Volumes I and II. By A. Kuhrt
by Graham Philip
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Narrative and Reform after 1000
by I. N. Wood
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Lorenzo de' Medici. Lettere, vols. V (1480-81) and VI (1481-82). Ed. Michael Mallett; Gen. Ed. Nicolai Rubinstein. Istituto Nazionale di Studi sul Rinascimento. Giunti-Barbèra, Florence, 1989-1990. Vol. V.: 8 pls. + xxiv + 360 pp. Vol. VI: 8 pls. + xvi + 386 pp.
by Francis William Kent
Lorenzo de' Medici. Lettere, vols. V (1480-81) and VI (1481-82). Ed. Michael Mallett; Gen. Nicolai Rubinstein. Istituto Nazionale di Studi sul Rinascimento. Giunti-Barbèra, Florence, 1989-1990. Vol. V.: 8 pls. + xxiv 360 pp. VI: xvi 386 - Volume 49 Issue 1
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Droit, économie, monnaie, finances dans le regnum Francorum. Petite chronique des temps mérovingiens
by Jean-Marie Thiveaud
The absurd polemic with, over the last couple of months, has occurred around Clovis commemoration offers opportunity proposing a more objective reading economic, financial and legal data belonging to history Regnum Francorum, between fall Roman Empire come back Carolingian Empire. Over approximately four centuries, during which elements provided History were both rare rudimentary, not only outline what was become France, but also probably partial préfiguration Europe have taken from. A mixture traditions cultures, passion resistance transformed broad territory along years. Latin-Anglo-Gallo-German marriage been forced by wars before being established Church those obscure mythical centuries. economy suffered, currency shrunk but, in spite appearances, situation as dramatic it most frequently said, contributed lay foundations new political, order ; if our modern concept could answer disruptions disorders characterized these periods.
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David Ganz, Corbie in the Carolingian Renaissance
by Anita Guerreau-Jalabert
None
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Paul Edward Dutton, The Politics of Dreaming in the Carolingian Empire
by Rosamond McKitterick
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Michael Sherberg. Rinaldo: Character and Intertext in Ariosto and Tasso. (Stanford French and Italian Studies, 75.) Saratoga, CA: ANMA Libri, 1993. viii + 209 pp. $46.50.
by Dennis Looney
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above information on how to content.
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A history of the family
by André Burguière
Volume One: Preface. Introduction: Claude Levi-Strauss. An Anthropological Perspective on Kinship and the Family: Francoise Zonabend. Part I: Antiquity: 1. Prehistory of Masset. 2. From Sumer to Babylon: Families as Landowners Rulers: Jean-Jacques Glassner. 3. The Survival Family Name Pharaonic Order: Annie Forgeau. 4. Desire for Transcendence: Hebrew Model Jewish Practices: Frank Alvarez-Pereyre Florence Heymann. 5. in Ancient Athens (5th-4th Century BC): Giulia Sissa. 6. Fathers Citizens Rome, Rome a City (2nd century BC - 2nd AD): Yan Thomas. 7. Under Roman Empire: Signs Gestures: Aline Rouselle. II: Medieval Times: Georges Duby. 8. Barbarian Europe: Pierre Guichard Jean-Pierre Cuvillier. 9. Carolingian Moment (8th-10th Century): Toubert. 10. Feudal Era (11th-13th Robert Fossier. 11. Town Country (13th-15th Henri Bresc. 12. Kinships Byzantium: Evelyne Patlagean. III: Distant 13. China: Relay Government: Michel Cartier. 14. Japan: Household Society: Patrick Beillevaire. 15. World Order Institution India: Roland Lardinois. 16. Arab Islam: Thierry Bianquis. Glossary. Bibliography. Index. Two: Jack Goody. Europe First Modernity: One Hundred Andre Burguiere FranCois Lebrun. Priest, Prince Other Worlds: Children Apocalypse: Meso-America Andes: Carmen Bernand Serge Gruzinski. Long March Chinese Instrument Japanese Nation: Family, State, Women: Africa: at Crossroads: Dozon. World: Fortress: Philippe Fargues. Western Industrialization Urbanization: Industrial Revolution: from Proletariat Bourgeoisie: Martine Segalen. Love Liberty: Contemporary American HervE Varenne. Socialist Families: Basile Kerblay. Scandinavian Model: David Gaunt Louise NystrOm. France: Segalen FranCoise What Next?: Burguiere, Christiane Kalapisch-Zuber,
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Britain and the Crisis of European Union
by Lord Beloff
Historians like finding turning-points. The turning-point in the history of process European Union set on foot by Jean Monnet and his collaborators had actually taken place a few months before signature Treaty Maastricht. date was 20 June 1991 — event decision German Bundestag that reunification Germany (on 3 October 1990) should be followed resurrection Berlin as country’s capital gradual move from Bonn to principal institutions federal government. As seen an earlier chapter, basic inspiration Monnet, Adenauer, Schuman de Gasperi recreation Carolingian Empire. not existed Charlemagne’s time region which it situated never been part empire. It then still contested ground between Teutons Slavs.
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Espacio y Poder en la Castilla Medieval: Los Montes de Torozos (Siglos X- XIV).Carlos Manuel Reglero de la Fuente
by Teófilo F. Ruiz
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Philip the Good and the German Empire. The legitimation of the Burgundian succession to the German principalities
by Robert A. Stein
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Ordines Coronationis Franciae. Texts and Ordines for the Coronation of Frankish and French Kings and Queens in the Middle Ages, Volume I., ed. by Richard A. Jackson
by Michael J. Enright
BOOK REVIEWS 517 a now-modest-seeming sum of£.8,000), theJarrow Lectures have for many years deserved their reputation as one of the most prestigious forums presentation research on Bede. The collection,which makes this significant body scholarship widely available first time, belongs in every library which early Middle Ages are seriously represented. Publishing these crammed and costly volumes was worthy venture, several senses. To adapt slightly comments ofJ. O. Cobham, who introduced Colgrave's inaugural lecture, "It is hoped that those read [these lectures] will send cheque to Rector, St. Paul's Rectory, Borough Road,Jarrow, Co. Durham" Q, 2), well bookseller . Allen J. Frantzen Loyola University Chicago Ordines Coronationis Franciae. Texts Coronation Frankish French Kings Queens Ages, Volume I. Edited by Richard A.Jackson. [Middle Series.] (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Press. 1995. Pp. xiv, 283. $49.95.) A number ofmodern scholars studied or produced editions royal imperial coronation ordines Ages; Georg Waitz, Carl Erdmann, Percy Ernst Schramm, Michel Andrieu,Reinhard Elze few ofthe names come mind. A.Jackson,the author ofa good book later ceremony, now joins select group with his edition all texts orders from Sacramentary Gellone (790-800) down Ordo 1200, some nineteen all. This constitutes volume projected two-volume work contains, among other topics, general introduction rituals, discussion oftheir manuscript sources, an analysis historical development ceremony statement principles governing texts. Like scholars, perhaps, present reviewer initially dubious need new edition, especially Early since I had long trusted MGH published noted above. In introduction, related studies recently Viator,Jackson convincingly argues otherwise. Not only has he made real contribution four attributed Hincmar Reims liturgical political background, but complete series dependable future students kingship, liturgy, church-state relations. It welcome between two covers. Jackson's individual commentaries each order clearly written fully footnoted; variant readings after paragraph smaller type rather than separate apparatus criticus idea, layout materials visually pleasing. throughout reliable impressive. 518 venture disagree interpretation, however, although because brief space allotted, explanation be summary form. view, origin anointing rite Franks—a critically important ritual it decisive step Christianization Germanic kingship —might developed through eitherVisigothic Irish influence else been Franks themselves drawing Old Testament baptismal ritual. my evidence much stronger allows, while arguments possible sources fail reasons. take latter hypotheses first: unction might theoretically examples rite, there absolutely no they ever actually considered applying such ideas contemporary kingship. simply did not think terms whereas copious (that discussed Raymund Kottje Kim McCone, example) shows very definitely did, so frequently programmatically. Moreover, Carolingians sought legitimation techniques occasions seventh eighth centuries right up Pippin's own best could do cappa of...
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Fiefs and Vassals: The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted.Susan Reynolds
by Fredric L. Cheyette
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsFiefs and Vassals: The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted. Susan Reynolds Fredric L. CheyetteFredric Cheyette Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 71, Number 4Oct., 1996 journal of the Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2865769 Views: 9Total views on site Citations: 5Citations are reported from Crossref Copyright AmericaPDF download reports following citing article:Andrew T. Young Carolingians, Church, medieval constitution, Social Science Journal 56, no.33 (Dec 2019): 358–366.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soscij.2018.08.004Andrew & Constitution, SSRN Electronic (Jan 2018).https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3125906Elizabeth Dachowski Counts Anjou in Tenth Eleventh Centuries: Understanding Power Authority High Middle Ages, History Compass 13, no.11 2015): 1–9.https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12211Richard Abels Historiography a Construct: “Feudalism” Historian, 7, (May 2009): 1008–1031.https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-0542.2009.00610.xGeorge Beech lord/dependant (vassal) relationship: case study Aquitaine c. 1030, 24, 2012): 1–30.https://doi.org/10.1016/S0304-4181(97)00019-5
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Communications and power in medieval Europe. The Carolingian and Ottonian centuries. By Karl Leyser. Edited by Timothy Reuter. Pp. xvii + 244. London–Rio Grande: Hambledon Press, 1994. £35. 1 85285 013 2 - Communications and power in medieval Europe. The Gregorian revolution and beyond. By Karl Leyser. Edited by Timothy Reuter. Pp. xxv + 214. London–Rio Grande: Hambledon Press, 1994. £35. 1 85285 113 9
by Julia Barrow
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Benedictine maledictions. Liturgical cursing in Romanesque France. By Lester K. Little. Pp. xx + 296. Ithaca–London: Cornell University Press, 1993. $34.65. 0 8014 2876 9
by Stephen D. White
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above information on how to content.
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An Historical Introduction to Western Constitutional Law
by R. C. van Caenegem
Journal Article An Historical Introduction to Western Constitutional Law Get access Van Caenegem R.C., Law. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995. x, 338 pp. $64.95 (cloth); $22.95 (paper). Mortimer Sellers of Baltimore Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar American Legal History, Volume 40, Issue 4, October 1996, Pages 517–518, https://doi.org/10.2307/845421 Published: 01 1996
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From Alfred the Great to Stephen. By R. H. C. Davis. Pp. xi + 318 incl. ills. London–Rio Grande: Hambledon Press, 1991. 1 85285 045 0
by George Garnett
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above information on how to content.
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The Theotokos Evergetis and eleventh-century monasticism. Papers of the third Belfast Byzantine International Colloquium, 1–4 May 1992. Edited by Margaret Mullett and Anthony Kirby. (Belfast Byzantine Texts and Translations, 6.1.) Pp. xvi + 408 incl. 4 figs + 19 plates. Belfast: Belfast Byzantine Enterprises, 1994. 0 85389 503 1; 0960 9997
by D. M. Nicol
The Theotokos Evergetis and eleventh-century monasticism. Papers of the third Belfast Byzantine International Colloquium, 1–4 May 1992. Edited by Margaret Mullett Anthony Kirby. (Belfast Texts Translations, 6.1.) Pp. xvi + 408 incl. 4 figs 19 plates. Belfast: Enterprises, 1994. 0 85389 503 1; 0960 9997 - Volume 47 Issue 1
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Byzantium and the Crusader States, 1096–1204. By Ralph-Johannes Lilie. (Trans. by J. C. Morris and J. C. Ridings of Byzanz und die Kreuzfahrerstaaten, Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 1981, rev. 1988.) Pp. xiv + 342 incl. 2 maps. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993. £40. 0 19 820407 8
by Jonathan Phillips
Byzantium and the Crusader States, 1096–1204. By Ralph-Johannes Lilie. (Trans. by J. C. Morris Ridings of Byzanz und die Kreuzfahrerstaaten, Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 1981, rev. 1988.) Pp. xiv + 342 incl. 2 maps. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993. £40. 0 19 820407 8 - Volume 47 Issue 1
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Les circonscriptions civiles carolingiennes à travers l'exemple limousin
by Jean-François Boyer
The statistical analysis of cartularies from Limousin shows that the carolingian civil circumscriptions were used almost systematically by writers acts to localize domains IXth c. 990. study their area clearly correspondences with first parochial structure, while geographical, historical and archaeological eponymous site testifies two very different types population's centers, on one hand, public places, vici, castra, crossroads..., other country villae, some characteristics allowing think they fiscal domains. In fact, every circumscription seems have been organized a category, often center large baptismal parish, but it had also rural domain be perhaps as giving or residence for vicarius who held vicaria whose its name was this these sites.
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Eriugena: East and West: Papers of the Eighth International Colloquium of the Society for the Promotion of Eriugenian Studies, Chicago and Notre Dame, 18-20 October, 1991 ed. by Bernard McGinn and Willemien Otten
by John J. Contreni
Eriugena: East and West: Papers of the Eighth International Colloquium Society for Promotion Eriugenian Studies, Chicago Notre Dame, 18-20 October, 1991. Edited by Bernard McGinn Willemien Otten. [Notre Dame Conferences in Medieval Number V] (Notre Indiana: University Press. 1994. Pp. xii, 290. $39.95.) Since 1970 scholars interested Eriugena, an Irish master who came to Continent probably 830's, have gathered share their research. The 1991 colloquium focused on central, if not unique, feature scholarship, his command Greek patristics. volume's lead essay, Michael McCormick's Diplomacy Carolingian Encounter with Byzantium Down Accession Charles Bald, documents extensive contacts between Franks Byzantines before John Scot first set foot European continent (p. 24). late Meyendorff's Remarks Eastern Patristic Thought Scottus resuscitates image Eriugena as lonely, isolated genius 66) whose work failed bridge gap Byzantine Frankish intellectual communities. Otten's Eriugena's Periphyseon: A Contribution Theological Tradition, also swims against current East-West encounter when she concludes that anthropological optimism roots him deeply Western, specifically Carolingian, tradition. Both J. C. Marler (Dialectical Use Authority Periphyseon) Giulio d'Onofrio (The Concordia Augustine Dionysius: Toward Hermeneutic Disagreement Sources Scot's explore stance toward theological discourse. according Marler, inspired Pseudo-Dionysius Maximus Confessor, developed theory auctoritas saw bend authority reason way renews influence Plato Latin Christianity 108). D'Onofrio cautioned search truth face divergent authorities was proposing a solution based autonomy critical Abelardian type 120). D'Onofrio, Otten, views western, Augustinian tradition philosophical probabilism, but that, at least, enhanced Neoplatonic possibility ofsuprarational unification multiple particular 129). Deirdre Carabine reveals strands Western thought Symbolism Light, Cloud, Darkness Periphyseon. finds Augustine's light-dominated imagery influenced expression thought, Gregory Nyssa content thinking. …
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The Rothbury Cross: An Iconographic Bricolage
by Jane Hawkes
The surviving fragments of the Rothbury Cross (Northumberland) have long been recognized as outstanding pieces Anglo-Saxon stone sculpture, often being compared with more substantial monuments at Ruthwell (Dumfriesshire) and Bewcastle (Cumbria). However, apart from isolated studies one or two scenes, iconography has largely neglected. This aspect its decoration is examined here, attention to both iconographic models employed potential significance(s) scenes concerned. analysis suggests that most (surviving) figural were based on Late Antique early Christian prototypes which adapted within a Northumbrian context suit specific theological purposes, purposes are canonical orthodox, but in some cases fairly complex. In light these conclusions relationship between other sculptures, conventional "Carolingian" dating monument reconsidered, date second half eighth century proposed.
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Schriftlichkeit im fruhen Mittelalter
by Ursula Schaefer
None
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Portraits, the cult of relics and the affirmation of hierarchy at an early medieval monastery: San Vincenzo al Volturno
by John Mitchell|Richard Hodges
San Vincenzo al Volturno is an early medieval monastery in the high province of Molise, southeast Rome, and site most substantial excavations over last 15 years. The publication portrait wall-paintings from crypt its great church, Maggiore, occasion to examine place individual that religious society.
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Literary Aspects of Courtly Culture: Selected papers from the Seventh Triennial Congress of the International Courtly Literature Society, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA, 27 July-I August 1992
by Donald Maddox|Sara Sturm-Maddox
This collection contains 34 papers from the 1992 Congress of International Courtly Literature Society. They cover all aspects medieval European courtly literature (including Latin), representations sexuality in early texts to influence on historiography.
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NAPOLEON AND HISTORY
by Annie Jourdan
Journal Article NAPOLEON AND HISTORY Get access ANNIE JOURDAN Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar French History, Volume 10, Issue 3, September 1996, Pages 334–354, https://doi.org/10.1093/fh/10.3.334 Published: 01 1996
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THE FRAGMENTATION OF CULTURAL STUDIES AND THE FRAGMENTS OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND
by Allen J. Frantzen
None
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Engraved gems of the Carolingian empire
by None
Medieval Europe offers a pageant of almost incredible richness: King Arthur and his round table, demons cathedrals, Charlemagne paladins. The Carolingian culture the late 8th to 10th centuries (in what is now France, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, northern Italy) more than its fair share achievements. This illustrated study examines one revealing legacy Charlemagne's heirs people - gems rock crystal, jet agate engraved with complex figural scenes, which have never before been studied as group. These objects largely ignored in scholarship medieval art, partly because difficulty access. Genevra Kornbluth assembles for first time all 20 surviving gems, from small seal matrices 41-figure Susanna crystal London, along information about lost works. unique features each gem are made visible over 200 detailed black-and-white photographs, often highly magnified produced using new techniques developed record transparent engraving. analyses manufacture, style, chronology, iconography, patronage their social functions, organisation status artisans who created them, relations between media. presented evidence rich diversity culture, rather reflections an artistic programme dictated by imperial courts; they also seen be essentially creations, drawing on earlier visual traditions but adapting sources address contemporary concerns.
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Johannes Fried. <italic>Der Weg in die Geschichte: Die Ursprünge Deutschlands bis 1024</italic>. (Propyläen Geschichte Deutschlands, number 1.) Berlin: Propyläen. 1994. Pp. 922
by None
None
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Le Droit de Cuissage: La Fabrication d'un Mythe (XIIIe-XXe Siècle).Alain Boureau
by Paul Freedman
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviews Le Droit de Cuissage: La Fabrication d'un Mythe (XIIIe-XXe Siècle). Alain Boureau Paul FreedmanPaul Freedman Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 71, Number 3Jul., 1996 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2865808 Views: 1Total views on site Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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El romancero gitano-andaluz de Juan Jose Nino
by Teresa Catarella|Pedro Manuel Piñero Ramírez
None
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Tradition & Diversity: Christianity in a World Context to 1500
by Karen Louise Jolly
Part 1 Orthodoxy and Eterodoxy - Foundations of Christianity circa 50-450 CE: Jew Gentile Early Origins Jesus was Jewish John's Story the Samaritan Woman at Well, The Gospel According to Paul in Galatians, Ritual Practice Baptism Ceremony Hippolytus Christian Roman Conflict Assimilation Persecution Dionysius Wise, Patriarch Alexandria, Revelation Versus Reason Tertullian Clement, Converting Empire Eusebius' Account Constantine Helen, Altar Victory Dispute Heterodoxy Defining Heresy Ayrian Gnosticism Book Thomas Contender, Origenism End World, Arianism Arius Nicene Creed, Nestorians Nestorius, Cyril Chalcedon Life Death Body Resurrection Heroic Martyrdom Perpetua, Contemplative Macrina, Hope Tomb Inscriptions. 2 Patterns Accommodation Late Antiquity, 350-750: Heritage Middle Ages Creating an Authoritative Bible Jerome, Two Cities Augustine Hippo, Neoplatonic Mysticism Pseudo-Dionysius Areopagite, Consolation Philosophy Boethius Power Saints Monks, Relics Icons Desert Fathers Mothers Abba Antony Amma Syncletica, Monastic Examplar St. Benedict Rule Benedict, Pilgrimage Martinellus Martin Tours, Byzantine Worship Debate over Iconoclasm Adaptations Outside World Saintly Heroes Ethiopia Ethiopian Church, Conversion Nubia John Ephesus on Justinian Theodora's Competition, Martyrs South Arabia Women Najran, Nestorian Christians China Stele Acculturation Western Europe Celtic Hermetic Columba's Rule, Frankish Gregory Tours Clovis Clothilde, Anglo-Saxon Bede Edwin Ethelberga, Saxon Missions Boniface Leoba. 3 Society 600-1050: Kingship Theories Authority Pope Gelasius I Emperor Justinian, Royal Rituals Laws Visigothic Spain, Views Coronation Charlemagne, King Alfred Great Education Theology Carolingian Renaissance Charlemagne Alcuin, Scottus Eruigena, Vernacular Learning Alfred's Programme Literature Sermons Alfric Eynsham, Liturgy Rites for Living Dead, Poetry Dream Rood, Drama Hrotsvit Gandersheim, Abraham Diversity by Treaty Vikings, Animism Charms, Dialogue (Part contents)
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A Visigothic-Script Folio of a Carolingian Collection of Canon Law
by Roger E. Reynolds
Le folio qui est le sujet de l'analyse l'A. contient un texte base sur l'ancienne Collectio Dionysiana telle qu'elle fut modifiee et largement diffusee au cours l'epoque carolingienne appelee Dionysio-Hadriana. Avec autre fragment en ecriture wisigothique reprenant Ecclesiastique 21:20; 22:21, il rapporte par Millares Carlo aux Archives Nationales Paris. Il possible que ce ait ete redige scribe habitue a type redaction. provient sans doute du sud la France
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Beyond adoption: Orphans and family strategies in pre-industrial France
by Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux
There was no legal adoption of under-age children in France before 1923. After the collapse Roman Empire customs western European societies, including France, sought to find a new family framework for orphaned and tried carefully secure transmission assets such inherited. Relatives had duties towards children, turn work serve their substitute parents obey them. A child “person” Christian society as soon he or she baptized, were charge. But an orphan semi-orphan controlled by council his her future submitted familial debate neighbors relatives, often front public judicial authorities. French 1789 Revolution devised numerous ways meeting needs many orphans created prevailing high mortality rate, maternal paternal kinship expressed itself diverse liv...
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“Imaginary” or “Real” Moneys of Account in Medieval Europe? An Econometric Analysis of the Basle Pound, 1365–1429
by Ernst Weber
Abstract During the Middle Ages, medium of exchange function money was separate from unit account function. This has given rise to misconception that medieval pound an “abstract” or “imaginary” whose purchasing power independent gold and silver coins. The joint behavior price gold, silver, silver–gold ratio in Basle between 1365 1429 cannot be reconciled with notion nominal values were autonomous. Instead, monetary system based on a standard, supplemented by coins determined this standard.
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The Inheritance of the Papyrus Style of Illustration in Early Latin Literary Codices
by David H. Wright
None
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Introduction: Household and family contexts in the Balkans
by Karl Käser
The structural study of the Balkan family began in United States 1940s, producing several generations scholars. Such scholarly continuity is much more recent on European continent. Findings to date suggest pattern male equal partible inheritance could lead four distinctive household formation patterns. But though it seems that system played a key role, was only combination with additional elements evolved. These were neolocality or patrivirilocality; environmental factors (abundance scarcity land, remote mountainous regions, islands); economic such as forms pastoralism, mixed production fishing; and agnatic kinship opposed community ties. Future research will have continue address question familial diversity, well how Balkans compare rest Europe respect crucial characteristics.
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Underwater archaeology in Germany
by Helmut Schlichtherle|Werner Krämer
International Journal of Nautical ArchaeologyVolume 25, Issue 2 p. 141-151 Underwater archaeology in Germany H. Schlichtherle, Schlichtherle Commission für Unterwasserarchäologie, Landesdenkmala Baden- Württemberg, Fischersteig 9, Hemmenhofen D-78343, GermanySearch for more papers by this authorW. Kramer, W. Kramer author First published: May 1996 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-9270.1996.tb00765.xCitations: 4AboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions Use check box below share version article.I have read accept the Wiley Online Library UseShareable LinkUse link a article with your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Citing Literature Volume25, Issue2May 1996Pages RelatedInformation
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The Anatomy of a Little War: A Diplomatic and Military History of the Gundovald Affair (568-586).
by Ian Wood|Bernard S. Bachrach
None
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The Doctrine of Transubstantiation in Durand's Rationale
by Timothy M. Thibodeau
In a recent article on the medieval dogma of transubstantiation, Gary Macy builds upon works Hans Jorissen and James F. McCue to question validity Jaroslav Pelikan's claim that “at Fourth Lateran Council in 1215, doctrine real presence body blood Christ Eucharist achieved its definitive formulation transubstantiation.” demonstrates through most thirteenth century, majority theologians did not, fact, consider IV's decree final word eucharistic theology. The debate over precisely how occurred eucharist was far from closed.
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Towards a Corpus of Carolingian Biblical Glossaries. A Research in Progress Report
by Paolo Vaciago
None
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Feminism and the Honor Plays of Lope de Vega
by Teresa J. Kirschner|Yvonne Yarbro‐Bejarano
None
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Living on the Byzantine Borders of Western Art
by Robert S. Nelson
In general surveys of art history in current use, Byzantine has been separated from Western Medieval by several strategies. Most often Early Christian and follows Roman precedes Islamic art. Advancing as late the sixteenth or seventeenth century Orthodox countries, turn back to early medieval Europe which another narrative proceeds directly Renaissance. some survey books, transition Rome Byzantium Islam is also moment introduce arts Asia, Africa, Americas. These organizational strategies, disassociate Europe, are encountered history's first handbooks, published Germany mid-nineteenth Franz Kugler Carl Schnaase, still earlier influential Philosophy History G. W. F. Hegel. The surveys' chronological inversions Hegel's assessment should be understood a manifestation Orientalism, cultural prejudice detected other aspects treatment American textbooks. Instead, it suggested that new accountings transcend rigid conceptual boundaries inherited European nationalism explore larger problems across many cultures spaces Middle Ages.
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Lay Appropriation of the Sacraments in the later Middle Ages
by Eamon Duffy
Perhaps the most crucial single utterance of Second Vatican Council, at least in terms impact on our shared experience as Catholics, occurs paragraph 14 Council's constitution liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium. This was first conciliar documents to be promulgated, and many ways its bloodily contested production. The question runs like this:
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The Reader as Author of the User-Produced Manuscript: Reading and Rewriting Popular Latin Theology in the Late Middle Ages
by Eric Reiter
"The Reader as Author of the User-Produced Manuscript: Reading and Rewriting Popular Latin Theology in Late Middle Ages." By fifteenth century, readers increasingly produced manuscripts for their own use, which allowed them considerable freedom to personalize books ways not open reader a printed book. The active creative role reader/scribe extended even rewriting or renaming works, led practice blurring categories author. Based on study textual transformations works popular theology user-produced (like widely-circulating Stella clericorum), this article explores some theoretical implications close link between reading rewriting. Modern critical models textuality reader-response, stress abstractions texts rather than physical idiosyncrasies books, fail take into account authorial evident these manuscripts, thus obscure rich evidence late medieval practices.
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Where is All the Amalgam Silvering?
by Kilian Anheuser
None
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The writing-master Ambrosius Perling - in the twilight of a great tradition
by Ton Croiset van Uchelen
None
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The formation of literary Italian: Aspects of poetic tradition and translation in the thirteenth century
by Michelangelo Picone
(1996). The formation of literary Italian: Aspects poetic tradition and translation in the thirteenth century. Italianist: Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 5-19.
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Palaces or minsters? Northampton and Cheddar reconsidered
by John Blair
Since their excavation in the 1950s and early 1960s, palace buildings at Yeavering (Northumberland) Cheddar (Somerset) have exemplified physical impact of kingship on Anglo-Saxon landscape. When, 1980–2, massive eighth- ninth-century halls were found heart Northampton, temptation to recognize a major residence Mercian kings was irresistible. Thanks archaeology, image king's tūn as one fixed point shifting, uncertain world, encouraged by poetic sources adopted first detailed studies local organization, assuming concrete reality.
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Chiefdoms and Family Firm Regimes: Variations on the Same Anthropological Themes
by Elizabeth D. Rogers|Alan L. Carsrud|Norris Krueger
Family owned and managed firms exhibit remarkable parallels to pre-industrial chiefdoms because the typical economic environment in which they exist limits them a size scale equivalent that of chiefdom. Using anthropological research this study inventories all known procedures accommodating multiple heirs paramountcy chiefdoms. It uses exhaustive inventory characterize succession process modern family firms. The major theoretical concept adopted from anthropology is polity, defined as an autonomous system institutional finance organizational support (resource control governance). terms such polity helps us recognize universality processes. Succession processes are less idiosyncratic than we once thought. Thus, can fruitfully explore structural similarities between organizations using considerable body field literature on (Goody, 1958; Barrett, 1965) finds every scheme accommodate successors falls into one two categories: (a) personnel strategies (b) asset strategies. A second critical while it possible outcomes (here, strategies) any dynamic system, no single outcome be accurately predicted advance. purpose paper provide process, rather trying predict strategy chosen given case. perspective provides much-needed, empirically based, comprehensive model permits more nomothetic approach firm research.
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The Early Christian Revival at S. Miniato al Monte: The Cardinal of Portugal Chapel
by Linda A. Koch
The Cardinal of Portugal Chapel in S. Miniato al Monte at Florence has been thought to be based solely on Brunelleschi's architecture, a view which left its lavish interior ornament little understood anomaly. This essay demonstrates that richly decorated cruciform martyria and mausolea the Early Christian period were sources for conception chapel. Its formal symbolic assimilation with church is elucidated, influence reassessed. cardinal's chapel emerges as monument key importance revival fifteenth-century Florentine art.
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The frontier and identities of exclusion in European history
by Gerard Delanty
L'A. s'interesse aux perspectives concernant l'unite de l'Europe sur le plan historique. Il montre qu'il n'existe pas une mais plusieurs visions europeenne. souligne caractere divers du Vieux continent. s'interroge s'il structure sous-jacente qui forge et transcende ces differences. porte son attention les changements frontieres dans ce cadre geographique. affirme que l'histoire europeenne n'est marquee par continuite. toute tentative d'unification echoue lorsque l'hegemonie a atteint paroxisme. considere survit dislocations politiques sont des constructions ideologiques. etudie rapports entre l'Occident l'Orient
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