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Book Review: Buddhist Spirituality 1: Indian, Southeast Asian, Tibetan, Early Chinese by Francisca Cho Bantly None <eot>
State and Nation in Medieval France by Josep R. Llobera Abstract The modernist theory of the nation is criticised for being unable to explain existence idea and national sentiments in medieval period. By focusing on central role played by monarchy making French state Middle Ages it possible show legitimating importance language culture that Furthermore, appearance France as an ‘imagined community’, even if was only shared a small minority people, proves end there clear sense identity. <eot>
Prince and States General: Charles V and The Netherlands (1506–1555) (The Prothero Lecture) by H. G. Koenigsberger ON the 18th June 1902 viceroy of India, Lord Curzon, wrote to his government in London: The fact is that your Political Committee and Foreign Office have gone completely off rails … Now, why could not India trust me …? You send out as an expert you treat my advice though it were impertinent schoolboy. <eot>
Women and Credit in Pre-Industrial and Developing Societies. by Rosemary O’Day|William Chester Jordan None <eot>
Newsplan: report of the Newsplan project in Ireland. By James O’Toole. Pp xxiii, 283. London & Dublin: British Library & National Library of Ireland. 1993. £30. by Hugh Gough 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. <eot>
94.11.04, Dutton, The Politics of Dreaming in the Carolingian Empire by Patrick J. Geary None <eot>
„The Foxes Have Holes“, Once Again by George Henderson None <eot>
P. Godman and O. Murray (eds), Latin Poetry and the Classical Tradition: Essays in Medieval and Renaissance Literature (Oxford-Warburg Studies). Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990. Pp. xi + 243. ISBN 0-19-920174-9. £30.00. by Peter Hainsworth P. Godman and O. Murray (eds), Latin Poetry the Classical Tradition: Essays in Medieval Renaissance Literature (Oxford-Warburg Studies). Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990. Pp. xi + 243. ISBN 0-19-920174-9. £30.00. - Volume 84 <eot>
The Venetian ospedali by Laura Macy None <eot>
The medieval sequence: a foretaste of heavenly song by Christopher Page Journal Article The medieval sequence: a foretaste of heavenly song Get access Margot Fassler, Gothic song: Victorine sequences and Augustinian reform in twelfth-century Paris(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), £60 Christopher Page Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Early Music, Volume XXII, Issue 4, November 1994, Pages 679–682, https://doi.org/10.1093/earlyj/XXII.4.679 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
III. Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages (300–900) by Clare Brett Annual Bulletin of Historical LiteratureVolume 78, Issue 1 p. 14-19 III. Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages (300–900) Caroline Brett, BrettSearch for more papers by this author First published: November 1994 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8314.1994.tb00932.xAboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text full-text accessPlease review our Terms Conditions Use check box below share version article.I have read accept Wiley Online Library UseShareable LinkUse link a article with your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditWechat Volume78, Issue1November 1994Pages RelatedInformation <eot>
The Hundred Years War: Trial by Battle.Jonathan Sumption by John Bell Henneman Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsThe Hundred Years War: Trial by Battle. Jonathan Sumption John Bell HennemanJohn Henneman Search for more articles this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 1Jan., 1994 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2864876 Views: 7Total views on site Citations: 1Citations are reported from Crossref Copyright AcademyPDF download reports following citing article:David Henige Being Fair Hounds: Function and Practice Annotation, History in Africa 28 (May 2014): 95–127.https://doi.org/10.2307/3172210 <eot>
Vanguard of Empire: Ships of Exploration in the Age of Columbus by Roger C. Smith by Donald H. Keith TECHNOLOGYAND CULTURE Book Reviews 899 tension-resisting members. Courtenay discusses these at length and follows their murky but plausible dissemination in Early Christian churches the DarkAges Carolingian eras. Romanesque roofs may preserve Roman memories, with rows of identical tied trusses, without ridge beams or any transverse bracing other than batten boards supporting cladding. The Scandinavian development lateral division into bays principal common rafters remains somewhat enigmatic this account, as does influence on Gothic timber frames. Courtenay’s summary her research, collabo­ ration Mark, great hammer beam truss by Hugh Herland Westminster Hall London, is climax chapter. Renaissance innovations are fully triangulated trusses ofVasari Palladio, Philibert de l’Orme’s laminated wooden arches, both executed published new breed scholar-practitioners. Com­ pared to these, Wren’s famous frame for Sheldonian Theater Oxford anachronistic, despite its unusual span metal-fastened scarfjoints. book, minor errors omissions, a very useful reference, summarizing much scholarship historical structures. With some guidance, it could be fine secondary textbook variety undergraduate graduate courses. Sergio L. Sanabria Dr. teaches Department ofArchitecture Miami University. Vanguard ofEmpire: Ships ofExploration theAge ofColumbus. By Roger C. Smith. NewYork: University Press, 1993. Pp. xii+316; illustra­ tions, notes, appendixes, bibliography, indexes. $35.00. When one considers history technology, few inventions stand out dramatically significantly seagoing ship. Smith’s ofEmpire attempts provide “an up date perspective ways which Iberian vessels exploration were built, manned, armed, provisioned” (p. vii). Although objective has been sought before, approach make greater use newly discovered documents results recent archaeological excavations discovery-period shipwreck sites. Following brief introduction political, religious, economic, cultural conditions leading European Age Discovery cursorily reviewed, Smith identifies maritime states Spain Portugal center nautical renaissance oceangoing technology years between 1430 1530, caravel nao ship types most favored explorers. He then oudines probable origins two vessel describes general characteristics. majority book devoted step-by-step descriptions building caravels naos 900 equipping them exploratory voyaging. Throughout narrative includes Spanish Portuguese equivalent virtually every term mentioned. Originally Ph.D. dissertation History Texas A&M University, ofEmpireis latest addition voluminous body literature 15th 16th centuries. Much used review recapitulate earlier set stage revelations document research archaeology. Preeminent among an inventory equipment board Santa Clara (Columbus’s Nina) 1498. Discovered Eugene Lyon, reproduced facsimile appendix D translated annotated Denise Lakey. Among surprises, appears indicate that Nina carried four masts, not three, historians have always presumed. reader disappointed archaeo­ logical research: all three sites explored had salvaged dredged before archaeologists arrived scene, can positively identified nao. findings seem ambiguous, even contradictory, gets impression still too early learn from quarter. Vanguard's main concern ships themselves—the technological vectors geographic exploration. It makes point resulted purposeful combining several technologies already existed. effect culture imparted subliminally throughout descriptions... <eot>
Dominique Barthélemy. <italic>La société dans le comté de Vendôme: De l'an mil au XIV<sup>e</sup> siècle</italic>. Paris: Fayard. 1993. Pp. 1118. 290 fr by None None <eot>
Book Review: Baptism and Change in the Early Middle Ages, c. 200—c. 1150 by Maxwell E. Johnson None <eot>
Benedictine Maledictions: Liturgical Cursing in Romanesque France. By Lester K. Little (Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1993. xx plus 296pp.) by Constance B. Bouchard None <eot>
Land and Power: Studies in Italian and European Social History, 400-1200 by Chris Wickham Brings together 11 of the author's fundamental essays on social history late Roman and early medieval period in Italy and, more generally, Europe. first section, The Empire After, focuses state economy Antiquity what happened to them political crisis western empire fifth century. Part 2, Theorizing Europe, concentrates west, as seen through comparative surveys pastoralism, use woodland relationships between peasants lords. last part, Italian society from Carolingians communes contains analyses that are interest. <eot>
Introduction by None None <eot>
John C. Cavadini. <italic>The Last Christology of the West: Adoptionism in Spain and Gaul, 785–820</italic>. (Middle Ages Series.) Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 1993. Pp. xii, 225. $36.95 by Julia M. H. Smith None <eot>
On the History of the Commenta Bernensia and the Adnotationes Super Lucanum by Shirley Werner None <eot>
Modern History as reinstatement of theSaeculum: A study in the semantics of history by Yehoshua Arieli None <eot>
Beneventanum Troporum Corpus I: Tropes of the Proper of the Mass from Southern Italy, A.D. 1000–1250 by Kenneth Levy The south of Italy in modern times has seemed a region slighted by fortune ... where Cristo si e fermato. In early medieval times, it was robust Lombard duchy that at its northern extreme stretched almost to Rome and the took all but Calabrian toe Apulian heel peninsula. Its political center ancient Beneventum, sixty kilometers east Naples. A hundred northwest, dominating road Adriatic, mother house Benedictine Order Monte Cassino. Established 529, this would influence European spirituality for ages come. Farther pilgrimage site Gargano, Archangel Michael appeared late fifth century. Down coast were Bari Brindisi, gateways Byzantium Holy Land. Charlemagne wrested control much territory from Lombards 774, after further victories 788 he joined Carolingian monarchy. zone's cultural significance long been recognized. Campanian model basis Lindisfarne Gospels ca. 700; illuminations Exultet rolls attracted art historians; Italian readings ecclesiastical poetry taken into Analecta hymnica. image owes stylish minuscule book hand, E.A. Loew's Script (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1914) went beyond paleography consider role transmission classics. Study music began with R. Andoyer 1911. Publications R.-J. Hesbert 1930s emphasized archaism authority traditions. Hesbert's facsimile edition an eleventh-century gradual Paleographie musicale (PM), volume 14 (Le Codex 10.673 de la Bibliotheque vaticane, fonds latin (X[I.sub.e] siecle) graduel beneventain [Tournai, 1931-36]), accompanied massive commentary; staffless neumes PM supplemented twelfth-century on lined staff 15 VI. 34 capitulaire Benevent (X[I.sub.e]-X[I.sub.e] siecle). Graduel avec prosaire et tropaire 1937]). past two decades have had particularly rich musical harvest. Five categories can be distinguished: (1) Old-Beneventan chants; (2) Carolingian-Gregorian Proper (3) tropes Gregorian Propers; (4) Mass Ordinary; (5) sequences, prosulae, hymns, so forth (such as Exultet). For Beneventan repertory (no. 1), Thomas F. Kelly offered fulldress study prior Chant (Cambridge: Cambridge University 1989); then 21 (Les Temoins manuscrits du chant Beneventain [Solesmes, 1992]) there are most surviving Old melodic sources facsimile; chants fascinate, prospectus observes, their prolixity repetition presque incessante petites formules melodiques invariables. no. 2, Carolinglan-Gregorian Propers, ample documentation exists; addition three full Beneventan-Gregorian manuscripts Propers available black-and-white facsimiles (PM 14, 15, 20 [La Missale antiquum. No. 33 (olim VI 33) des Archives Archiepiscopoles (Bern, 1983)!), color others promised series Codices gregoriani La Linea Padua. Office lag behind, less abundant, best remaining inventory Benevento V. Corpus antiphonalium officii, II. other (nos. 3-5) fall largely under heading tropes, now, thanks devotion John Boe Alejandro Planchart, about half material become monumental publications Beneventanum troporum corpus (BTC) review: remainder (one hopes, including sequences) should before issue same highly competent editorial hands. … <eot>
Cuisiner à l'Antique : Apicius au Moyen Age by Bruno Laurioux The ancient way of cooking : Apicius in the Middle Ages - Assembled late fourth century, cookbook which tradition has attributed to had a predominantly medieval destiny. Serving as practical and living text until sixth it became known from that time onward purely literary dead work. This was notably case during Carolingian Renaissance, when scriptoria Tours Fulda produced manuscripts where, seems, Loup de Ferrières, well all those who were inspired by it, used Apicius' text. It afterwards practically forgotten, its rediscovery fifteenth century humanists. credit for this is due not Poggio, but Enoch Ascoli, brought manuscript back Italy. rediscovery, however, only limited influence, with exception Roman Academy Pomponio Leto, where Platina define his humanist gastronomy. <eot>
Carolingian Ballads, 1: Roncesvalles by None None <eot>
Ernst Kantorowicz and the Sacralization of the Past by Carl Landauer “ At the beginning of this book,” Ernst Kantorowicz wrote in preface to The King's Two Bodies , “stands a conversation held twelve years ago with my friend Max Radin (then John H. Boalt Professor Law, at Berkeley) his tiny office Hall, brimful floor ceiling and door window books, papers, folders, notes—and life.” 1 two men had that day centered on Kantorowicz's amusement receiving mailing from Order St Benedict, Inc. “To scholar coming European Continent not trained refinements Anglo-American legal thinking,” wrote, “nothing could have been more baffling than find abbreviation Inc ., customary business other corporations, attached venerable community founded by St. Benedict rock Montecassino very year which Justinian abolished Platonic academy Athens.” thus traced origins magnum opus an amusing tale about American Benedictine abbey stimulating between scholars Berkeley campus. But what accomplished opening—in part reminding reader erudition—was place study realm different occupied first immense volume 1927, Kaiser Friedrich der Zweite . <eot>
Conclusion by None None <eot>
Book Review: Irenaeus on the Salvation of the Unevangelized by Lloyd George Patterson None <eot>
Frontmatter by None None <eot>
Frontmatter by None None <eot>
The Emerging European Supernationalism by Johan Galtung In both senses of conceiving; laying the basis for its birth, and coming to terms with idea in double sense explicating meaning getting used supernationalism, not only nationalism subnationalism. Nationalism is a state individual collective mind, usually subconscious, retrievable on occasion by leaders oth ers, calling identification say, Britain, France, or Spain (or, more precisely, what elites those countries may be up to). So which differs from relating larger, supernational entity thought as federation superstate, such European Union that now emerging confederal Community. subnationalism, identifies subnational entities Wales, Corsica, Catalonia. The object national, cultural entity, sum total language, religion, shared myths traumas glories; people who are carriers culture space through time. nation-state doctrine concretizes further, identifying territory, demand ing coincidence between territorial borders. At very center institutions state, personifications: emperor, king, president, so on. Above has been linked culture. As it em bodies assumptions about reality; some them, heavily value loaded. all nationalisms cultures but <eot>
Notes by None None <eot>
Book reviews by Henry Summerson|I. M. Ward|J.R. Young|Nigel Foster The Origins of the English Legal Profession. PAUL BRAND. Oxford: Blackwell, 1992. ix + 236 pp. (incl. index). £40 hb. ISBN 0 631 15401 9. Henry's Wars and Shakespeare's Laws. THEODOR MERON. Clarendon Press, 1993. xi 237 £25 019 8528119. Simon. A Political Biography Sir John DAVID DUTTON. London: Aurum x 364 1 85410 204 4. Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte. DIETMAR WILLOWEIT. München: C.H. Beck Verlag, 2nd. edn., xxx 377 DM 48 pb. 3 406 36529 <eot>
Raymond Van Dam. <italic>Saints and Their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul</italic>. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 1993. Pp. viii, 349. Cloth $49.50, paper $16.95 by Thomas Head None <eot>
The Last Descendant of Aeneas: The Hapsburgs and the Mythic Image of the Emperor by Larry Wolff|Marie Tanner None <eot>
<i>The Complete Works of Rather of Verona.</i>Rather of Verona , Peter L. D. Reid by None Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsThe Complete Works of Rather Verona. Verona , Peter L. D. ReidThomas F. X. NobleThomas Noble Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 2Apr., 1994 The journal the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2865171 Views: 1Total views on site Copyright AcademyPDF download Crossref reports no citing article. <eot>
Reply to Wayne Farris' Review by Karl F. Friday|William Wayne Farris None <eot>
Peter Brown. <italic>Power and Persuasion in Late Antiquity: Towards a Christian Empire</italic>. (The Curti Lectures, 1988.) Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. 1992. Pp. x, 182. Cloth $45.00, paper $12.95 by None None <eot>
A Spanish Apocalypse: The Morgan Beatus Manuscript.John Williams , Barbara A. Shailor by Jacques Guilmain Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsA Spanish Apocalypse: The Morgan Beatus Manuscript. John Williams , Barbara A. Shailor Jacques GuilmainJacques Guilmain Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 1Jan., 1994 journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2864881 Views: 13Total views on site Copyright AcademyPDF download Crossref reports no citing article. <eot>
Unwelcome companions: ancient rats reviewed by Philip Armitage The commensal rats — notably the black rat Rattus rattus and brown R. norvegicus are among mankind's most destructive dangerous enemies, have spread relentlessly with humans across globe. A decade after an important ratty meeting at Natural History Museum, London, in 1981, this noxious rodent pest is again reviewed. <eot>
D. Ganz, Corbie in the Carolingian Renaissance, 1990 by Marco Mostert None <eot>
Luigi Guicciardini. The Sack of Rome. by William V. Hudon|James H. McGregor None <eot>
Rinaldo: Character and Intertext in Ariosto and Tasso. by Diane Parkin-Speer|Michael Sherberg None <eot>
Westmitteleuropa. Ostmitteleuropa, Vergleiche und Beziehungen: Festschrift für Ferdinand Seibt zum 65. Geburtstag. Eds. Winfried Eberhard, Hans Lemberg, Heinz-Dieter Heimann and Robert Luft. Munich: R. Oldenbourg, 1992. 391 pp. Index. Plates. DM148, hard bound. by John Klassen Westmitteleuropa. Ostmitteleuropa, Vergleiche und Beziehungen: Festschrift für Ferdinand Seibt zum 65. Geburtstag. Eds. Winfried Eberhard, Hans Lemberg, Heinz-Dieter Heimann and Robert Luft. Munich: R. Oldenbourg, 1992. 391 pp. Index. Plates. DM148, hard bound. - Volume 53 Issue 4 <eot>
Las fuentes antiguas en el menologio medieval hispano: la pervivencia literaria e iconográfica de las Etimologías de Isidoro y del Calendario de Filócalo by Manuel Antonio Castiñeiras González The Spanish contribution to the textual and iconographical tradition was of special significance. On one hand, description Months in book V Saint Isidore's Etymologies, derived from Ancient World, was copied repeatly European scriptoria helped to create two themes calendar's iconography: Janus bifrons Spinario. other hand, library of the benedictine abbey Ripoll, a crossroad calendar's culture, kept until end Twelfth Century a manuscript -Vat. Reg. Lat. 123, dated 1055- with echoes filocalian recension with poem dedicated to related carolingian compositions. This text also understand some peculiarities of series Gerona Ripoll. <eot>
Law, Family, and Women: Toward a Legal Anthropology of Renaissance Italy.Thomas Kuehn by Richard C. Trexler None <eot>
Rhetoric goes to war: The doctrine of ancient and medieval military manuals by John R. E. Bliese None <eot>
The Welsh Saints: A Study of Patterned Lives.Elissa R. Henken by Frederick Suppe None <eot>
Renaissance Argument: Valla and Agricola in the Traditions of Rhetoric and Dialectic. by Charles G. Nauert|Peter Mack This book presents a new interpretation of the two most innovative renaissance works on use language, Lorenzo Valla's Repastinatio dialecticae et philosophiae (1439) and Rudolph Agricola's De inventione dialectica (1479). Mack attempts to find path through controversies which have recently raged around work, acknowledging originality skill his attack Aristotelian logic metaphysics, but recognizing inconsistency (and even Aristotelianism) alternative system. provides first full commentary work in modern times, establishing its coherence. Far from being mere popularisation Valla, turns out be one great texts Western rhetorical tradition. The concludes with survey influence thinking practices reading writing, print, educational system, such intermediaries as Erasmus, Vives, Melanchthon Ramus. <eot>
Shorter Notices by John J. Contreni Shorter Notices JOHN J. CONTRENI Purdue University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CIX, Issue 434, November 1994, Pages 1240–1241, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CIX.434.1240 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
Liturgy and Healing in an Early Medieval Saint's Cult: The Massin honore sancti Sigismundifor the Cure of Fevers by Frederick S. Paxton In The Glory of the Martyrs , a collection miracle stories completed by early 590s, Bishop Gregory Tours included chapter on Burgundian king Sigismund. A Catholic convert from Arian Christianity his father, Sigismund had founded monastery at Agaune, present St.-Maurice, Switzerland (Wallis/Valais), in year 515. After he died 523, hands Chlodomer, one sons Clovis, body lay well St.-Péravy-la-Colombe near Orléans (where Franks thrown it) until abbot Venerandus brought it back to St.-Maurice 535/36 for burial. Over next fifty years or so, gained reputation as saint and source healing power over fevers. About Sigismund's posthumous fame, recorded that “whenever people suffering chills piously celebrate mass honor make an offering God king's repose, immediately their tremors cease, fevers disappear, they are restored earlier health.” Gregory's reference is unusual very existence such celebration, Missa sancti Sigismundi peculiar example new development Latin liturgy late antiquity, missa votiva votive mass. Votive masses differed traditional forms eucharistic celebration because could be offered particular purpose special request member (or members) congregation. Unlike however, most other generalized titles pro vivorum et mortuorum. St. is, far I can tell, unique its appeal intercession specific purpose—the cure <eot>
Hinkmar von Reims als Verwalter von Bistum und Kirchenprovinz.Martina Stratmann by Patricia A. DeLeeuw Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsHinkmar von Reims als Verwalter Bistum und Kirchenprovinz. Martina Stratmann Patricia A. DeLeeuwPatricia DeLeeuw Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 1Jan., 1994 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2864875 Copyright AcademyPDF download Crossref reports no citing article. <eot>
"The Mouth of 'hem All": Ben Jonson, Authorship, and the Performing Object by Scott Cutler Shershow Many recent theorists and scholars have explored how the concept of authorship a system for transmission literary authority was constructed in early modern England.' Ben Jonson is commonly considered central figure this complex cultural development: poet who, as David Riggs puts it his biography, waged an extraordinary campaign to secure authorial prerogatives.2 Scholars also described detail how, related process, London stage at end sixteenth century adapted transformed whole spectrum earlier dramatic forms.3 Indeed, construction had particular urgency theatre, mode culture whose emergence from these popular roots went hand with relentless process self-definition. In essay, I will focus on form performance largely neglected by scholarship period: puppet or performing object. argue that contemporaries appropriated puppet-as metaphor, metadramatic device, marker subordination-in formulating their particular, culturally conditioned model theatrical authorship. <eot>
A Book of Middle English.J. A. Burrow , Thorlac Turville-Petre by Peter Nicholson None <eot>
The Hierarchy of Alamannic Settlements in the Former Limes Region of South-Western Germany to AD 500 by Heiko Steuer The author summarises recent research undertaken at Freiburg University on settlement in southwestern Germany during the Roman and Merovingian periods. Following Germanic conquest of Agri decumates retreat limes to Rhine Danube (AD 260), hillfort settlements appeared. They were pinnacle Alamannic hierarchy, forming counterpoint late castellae along Rhein, which also garrisoned by Alamanni warriors. New research, however, suggests an otherwise strong continuity pattern (particularly established villae rusticae), a major shift only occurred around AD 500 when hilltop disappeared village-like replaced scattered farmsteads. <eot>
Count and Bishop in Medieval Germany: A Study of Regional Power, 1100-1350.Benjamin Arnold by Raymond H. Schmandt Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsCount and Bishop in Medieval Germany: A Study of Regional Power, 1100-1350. Benjamin Arnold Raymond H. SchmandtRaymond Schmandt Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 1Jan., 1994 The journal the Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2864789 Views: 3Total views on site Copyright AcademyPDF download Crossref reports no citing article. <eot>
Who Wrote Hincmar's Ordines? by Richard A. Jackson "Who Wrote Hincmar's Ordines?" The study examines the four coronation ordines attributed to Archbishop Hincmar of Reims in order determine whether or not was really their author. composed his works by borrowing from and slightly modifying other sources whenever possible. His method is illustrated examples 866 Ordo Ermentrude 869 Charles Bald. Examination produces evidence show that a major part ordo copied an for recoronation Louis Pious as emperor 835, thus essentially pushing our knowledge ceremonial back entire generation. Although are indeed Hincmar's, he did write them, but basically compiled them. <eot>
Fleur de lis et Oriflamme: Signes Célestes du Royaume de France.Anne Lombard-Jourdan by Brigitte Miriam Bedos-Rezak None <eot>
Sex in Holy Places: An Exploration of a Medieval Anxiety by Dyan Elliott Sex in Holy Places: An Exploration of a Medieval Anxiety Dyan Elliott But those who forget their fear me and insane wickedness destroy the temples dedicated My name, or defile that dedication originated by Jacob polluting holy places with murderous blood impure seed adultery fornication ... O woe to wretches.1 Hildegard Bingen's prophetic denunciation sacrilegious pollution is premised on set conventional assumptions. Pollution prohibitions Christian tradition were sufficient antiquity provide kind illusory stability essential religious belief structures. Yet expression meaning particular anxiety still remained sensitive historical contingency. This paper examines case point. A rather startling story enjoyed popularity across all genres medieval didactic literature high later Middle Ages. man woman have intercourse precinct: be it church, monastery, cemetery, near sainf s shrine. As punishment for this inappropriate act, couple miraculously stuck together, only discovered humiliating predicament wondering populace, whose reaction ranges from hilarity deep disgust. They are eventually released united prayers community. graphic depiction what specialists call penis captious vaginismus (depending which genitals preferred as locus drama) fabricated tissue anxieties.2 When construed primarily an gynephobia female genitalia singular site "danger," tale can take its place alongside more celebrated motifs like vagina dentata? Nor does adhesive climax narrative fail achieve transhistorical transcultural ubiquity. Medical historians demonstrated breadth dissemination;4 when I first heard version was making rounds préadolescent circles urban legend. In latter context, functioned generalized warning against dangers sex.5 longevity motif ought not beguile us into regarding either static form meaning. The characteristic rendering focuses consecrated soil © 1994 Journal Women-s History, Vol 6 No. 3 (Fall) Eluott 7 transgression danger. such, specific timely respect origins, meaning, application, variants. earliest versions topos surfaced around 1100. miracle acta St. Guignerius (d. ca. 450), offense perpetrated tomb bishop had been member household father saint. couple, locked together dogs (more canum), conveyed shrine saint "where merit witness Christ intercession faithful they liberated."6 compared analogues, proximity notably oblique narrative. consecration offense, lesser occasion than church. ceremony evolved contend other forms pollution, cemetery's solitary defilement affect integrity church-proper. On hand, if church polluted some way, cemetery likewise desecrated.7 Similarly, deceased remotely associated question. Especially noteworthy fact author takes no pains differentiate between actions unseemly ritually polluting. marvel immediately preceding our incident, example, two soldiers horribly punished urinating rock where once anchored his ship.8 there difference world urine (even saint) semen soil, since requires deliberate public purification. Thus boundaries constitutes "the sacred" seem somewhat amorphous. "once-removed" proximity... <eot>
The Origins of the Wheelbarrow by M. J. T. Lewis unknown in Europe before roughly A.D. 1200, whereas China it had been used, asJoseph Needham shows, since perhaps the 1st century B.c.' Just how Western vehicle came about has matter for speculation. Along with Needham, Bertrand Gille and Andrea Matthies wonder if was a case of stimulus diffusion-of westerners hearing at several removes, via Islam or Byzantium, Chinese man-powered one-wheeled cart interpreting concept after their own fashion.2 Lynn White, Albert Leighton, suggest that also inspired by two-man handbarrow-which general circulation very long time-since, substituting wheel front man, number laborers needed could be halved. Leighton alternatively surmises somebody maneuvering two-wheeled hand conceived idea man-sized small loads, which would easier to manipulate only one wheel. Less convincingly, because difference size, proposes wheelbarrow may have adapted from broken wagon. The comes two basic forms. best known <eot>
SHORTER NOTICES by JOHANNA KOSSMANN SHORTER NOTICES Get access JOHANNA KOSSMANN Groningen Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CIX, Issue 430, February 1994, Page 138, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CIX.430.138 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
The External School in Carolingian Society.M. M. Hildebrandt by Michael I. Allen None <eot>
Shorter Notices by Patrick Wormald Shorter Notices Get access PATRICK WORMALD Christ ChurchOxford Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CIX, Issue 434, November 1994, Pages 1239–1240, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CIX.434.1239 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
SHORTER NOTICES by Janet L. Nelson SHORTER NOTICES Get access JANET L. NELSON King's CollegeLondon Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CIX, Issue 432, June 1994, Pages 681–683, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CIX.432.681 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
The Theory of Music Manuscripts from the Carolingian Era up to c. 1500 in the Great Britain and in the United States of America by Marie-Noël Colette|M. Huglo|Chr. Meyer|N. C. Phillips|Marie-Noël Colette None <eot>
The Announcement of the Coming of the Antichrist and the Medieval Concept of Time by Adriaan H. Bredero 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. <eot>
REVIEWS by E J. YARNOLD|S J None <eot>
Giorgio Chittolini and Dietmar Willoweit, eds., Statuti città territori in Italia e Germania tra medioevo ed età moderna. (Annali dell'Istituto Storico Italo-Germanico, Quaderno 30.) Bologna: Il Mulino, 1991. Paper. Pp. 502. L 50,000. by None None <eot>
Shorter Notices by Dianne McMullen None <eot>
Shorter Notices by R. A. FLETCHER Journal Article Shorter Notices Get access R. A. FLETCHER University of York Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CXI, Issue 433, September 1994, Pages 987–989, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CXI.433.987 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
Philippe Contamine, Des pouvoirs en France, 1300–1500. Paris: Presses de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure, 1992. Paper. Pp. 270; 2 color plates, 2 black-and-white plates. F 160. by None None <eot>
Shorter Notices by Rosamond McKitterick Journal Article Shorter Notices Get access ROSAMOND MCKITTERICK Newnham CollegeCambridge Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CXI, Issue 433, September 1994, Pages 986–987, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CXI.433.986 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
SHORTER NOTICES by Wes Warren None <eot>
The Hedeby Coinage by Björn Varenius This article deals with the early Nordic pictorial coinage, in all probability struck Hedeby first half of 9th century. The focus is on interpretation its role societal strategies, since some coins reproduce Carolingian empire while others expose an iconographic universe symbolism. One these symbols, which examined somewhat closer, ship. <eot>
Shorter Notices by Rosamond McKitterick None <eot>
Oblation or Obligation? A Canonical Ambiguity by John Doran The practice of oblation, the giving children to a religious community be brought up and educated, is as old monasticism itself. Oblation was means by which parents were able dispose unwanted offspring fairly confident that they would cared for others. However, there never any clear guidelines laid down Church with respect confusion over status an oblate satisfactorily settled. Even great effort put into removing ambiguities in canon law twelfth thirteenth centuries failed clarify technicalities oblation. This because no agreement on nature oblation from start. Eastern best summed St Basil Great, his Regulae Fusius Tractatae . He took granted, noting child easily moulded life, stipulated minimum age at should received, but he did insist those under care their received before witnesses. More importantly, anxious questioned strictly when reached sixteen or seventeen whether wished professed. then had demonstrate perseverance life only professed after much pleading. final profession irrevocable. Clearly tradition favour children, not considered definitive act. Certainly we can see abbot have say came age. very spirit early monasticism. forced retain unsuitable monks monastery. <eot>
L'aqueduc de Nimes et le Pont du Gard: Archeologie, geosysteme, histoire by A. Trevor Hodge|Guilhem Fabre|J.-L. Fiches|J.-L. Paillet Previous articleNext article No AccessBook ReviewsL'aqueduc de Nîmes et le Pont du Gard: Archéologie, géosystème, histoire. By G. Fabre, J.-L. Fiches, and Paillet.A. Trevor HodgeA. Hodge Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited American Journal of Archaeology Volume 98, Number 2April 1994 The journal the Archaeological Institute America Citations: 1Citations are reported from Crossref Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/506665 Copyright © America. All rights reserved.PDF download reports following citing article: John Neu Current Bibliography History Science Its Cultural Influences, 1994, Isis 85 (Oct 2015): 1–300.https://doi.org/10.1086/357072 <eot>
Saints and Their Miracles in Late Antique Gaul. by Thomas Head|Raymond Van Dam Saints' cults, with their focus on miraculous healings and pilgrimages, were not only a distinctive feature of Christian religion in fifth-and sixth-century Gaul but also vital force political social life. Here Raymond Van Dam uses accounts miracles performed by SS. Martin, Julian, Hilary to provide vivid comprehensive depiction some the most influential saints' cults. Viewed within context ongoing tensions between paganism Christianity Frankish kings bishops, these cults tell much about struggle for authority, forming communities, concept sin redemption late Roman Gaul.Van begins describing origins three discusses career Bishop Gregory Tours, who benefited from support various patron saints turn promoted He then treats religious dimensions healing miracles--including relation Catholic theology use bishops challenge royal authority--and pilgrimages shrines. The miracle stories, collected mainly appear first complete English translations. <eot>
Boethius and King Alfred by Janet Bately Any generalisation about the knowledge of Greek texts in medieval England is fraught with danger. However, it would appear that during first half period acquaintance works Plato was at second or even third hand, through writings authors such as Macrobius, Martianus Capella, Augustine, Boethius and (via Calcidius' translation Timaeus) John Scotus Eriugena,and Latin Old English drawing on one other these writings. The most important contribution vernacular provided by late ninth century reworking Boethius' De consolatione Philosophiae Alfred, King Wessex, though Platonic Neoplatonic ideas are also found Alfred's Soliloquies (by way Augustine) a couple homilies Boethius). earliest secure evidence for Consolatio Boethius, although, thanks apparently to Englishman Alcuin, being read continent from Carolingian Renaissance onward. Macrobius Capella had become known end century, while commentaries were circulation there beginning tenth. <eot>
Shorter Notices by David Rollason Shorter Notices Get access DAVID ROLLASON University of Durham Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CIX, Issue 431, April 1994, Pages 402–403, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CIX.431.402 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
Plato: Protagoras by Mary B. Whall|Karen Bell|Stanley Lombardo None <eot>
Shorter Notices by Janet L. Nelson Journal Article Shorter Notices Get access JANET L. NELSON King's CollegeLondon Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume CIX, Issue 434, November 1994, Pages 1241–1242, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CIX.434.1241 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
Books Received by None Books Received Get access Forum for Modern Language Studies, Volume XXX, Issue 1, January 1994, Pages 77–96, https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/XXX.1.77 Published: 01 1994 <eot>
The Image of Antiquity in Boccaccio's "Filocolo," "Filostrato" and "Teseida.". James H. McGregor by Dennis Looney None <eot>
Contextualizing the Gospel among the Saxons: An Example from the Ninth Century of the Cultural Adaptation of the Gospel as Found in The Heliand by Douglas G. Hayward In the middle of ninth century, Christian missionaries among Germans propagated gospel by singing story life Christ in meadhalls Saxon warrior-nobles. This article, based upon a new translation and interpretation that song-text (The Heliand) G. Ronald Murphy, SJ, examines manner which those sought to adapt witness Jesus times people. author identifies three primary concerns contextualizaiton every age, shows how these were addressed more than one thousand years ago. <eot>
Spanish Ballads by Gregory B. Kaplan|Roger Wright None <eot>
Erwerbspolitik und Wirtschaftsweise mittelalterlicher Orden und Klöster. Edited by Kaspar Elm. (Berliner historische Studien, 17: Ordensstudien, 7.) Pp. 279. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 1992. DM 146. 3 428 07319 3; 0720 6941 by F. Neininger Erwerbspolitik und Wirtschaftsweise mittelalterlicher Orden Klöster. Edited by Kaspar Elm. (Berliner historische Studien, 17: Ordensstudien, 7.) Pp. 279. Berlin: Duncker &amp; Humblot, 1992. DM 146. 3 428 07319 3; 0720 6941 - Volume 45 Issue 1 <eot>
Die Kosmologie des Franciscus de Marchia: Texte, Quellen und Untersuchungen zur Naturphilosophie des 14. Jahrhunderts.Notker Schneider by William A. Wallace Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsDie Kosmologie des Franciscus de Marchia: Texte, Quellen und Untersuchungen zur Naturphilosophie 14. Jahrhunderts. Notker Schneider William A. WallaceWilliam Wallace Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 1Jan., 1994 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2864869 Copyright AcademyPDF download Crossref reports no citing article. <eot>
Quis Teutonicos constituit iudices nationum? The Trouble with Henry by Horst Fuhrmann Previous articleNext article No AccessQuis Teutonicos constituit iudices nationum? The Trouble with HenryHorst FuhrmannHorst Fuhrmann Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 2Apr., 1994 journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2865086 Views: 12Total views on site Citations: 5Citations are reported from Crossref Copyright AcademyPDF download reports following citing article:Len Scales Emperors Rome: Italy and “Roman-German” monarchy, 1308-1452, (Jan 2022): 11–42.https://doi.org/10.4000/books.efr.42003Benjamin Reilly Cardinal Numbers: Changing Patterns Malaria Mortality in Rome, 494–1850, Journal Interdisciplinary History 49, no.33 (Nov 2018): 397–417.https://doi.org/10.1162/jinh_a_01302Claire Weeda Ethnic Identification Stereotypes Western Europe, circa 1100-1300, Compass 12, no.77 (Jul 2014): 586–606.https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12174Peter Godman Transmontani. Frederick Barbarossa, Rainald Dassel, Cultural Identity German Empire, Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur (PBB) 132, no.22 2010).https://doi.org/10.1515/bgsl.2010.027Edward Peters More With Henry: Historiography Germany Angloliterate World, 1888–1995, Central European 28, no.11 (Dec 2008): 47–72.https://doi.org/10.1017/S0008938900011249 <eot>
Dictionnaires et Répertoires au moyen âge: Une Étude du Vocabulaire.Olga Weijers by Marcia L. Colish None <eot>
Classical Continuity and Transposition in Two Twelfth-Century Adaptations of theAeneid by Raymond Cormier None <eot>
The Middle English "Physiologus.". Hanneke Wirtjes by Douglas Moffat Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsThe Middle English "Physiologus.". Hanneke Wirtjes Douglas MoffatDouglas Moffat Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 69, Number 1Jan., 1994 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2864883 Copyright AcademyPDF download Crossref reports no citing article. <eot>
Medieval archaeology in the Netherlands: A study of historic enlightenment - J.C. Besteman, J.M. Bos and H.A. Heidinga (eds), Medieval Archaeology in the Netherlands, Van Gorcum, Assen and Maastricht, 1990, 379 pp., Dfl. 80,-. by Richard Hodges None <eot>
Hagiography and the cult of saints. The diocese of Orléans, 800–1200, By Thomas Head. (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th ser. 14.) Pp. xvii + 342 + 2 maps and 2 figs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990. £35. 0 521 36500 7 by Valerie I. J. Flint None <eot>
Dramatized Spaces Between History and Anthropology by Élie Konigson The starting point for this brief study (which is a summary of several others) simple: it not so much in the location theatrical site as whole constructed spaces which situated, that we glean what few insights there are into evolution space. In Greece, Rome, then Western world late Middle Ages, primary dramatic has always been an urban one, could assert, paradoxically, question origins space less matter theatre studies than aspect town planning! Thus if to analyse must town. any case, two poles between destiny dramatized played out can be seen morphological unit dominates history both forms environment and individual habitat itself. effect exists original space, sort matrix at heart lived urban/residential area, within human enterprise includes, from outset, activity generally dramatic: hall-courtyaid-square , 1 complex identical morphological, functional symbolic terms differentiated only by built inscribed, provides framework carried all collective activities connected with area. <eot>
Review article: The archaeology of rural settlement in early medieval Europe by Helena Hamerow Early Medieval EuropeVolume 3, Issue 2 p. 167-179 Review article: The archaeology of rural settlement in early medieval Europe HELENA HAMEROW, HAMEROW Department Archaeology University DurhamSearch for more papers by this author First published: September 1994 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0254.1994.tb00060.xCitations: 2Read the full textAboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare text full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions Use check box below share version article.I have read accept Wiley Online Library UseShareable LinkUse link a article with your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Citing Literature Volume3, Issue2September 1994Pages RelatedInformation <eot>
Is Leviathan a Unicorn? Varieties of Hobbes Interpretations by Hiram Caton 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. <eot>
Before the Normans: Southern Italy in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries.Barbara M. Kreutz by D. H. Miller None <eot>
The Berlin commentary on Martianus Capella's De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii by Haijo Jan Westra|Christina Vester|Martianus Capella Acknowledgements Prolegomena to the Edition of Post-Carolingian Commentaries on Martianus Capella's De Nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii, Books I-II Notes Text, Author, Date and Place Commentary Abbreviations The Index <eot>
<i>Intellectuals in the Middle Ages</i> (review) by John O. Ward Reviews 151 assessing the degree to which Aristotelianism discredited dream revelation is that writers who do not take dreams seriously rarely bother mention them. Pursuing his theme of ambivalence, Kruger examines Walafrid Strabo's Visio Wettini and Nicolas Oresme's Tractatus de commensurabilitate vel incommensurabilitate motuum cell as examples vision form in fiction philosophy, pausing on way reflect partial truth linked dreams, mirrors, andfictionin medieval mind. The book concludes with autobiographical Guibert Nogent Hermann Cologne. A s a history male intellectual tradition work ignores questions social context. Hildegard Bingen's Causae et curae briefly discussed an example moral dualism but her use physiological theories dealt with. Julian Norwich Margery Kempe are mentioned passing show then conformity Augustinian tradition. Kruger's scholarship impressive choice occasionally refreshing. If thesis continuous ambivalence lacks nuance it has virtue staying true spirit subject tracing important thought. L. Sharon Davidson Department Economic History University Sydney Le Goff, Jacques, Intellectuals Middle Ages, trans. Teresa L Fagan, Cambridge Mass. Oxford, Blackwell, 1993; paper; pp. xxix, 194; 45 plates; R.R.P. U S $ ? [distributed Australia by Allen & Unwin]. This slapdash which, despite reputation its author, did need be translated into English. original was published 1957 now very dated. woolly, opinionated introduction translation, raises more than answers, cannot hide shortcomings whose author eschewed hard, critical labour necessary for topic. Any 'definition' 'intellectual' excludes all Carolingian well others such Dante (p. 2, although he gets, unaccountably, illustration p. 146 [as does Jan Hus!] bibliography 185), or Villon xviii, whole 153 devoted poetry), interests including those vocation professor scholar, is, university professionals, includes goliards ('those escapees from established structures', 26) 152 Abelard (who 'was goliard'!) Heloise Bernard Chartres foremost professor', 58) Jean M e u n (continuator Romance Rosel) Meister Eckhardt announces at end Ages 'profoundly anti-inteUectual' 158) humanist cause disappear, forfeits any claim serious consideration. fact, no substitute Haskins' 1927 potboiler Renaissance twelfth century. Use latter would spare us translationesc 'comparatist perspective', oblique references Foucault other French sociology ('organic', 'critical', 'marginal' intellectuals, none terms explained), 'wonderful' this scholar. w want litde origins universities, subjects, teachers, techniques, tools, we can always fall back Anders Ptitz, world learning (trans., 1981). Goff book, degenerates potted methods episodes. Regionalism, nationalism, politicizing later university, were, seems, inimical 'medieval urban intellectual', were certain trends philosophical peters out well-worn territory late scholasticism versus humanism. All pretensions towards defence odd statement 'milieu' intellectuals 'had never had better awareness itself Ages' 1) abandoned. Despite Martines (Power imagination: city-states Italy [1979], 206) told aristocrat and, anticipating Jardine Grafton (From humanism humanities, 1986), claims scholar worked open market-place, whereas the... <eot>
Prologues to Canonical Collections as a Source for Jurisprudential Change to the Eve of the Investiture Contest by Bruce C. Brasington None <eot>