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Karolingische Tradition und frühes französisches Königtum: Untersuchungen zur Herrschaftslegitimation der westfränkisch-französischen Monarchie im 10. Jahrhundert. Bernd Schneidmüller
by Frederick Behrends
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviews Karolingische Tradition und frühes französisches Königtum: Untersuchungen zur Herrschaftslegitimation der westfränkisch-französischen Monarchie im 10. Jahrhundert . Bernd Schneidmüller Frederick BehrendsFrederick Behrends Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 1Jan., 1982 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2847591 Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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Art History in Schools: a comprehensive strategy
by Alan Dyson
Journal of Art & Design EducationVolume 1, Issue 1 p. 123-133 History in Schools: a comprehensive strategy ANTHONY DYSON, DYSON DYSON. Lecturer the Department and Design, University London Institute Education, Chairman Schools Sub-committee Association Historians, previously Education at Froebel Institute, Head Department, Philippa Fawcett College.Search for more papers by this author First published: March 1982 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-8070.1982.tb00041.xCitations: 2AboutPDF 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 article with your friends colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditWechat Citing Literature Volume1, Issue1March 1982Pages RelatedInformation
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REVIEWS
by VIVIEN LAW
None
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Alain de Lille, Gautier de Châtillon, Jakemart Giélée et leur temps. H. Roussel , F. Suard
by William D. Paden
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviews Alain de Lille, Gautier Châtillon, Jakemart Giélée et leur temps . H. Roussel , F. Suard William D. Paden, Jr.William Jr. Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 1Jan., 1982 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2847590 Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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REVIEWS
by Carole Hillenbrand
Journal Article REVIEWS Get access PATRICIA CRONE, Slaves on horses. The evolution of the Islamic polity, Cambridge University Press, 1980. Pp. x + 302. Price: £ 15.75. CAROLE HILLENBRAND UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Semitic Studies, Volume 27, Issue 1, SPRING 1982, Pages 116–119, https://doi.org/10.1093/jss/27.1.116 Published: 01 January 1982
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Max Weber's Marxism
by Jonathan M. Wiener
None
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Short Notices
by P. D. A. Harvey
None
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Christianity and Homosexuality
by Michael M. Sheehan
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 SOVEREIGNTY OF VENUS: THE PROBLEM OF COURTLY LOVE
by Geoff Hughes
None
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Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress of Medieval Canon Law, Salamanca, 21–25 September 1976. Edited by Stephan Kuttner and Kenneth Pennington. (Monumenta Iuris Canonici, ser. C: subsidia, vol. 6.) Pp. xxx + 588. Vatican City: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1980. S72.50.
by Walter Ullmann
Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress Medieval Canon Law, Salamanca, 21–25 September 1976. Edited by Stephan Kuttner and Kenneth Pennington. (Monumenta Iuris Canonici, ser. C: subsidia, vol. 6.) Pp. xxx + 588. Vatican City: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, 1980. S72.50. - Volume 33 Issue 1
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Josep M. Salrach, El procés de formació nacional de Catalunya (segles viii–ix), 1: El domini carolingi; 2: L'establiment de la dinastia nacional. Barcelona: Edicions 62, 1978. Paper. 1: pp. 177. 2: pp. 254.
by John C. Shideler
None
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Der "Pfennigstreit" in Hildesheim, 1343: Untersuchungen zur Sozialgeschichte des mittelalterlichen Hildesheim. Brigide Schwarz
by Susanne Jenks
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsDer "Pfennigstreit" in Hildesheim, 1343: Untersuchungen zur Sozialgeschichte des mittelalterlichen Hildesheim. Brigide Schwarz Stuart JenksStuart Jenks Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 1Jan., 1982 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2847592 Views: 1Total views on site Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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Art et archéologie des Juifs en France médiévale. Bernhard Blumenkranz
by Carl F. Barnes
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviews Art et archéologie des Juifs en France médiévale . Bernhard Blumenkranz Carl F. Barnes, Jr.Carl Jr. Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 4Oct., 1982 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2848767 Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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The earls in Henry the Second's reign.
by Paul Latimer
The object of the thesis is to provide a total picture of
the earls in Henry II's reign. Chapter One looks at history
of earldoms England, before and after Norman conquerors
brought with them Carolingian traditions local
government. Two examines duties, rights perquisites as local officials, how their position
changed course eleventh early twelfth centuries,
and how, except certain special cases, practical role
as officials became insignificant Ins
reign. Three various aspects lives of
Henry II I s earls: constant travelling; residences;
their military lifestyle culture, religion.
Chapter Four describes complex structure earls'
honours, financial administrative problems that the
earls faced. Chapters Five Six examine relationship
between royal government. at
the role central government, both individuals
and group, impact on justice the
increasing dependence favourable position court. deals specifically taxation:
the forming taxation policy; of
taxes earls, growing on
individual feudal political relationships between king subject. Seven revolt against in
1173-4, greatest crisis reign, which many earls
were involved, for king. Eight
looks region comprising Cambridgeshire, Essex, Norfolk
and Suffolk, showing powerful local
landlords efforts establish effective royal
control area.
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Cervantes and the credibility crisis in Spanish golden‐age fiction
by Barry Ife
None
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Has Bede's Version of the «Passio S. Anastasii» come down to us in BHL 408?
by Carmela Vircillo Franklin|Paul Meyvaert
None
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The Manuscript Tradition of Eugippius' Excerpta ex operibvs sancti Avgvstini Second Part
by Michael M. Gorman
None
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Der Werdener Psalter in Berlin Ms. theol. lat. fol. 358. Eine Untersuchung zu Problemen mittel-alterlicher Psalterillustration
by Walter Cahn|Rainer Kahsnitz
None
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5. LOOKING AT CLUNY IN CONTEXT
by Barbara H. Rosenwein
None
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Scandinavian relations with Northwestern Russia during the Viking age: The archaeological evidence
by Anne Stalsberg
(1982). Scandinavian relations with Northwestern Russia during the Viking age: The archaeological evidence. Journal of Baltic Studies: Vol. 13, No. 3, pp. 267-295.
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The ‘Imperial Church System’ of the Ottonian and Salian Rulers: a Reconsideration
by Timothy Reuter
There is a general consensus among historians that there was something quite special about the church policy of Ottoman and Salian rulers Germany from Henry i to m. The normal reliance medieval king on his prelates here turned into deliberate systematic exploitation potential Church as an instrument government. These used bishops abbots, whom they appointed, counterweight turbulent unreliable lay nobility. Many have, so speak, followed them in this, have Ottomans' Salians' complex seemingly unsatisfactory relations with their aristocracy policy. Here seen plan, system harmony, much has come be regarded principal government available these rulers. Our picture 'imperial system', Reichskirchensystem German historians, been refined by recent scholarship, but essential outlines not greatly altered since time Waitz Giesebrecht. purpose what follows re-examine outlines. qualifications, doubts re-interpretations offered are all new; many expressed or at least hinted existing literature. But never fully articulated, it seems worth looking again whole ask how far fact did could performed functions usually attributed it, also system. focus attention will inevitably bishoprics (and lesser extent royal abbeys) before Investiture Contest, necessary look position elsewhere Europe this period, because appearance uniqueness fostered considering conditions Reich isolation
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4. LOOKING IN: The Cluniac Perception of the Monastery
by Barbara H. Rosenwein
None
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Jonathan B. Riess. <italic>Political Ideals in Medieval Italian Art: The Frescoes in the Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia (1297)</italic>. (Studies in the Fine Arts: Iconography, number 1.) Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press. 1981. Pp. xii, 187. $34.95. Linda Seidel. Songs of Glory: The Romanesque Façades of Aquitaine. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1981. Pp. x, 220. $25.00
by None
Jonathan B. Riess. Political Ideals in Medieval Italian Art: The Frescoes the Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia (1297). (Studies Fine Arts: Iconography, number 1.) Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press. 1981. Pp. xii, 187. $34.95. Linda Seidel. Songs of Glory: Romanesque Façades Aquitaine. Chicago: University Chicago x, 220. $25.00 Get access Riess B.. Seidel Linda. $25.00. Kristine Edmondson Haney Massachusetts, Amherst Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar American Historical Review, Volume 87, Issue 5, December 1982, Pages 1377–1379, https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr/87.5.1377-a Published: 01 1982
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Political Ideals in Medieval Italian Art: The Frescoes in the Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia
by Kristine Edmondson Haney|Jonathan B. Reiss|Linda Seidel
None
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The Origins of France
by Edward James
None
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End and Beginning: On the Generations of Cultures and the Origins of the West.
by Virgil Nemoianu|Franz Borkenau|Richard Löwenthal
None
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The Insular Latin grammarians
by Vivien Law
The adaptation of Late Latin grammars from the schools Roman Empire for use in a foreign Christian society culminated British Isles 7th and 8th centuries development two distinct types grammar designed respectively elementary more advanced students. These works, whether they take form elaborate commentaries on classical grammarians, or simple collections paradigms, reflect reading intellectual preoccupations their authors, first teachers West to face problem large-scale formal foreign-language teaching. influence Insular grammarians extended far beyond own time: taken Continent by Irish Anglo-Saxon missionaries, shaped both latinity pedagogical technique pupils Carolingians, teaching has persisted until our time.
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The Long-haired Kings and Other Studies in Frankish History
by J. M. WALLACE–HADRILL
Originally published in 1962, The Long-Haired Kings is split into two parts. first concerned with the history of France period gestation, between end Roman imperial room Gaul, and emergence medieval tenth century. It principally Franks, their institutions, laws writers. second half acts as an introduction to hitherto unpublished study Frankish kingship surveys Merovingian rule from its beginning Rhineland wastes metamorphosis Carolingian rule. This book a unique contribution was one books time provide European languages.
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The Making of the Cambridge Medieval History
by Peter Linehan
Previous articleNext article No AccessThe Making of the Cambridge Medieval HistoryP. A. LinehanP. Linehan Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 3Jul., 1982 The journal Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2848689 Views: 8Total views on site Citations: 5Citations are reported from Crossref Copyright AmericaPDF download reports following citing article:Peter Webster Edited Collection, 23 (Apr 2020).https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108683647Paul Fouracre New History, (Mar 2008).https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521362917Guy Halsall sources and their interpretation, (Dec 2005): 56–90.https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521362917.005Roger Collins Carolingians Ottonians in an Anglophone world, Journal History 22, no.11 (Jan 2012): 97–114.https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-4181(96)00007-3Edward Peters More Trouble With Henry: Historiography Germany Angloliterate World, 1888–1995, Central European 28, 2008): 47–72.https://doi.org/10.1017/S0008938900011249
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Die Bussbücher Halitgars von Cambrai und des Hrabanus Maurus: Ihre Uberlieferung und ihre Quellen. By Raymund Kottje. Beiträge zur Geschichte und Quellenkunde des Mittelalters 8. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1980. xix + 297 pp. DM 148.
by Roger E. Reynold
Die Bussbücher Halitgars von Cambrai und des Hrabanus Maurus: Ihre Uberlieferung ihre Quellen. By Raymund Kottje. Beiträge zur Geschichte Quellenkunde Mittelalters 8. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1980. xix + 297 pp. DM 148. - Volume 51 Issue 4
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Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of the Christian Era to the Fourteenth Century. By John Boswell. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1980. xviii+ 424 pp. $27.50.
by Patrick Henry
Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality: Gay People in Western Europe from the Beginning of Christian Era to Fourteenth Century. By John Boswell. Chicago: The University Chicago Press, 1980. xviii+ 424 pp. $27.50. - Volume 51 Issue 4
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La cathédrale Saint-André et les origines chrétiennes d'Avranches
by Daniel Levalet
Daniel Levalet, The cathedral church St-André at Avranches. excavations carried out from 1972 to 1977 the site of early d'Avranches have uncovered, beneath Romanesque church, three structures that go back even earlier : a with naves and western apse trapezoidal shape middle 9th century ; end 4th can, some likelihood, be considered been first Avranches finally, building exact purpose which was unclear, though it quite certainly built beginning period Roman occupation. results are important for knowledge they yield Christianization Normandy. They entitle us consider Christianiza-tion thoroughly rooted in area by century, same time Church's organizational framework working order. Moreover, discovery huge structure Carolingian era makes tempting think Scandinavian invasions had not totally upset entire region towns able resist expand.
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III Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages
by Roger Collins
Annual Bulletin of Historical LiteratureVolume 66, Issue 1 p. 27-33 III Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages R. J. H. Collins, Collins Lecturer in Medieval History, University LiverpoolSearch for more papers by this author First published: November 1982 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8314.1982.tb00647.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 Volume66, Issue1November 1982Pages RelatedInformation
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The Three Orders: Feudal Society Imagined
by Georges Duby
None
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Boethius in the Carolingian Schools
by Margaret Gibson
The medievalist who goes to Pavia will visit first and most reverently the church of San Pietro Ciel d'Oro. It is an eighth-century foundation, reformed by Cluny in tenth much rebuilt altered over years. But you do not go it for architecture, nor gilded ceiling—long tarnished; salute relics: crypt, Boethius; on high altar St Augustine Hippo. There have categories medieval scholarship, which found its subject-matter language Boethius. These are easy generalizations. What we must consider harder, practical questions Boethius' entry into western academic tradition. To what extent why was he influence learning early Middle Ages? He conveyed classical heritage west, no doubt— but how when?
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How the WLN began in 1949 and how it might be in 1999
by William J. Wiswesser
ADVERTISEMENT RETURN TO ISSUEPREVArticleNEXTHow the WLN began in 1949 and how it might be 1999William J. WiswesserCite this: Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci. 1982, 22, 2, 88–93Publication Date (Print):May 1, 1982Publication History Published online1 May 2002Published inissue 1 1982https://doi.org/10.1021/ci00034a005RIGHTS & PERMISSIONSArticle Views268Altmetric-Citations19LEARN ABOUT THESE METRICSArticle Views are COUNTER-compliant sum of full text article downloads since November 2008 (both PDF HTML) across all institutions individuals. These metrics regularly updated to reflect usage leading up last few days.Citations number other articles citing this article, calculated by Crossref daily. Find more information about citation counts.The Altmetric Attention Score is a quantitative measure attention that research has received online. Clicking on donut icon will load page at altmetric.com with additional details score social media presence for given article. calculated. Share Add toView InAdd Full Text ReferenceAdd Description ExportRISCitationCitation abstractCitation referencesMore Options onFacebookTwitterWechatLinked InReddit (886 KB) Get e-Alerts
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Fifth-Century Facts
by Philip Bartholomew
In Britannia, volume viii (1977), Professor E. A. Thompson published a long account of British political history in the early fifth century. Arguing carefully and ingeniously, he derived from literary sources an attractive detailed narrative last years Roman Britain. The source material, however, is full difficulties; it purpose present paper to draw attention these difficulties show that evidence cannot serve as foundation for elaborate superstructure which wishes erect upon it.
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OLD AND NEW IN MEROVINGIAN TAXATION
by Walter Goffart
None
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L'ancienne église de Saint-Pierre-l'Estrier à Autun
by Christian Sapin
Christian Sapin, The old church of St.-Pierre-l'Estrier at Autun. Located along the inner perimeter Autun (Department Saone-et-Loire) cemetery, Saint-Pierre-l'Estrier was partially destroyed and modified by work carried out in 18th 19th centuries. In spite these radical changes its superstructure substructure, it still contains considerable elements belonging to different edifices that followed on same site. Recent archaeological has made possible set up for this complex, which had never been studied, a relative chronology stretches from 2d beginning 11th century case oldest periods. It would appear structure 9th rests part constructions Lower Empire time played some funerary role. Although is not yet determine their outline full, number point monumental character. As identical circumstances noted other sites Europe, early were determinant as site cult buildings often rebuilt times. There evidence stages superstructure. last indicates extent project Carolingian tradition, with sculptural like be found nowhere else Burgundy. what remain edifice much later tombs bishops erected, whose mausoleums, close Saint-Pierre, century.
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Ancients and Moderns in the Renaissance: Rhetoric and History in Accolti's Dialogue on the Preeminence of Men of his Own Time
by Robert Black
None
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Griechisch-lateinisches Mittelalter: Von Hieronymus zu Nikolaus von Kues
by John J. Contreni|Walter Berschin
None
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Aspects of a mediaeval cultural context ‘milieu’ and manuscript transmission at Nevers Cathedral
by Nancy van Deusen
Abstract Key differences between monastic and cathedral institutions during the important transitional period of late eleventh to early twelfth centuries account for selective, eclectic assimilation pieces, feasts, performance mannerisms musical structural emphasis in manuscripts from a community central France. Affinity institutional type connects Nevers with cities which circle Paris, Norman-influenced Sicily, eastern Europe. Personalities significant aspects change at turn century will be discussed.
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Lead burden in prehistorical, historical and modern human bones
by G. Drasch
From archaeological findings it is well known that, in the past, lead has been intensively used by man. The toxicological aspects of increased exposure are perceived onward from 2nd century B.C.; between 90 and 95% absorbed stored bone. Therefore measurement levels ancient bones seemed to be a suitable approach determine real body burdens at different periods time compare results with present situation. Approximately 650 total 332 individuals following epochs were analysed: prehistorical Peruvians, Teutons, late Romans, Middle Age (further differentiated), Germans. determination was made graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy. possibilities postmortem alterations concentrations thoroughly investigated. For this purpose dependence found compared age, sex, type bone, conditions preservation storage. It concluded that only series “prehistorical Teutons” may exposed which relevant changes. concentration group Peruvians” can taken as “physiological zero point”; culture no use known. burden for Germany about 20 times greater than point”. In Roman epoch, but also 41–47% today. Only after Barbarian Invasions did value drop 13% result lower living standard. sources during times, today discussed.
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The Christian Community
by Edward James
Most people in Gaul the centuries after barbarian invasions belonged to a community wider than nation, city or family, with its own initiation ceremonies and meeting-places, membership of which gave sure knowledge world, both visible invisible, chance eternal happiness. The ceremony was baptism, involving triple immersion sunken pits fonts specially built baptisteries (both often octagonal shape, for number 8 signified eternity rebirth), usually performed by bishop, at Easter, Christmas on another suitable day such as feast St John Baptist. Already 500, child, rather adult, baptism norm; Carolin-gian times child might be one two years old. By then it had become much easier parents obtain sacrament their children: parish priests would perform ceremony, using small font inside church. In theory, continuing required fulfilment oaths sworn baptism; practice only minimum participation sacraments. Council Agde 506 laid down that every Christian should take communion Christmas, Easter Pentecost; Carolingian bishops decreed make confession sins once year, before Lent (hence Shrove Tuesday, from ‘to shrive’, meaning hear confession).
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Notes
by None
None
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Round or Square? The Axial Towers of the Abbey Church of Saint-Riquier
by Virginia Jansen
Illustrating the important Carolingian monastery of Saint-Riquier, seventeenth-century engravings after a destroyed eleventh-century miniature portray axial towers former abbey church as round. Yet few contemporaneous illustrations, numerous texts, and common construction practices indicate that similar were rectangular. Did engravers miscopy medieval illustration? If not, did render buildings realistically enough for historian to draw conclusions about architecture from it? Evidence recent excavations has demonstrated reliability copied portrayal if used with discrimination calibrated other evidence. Furthermore, detail in prints hints depiction could be reinterpreted: accordance examples, probably square. When historians seek reconstruct what would an exceptional element monument, histo...
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From Ausonius' Schooldays? A Schoolbook and its Relatives
by A. C. Dionisotti
Some time ago, pursuing humanistic Greek dictionaries, I was leafing through the volume of plates from Vienna MSS published by Josef Bick in 1930, when my eye caught a plate Latin–Greek dictionary, arranged not alphabetically but topics. and catalogue informed me that there subscription at end, written beginner's then crossed out (Plate I): ‘And so ends, with God's help, dictionary Cicero, me, Conrad Celtes, Poet, monastery Sponheim, year Our Lord 1495 on seventh day October, while Johannes Trithemius Abbot. Praise be to God heaven most glorious.’ On first page volume, Celtes had table contents: Continetur hoc libello: Grammatica greca brevissima, contracta ex diver sis autoribus per C.C. 2 Colloquia et conversaciones grece, quas vulgo apud Latinos Latinum ideoma dicunt (?), cum vocabulario inventas. 3 Vocabularium rerum admirandum grecum, nuper Conrado Celte Hercinia silva druidas inventum . same page, instructions well-known publisher: Aldus meus is add short preface addressed all youngsters Europe who want learn Greek, assured it will fine very useful little book. Various additions are needed Grammar; needs no telling, let him emend as necessary; have accents added, for Celtes' exemplar, books France Germany, were none.
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Joan of Arc: The Image of Female Heroism
by Anne Llewellyn Barstow|Marina Warner
Book synopsis: The fame of Joan Arc began in her lifetime and, though it has dipped a little now and then, she never vanished from view. Her image acts as seismograph for the shifts settlings personal political ideals: is heroine every movement wanted their figurehead. In France, anti-semitic, xenophobic, extreme right parties have claimed since Action Francaise 19th century. By contrast, Socialists, feminists, liberal Catholics rallied to champion dispossessed wrongly accused. also played crucial role changing visions female heroism. She proved an inexhaustible source inspiration writers, playwrights, film-makers, performers, composers. single, brief life, several essential mythopoiec characteristics that throughout history defined charismatic leader saint are powerfully intensely condensed. Even while was still alive, but far more so after death, heroic part story sparked narratives all kinds, pictures, ballads, plays, satires. This only heightened 1841-9 by publication Inquisition trial which had examined witchcraft heresy. transcript interrogations gives us voice this young woman across centuries with almost unbearable immediacy; spirit leaps page, uncompromising its frankness, good sense, courage, often breathtaking simple effectiveness. into one most fully vividly present personalities history, about whom great known, own words at first hand, than is, example, Shakespeare. However, not stopped flow fictions fantasies her. Marina Warner analyses symbolism Maid time rich afterlife popular culture. cultural expressions ongoing historical struggle symbol - you could say, brand. new preface study, takes stock continuing contention, politics culture, powerful virtue. Arc's multiple resurrections transformations show how vigorous need figures like remains, meet thoughtfulness. argues abandoning search identify heroes define them, out kind high-minded distaste propaganda, lets dangerous factions manipulate them ends. When Marine Le Pen calls on name, needs be confronted bad faith abuse history.
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‘Bons Bretons et Bons Francoys’: The Language and Meaning of Treason in Later Medieval France
by Michael Jones
‘Men dred tresson wher they it finden’ wrote an anonymous fifteenth-century translator of the Song Roland , earliest and greatest all chansons de geste which take treason as their major theme. In later medieval France men did not have far to search before found evidence justifying concern with that particular topos. Treason was often associated its sister sedition in contemporary chronicles, memoirs, pamphlets, sermons political allegories, even figurative representations betrayal, most notorious men, by Judas his Lord. The long war England naturally posed delicate problems over loyalty allegiance many involved conflict through no choice own. Aspects what happened when individuals changed sides whole provinces bent force majeure recognizing a new sovereign, thereby incurring stigma rebellion against former lord, recently been much discussed. Plots deliver castles towns are without number. Siege warfare, so characteristic period, encouraged such behaviour. Surviving interrogations reveal both serious improbable schemes over-throw royal authority, great provincial princes were implicated. Thousands letters pardon recite, frequently graphic words guilty, extent innumerable individual acts treachery towards French crown. use spies informers, coded cryptic messages, poisoning, assassination, torture, bribery blackmail, pre-arranged meetings mysterious figures also invocation intangible occult forces, sorcery, divination black magic, attain ends, these integral cases treachery.
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The Manuscript Tradition of Eugippius' Excerpta ex operibvs sancti Avgvstini First Part
by M. M. Gorman
None
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The question of border regions in Western Europe: An historical background
by Sven Tägil
(1982). The question of border regions in Western Europe: An historical background. West European Politics: Vol. 5, Frontier Regions Europe, pp. 18-33.
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Authority and Power: Studies on Medieval Law and Government Presented to Walter Ullmann on His Seventieth Birthday
by Walter Ullmann|Brian Tierney|Peter Linehan
Journal Article Authority and Power: Studies on Medieval Law Government Presented to Walter Ullmann His Seventieth Birthday Get access Tierney Brian Linehan Peter, eds., Birthday. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980. x, 274 pp. £ 25.00. James A. Brundage of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar American Legal History, Volume 26, Issue 3, July 1982, Pages 256–258, https://doi.org/10.2307/844741 Published: 01 1982
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The Evolution of Music Education Philosophy from Utilitarian to Aesthetic
by Michael L. Mark
Throughout Western history, various philosophies of music education have been articulated by intellectual, political, and religious leaders. A common factor in the is relationship between society. Since middle 20th century, writers on philosophy mostly educators, rather than societal They have, for most part, abandoned many historical justifications profession favor aesthetic philosophy. The utilitarian values that formed its philosophical basis rejected during last 30 years because they little to do with music. Music now taught sake music, link has historically connected aesthetics needs broken.
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The "Literati" at Iowa in the Twenties
by Charlton Laird
None
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The Last Judgment Tympanum at Autun: Its Sources and Meaning
by Don Denny
Le tympan de la cathedrale romane d'Autun (ca. 1130) et sa representation du Jugement Dernier. Analyse. Importance l'inscription linteau: elle proclame que les peches determinent damnation ou le salut, selon qu'ils sont presents absents, ce qui implique une considerable responsabilite humaine. L'A. montre theme reflete pratique des cours ecclesiastiques concept judicium dei. Dernier a moins faire avec subtilites debat theologique qu'avec d'un systeme juridique primitif.
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The Oldest Latin Manuscript in Boston: A Unique Carolingian Homiliary for Lent from Clermont
by Michael M. Gorman
None
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Boethius in the Carolingian Schools
by Margaret Gibson
None
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Crucifixion as annunciation: The relation of ‘the dream of the rood’ to the liturgy reconsidered1
by Éamonn Ó Carragáin
None
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E. Flores, Le scoperte di Poggio e il testo di Lucrezio. Naples: Liguori, 1980. Pp. 95.
by E. J. Kenney
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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English castles in the reign of Edward II
by Michael Prestwich
Why did castles not play a more dominant role in the troubles of Edward II's reign? There were no major sieges like those Bedford or Kenilworth thirteenth century, and failed to protect north against Scottish raids. It was so much that their walls battlements inadequate, but rather garrisons supplies often insufficient. Frequent changes command partly reflected political difficulties period, also result administrative confusion. In several English towns there considerable trouble between constable local castle urban populace. Royal attempts overawe opposition by placing large numbers state defence seem have had little effect, while baronial rarely held out for long under attack. Architectural developments changing castles. The traditions I's castle-building declined, greater emphasis on domestic aspects castles, than fortifications. Much building relatively small scale, response disorder national emergency.
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L'ancien diocese de Limoges: Des origines au milieu du XI Siecle
by Daniel F. Callahan|Michel Auburn
None
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Structures narratives chez Chrétien de Troyes. Katalin Halász
by Matilda Tomaryn Bruckner
None
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The Visual Arts: A History
by Hugh Honour|John Fleming
(NOTE: Each chapter contains a timechart and box features.) Starter Kit. Introduction. Art as Craft. Systems of Building. Sculptural Techniques Materials. Painting Print-making. Photography. Pictorial Representation. Perspective. Color. Style Individual Expression. The Power Images. Women Artists. History Art. I. FOUNDATIONS OF ART. 1. Before History. the Hunters. Cave Mesolithic Farmers. Neolithic Architecture. Stonehenge. 2. Early Civilizations. Mesopotamia. Sumer. Akkadian Ziggurats. Babylon. Indus Valley. Ancient Egypt. Predynastic. Dynastic. Old Kingdom Sculpture Painting. Middle Kingdom. Aegean. Minoan Crete. Mycenae Mainland. China. Shang Dynasty. 3. Developments Across Continents. Hittites. Discovery Iron. New in Akhenaten. Ramesside Assyria Narrative Relief. Iran. Archaemenid Persepolis. Zhou Americas. Olmecs. Peru. Africa: Nok Culture. 4. Greeks Their Neighbors. Archaic Greece. Male Nude. Polis. Classical Period. Parthenon. Naturalism Idealization. Vase Stelae. Late Barbarian Alternatives: Scythians Animal Style. Hallstatt La Tene. Iberia Sardinia. Etruscans. 5. Hellenistic Roman Plato, Aristotle Arts. Allegory. Mosaics. Domestic Temples Public Works. Colosseum Invention Concrete. Pantheon. Sculpture. Towards Definition Antique II. ART AND THE WORLD RELIGIONS. 6. Buddhism, Hinduism, Far Eastern Buddhist India. Image Buddha. Hindu Sri Lanka Java. on Southeast Asian Confucian, Daoist, Han Tang Dynasty Five Dynasties. Song Landscape Shinto Japan. Periods (794-1333). 7. Christian Byzantine Beginnings From Domus Ecclesiae to Basilica. Christ. Ravenna. Ecclesiastical Hagia Sophia. Tradition. Icons Iconoclasts. Triumph Orthodoxy. Northern Europe. Interlace Illumination. Western Carolingian Renovation. Imagery. 8. Islamic Umayyad Abbasid Spain. Samanid Seljuk Decoration. III. SACRED SECULAR 9. Medieval Christendom. Ottonian Romanesque Architecture Italy. Innovations Gothic High Gothic. Stained Glass Flying Buttresses. Economics Theology. English German Italian Giotto. Secular International 10. Fifteenth Century Beginning Renaissance. Brunelleschi. Masaccio. 'Progress' A Flanders. Van Eyck van der Weyden. Alberti. Donatello. Departures. Church. Fra Angelico, Uccello, Piero della Francesca. Botticelli. Venetian Synthesis. Mantegna Bellini. Humanism. Durer. 11. Sixteenth Reform North. Hieronymus Bosch. Grunewald. Protestant Renaissance Leonardo da Vinci. Harmony, Unity, Raphael Michelangelo. Giorgione. Titian. Tintoretto Veronese. Sansovino, Palladio, Laws Harmony. Mannerism Mannerisms. Correggio Mannerist 'License'. Pieter Bruegel Elder. El Greco. 12. Americas, Africa, Asia. Mesoamerica Maya, Toltecs, Mixtecs. Aztecs. Incas. Africa. World. Ottoman Safavid Mughal Yuan Ming Japan-Kamakura Edo. Influence Zen Buddhism. 13. Seventeenth Rome. Baroque Rubens Dyck. Easel Bernini. Borromini. Poussin Claude. Velasquez. Dutch Hals. Rembrandt. Landscape. Still Life Genre. Vermeer. England France. 14. Enlightenment Liberty. French Rococo Watteau, de Troy, Interior. Boucher, Chardin, Fragonard. Germany Tiepolo, Guardi, Canaletto. Sense Sensibility. Hogarth Gainsborough. Classicism. Neo-Classicism, or 'True Style'. Canova David. IV. MAKING MODERN WORLD. 15. Romanticism Realism. Romanticism. Heirs Goya. Gericault. Ingres. Delacroix. Philosophy. Friedrich. Blake. Romantic Constable. Turner. Corot Etude. In Which Should We Build? Historicism Pre-Raphaelites. Courbet. Millet. Manet. USA. Photography Comes Age. 16. Traditions. Oing-Dynasty Decorative Japan Edo Hokusai Hiroshige. 17. Impressionism Post-Impressionism. Impressionism. Monet. Morisot, Renoir, Degas. Japonisme. Neo-Impressionism. Seurat, Divisionism, Socialism. Symbolism. Gaugin Gogh. Allegories Modern Life: Munch Rodin. Nouveau Sullivan Skyscraper. Cezanne. 18. Indigenous Arts Australia, Oceania. Polynesia. Melanesia Micronesia. Australia. American Northwest. Plains Arid Lands North America. V. TWENTIETH-CENTURY 19. from 1900 1919. Ways Looking. Fauves Expressionism. Matisse. Expressionists. Kandinsky. Marc. Cubism. Picasso Braque: Analytical Synthetic Orphic Futurism. Abstract Non-Objective Suprematism Founding De Stijl. Frank Lloyd Wright. 20. Between Two World Wars. Dada Surrealism. Duchamp. America Precisionist View. Diego Rivera Mexican Muralists. Breton, Chirico, Ernst. Dali, Magritte, Miro. Welded Metal: Revolution Movements. Constructivism, Stijl, Revolution. Bauhaus. 21. Post-War Post-Modern. Pollock Kooning. Still, Rothko, Newman. European Survivors. Post-Painterly Abstraction. Jasper Johns Robert Rauschenberg. Pop Photographic Minimal Conceptual Earth Land Photo-Realism Body Process Modernism Post-Modernism. 22. Continuity Change -- Twilight Second Millenium. Questioning Modernism. Neo-Expressionism. Identity. Post-Modern Multiculturalism. Video Post-Medium Condition. Construction Reality. Abjection. Function Value. Artspaces. Politics Memory. Globalization. Spectacle. Glossary. For Further Reading. Index. Maps.
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Twelfth Century Latin Commentaries on the Mass: The Relationship of the Priest to Christ and to the People
by Mary M. Schaefer
None
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"Authority and Power. Studies on Medieval Law and Government Presented to Walter Ullmann on his seventieth birthday", ed. Brian Tierney and Peter Linehan (Book Review)
by Nicholas G. Round
None
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Celebration and Persuasion: Reflections on the Cultural Evolution of Medieval Consultation
by Thomas N. Bisson
None
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Giuliana Italiani, La tradizione esegetica nel commento ai Re de Claudio di Torino. (Quaderni dell'Istituto di filologia classica “Giorgio Pasquali” dell'Università degli Studi di Firenze, 3.) Florence: Cooperativa Libraria Universitatis Studii Florentini, 1979. Paper. Pp. 147. L 4,500.
by E. Ann Matter
None
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The Continuity of Utopian Thought in the Middle Ages A Reassessment
by Janet Coleman
None
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Some Theoretical and Methodological Observations About the Inca Empire and the Asiatic Mode of Production
by Heinz Dieterich
None
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Reviews
by Hugh Honour|Paul M. Thompson|C.M. Kauffmann|Andrew Martindale|Jill Franklin
Guide to the Literature of Art History by Etta Arntzen and Robert Rainwater, Chicago: American Library Association London: The Book Company, 1980, 616 pp., £35 William Burges High Victorian Dream J. Mordaunt Crook, John Murray, 1981, 454 261 ills, 11 colour pls, £40 Strange Genius Burgess, ‘Art-Architect‘, 1827–1881 (Cardiff, National Museum Wales) ed. J.M. Cardiff, 151 179 £3.50 Hans Baldung Grien (Washington, Gallery Art, New Haven, Yale University Gallery) James H. Marrow Alan Shestack, Chicago Press, 282 c. 200 £12 Les Fastes du Gothique - le siècle de Charles V (Paris, Grand Palais), Paris: Editions la Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 461 pp, approx 369 24 9 fr (French) Songs Glory. Romanesque Façades Aquitaine Linda Seidel, 220 63 £17.50
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Aspects of Anglo-Saxon and Norman Colchester. By Philip Crummy. (Colchester Archaeological Report No. 1.) 29·5 × 21 cm. Pp. 91 + 69 ills. London: Council for British Archaeology (Research Report No. 39), 1981. £14·00.
by Carolyn Heighway
None
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The ‘archbishopric’ of Dol and the ecclesiastical politics of ninth-century Brittany
by Julia M. H. Smith
In the history of invasions which marked end Roman empire in west, Armorican peninsula northwestern Gaul holds a distinctive place. It witnessed only substantial settlements by people whose homeland lay within empire, and who had been subject to civil government for several centuries. These settlers crossed English Channel probably between late fourth early seventh Establishing new communities sparsely populated areas western Armorica, they brought with them their own language, social patterns Christian organisation, strong sense affinity Celts Wales Cornwall from whom derived.’ Whilst Britons were establishing themselves as Bretons, Franks asserting hold over remainder northern Gaul. A few settled eastern approaches peninsula, civitates Rennes Nantes. Culturally politically, this part Armorica was attached Merovingian Gaul, having its kings descendants Clovis, bishops members Gallo-Roman aristocracy.
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Rites and Religions of the Anglo-Saxons. By Gale R. Owen. 25 × 21·5 cm. Pp. 216 + 40 illus. Newton Abbot, London: David & Charles; Totowa, New Jersey: Barnes & Noble, 1981. £12·50.
by H. R. Loyn
Rites and Religions of the Anglo-Saxons. By Gale R. Owen. 25 × 21·5 cm. Pp. 216 + 40 illus. Newton Abbot, London: David & Charles; Totowa, New Jersey: Barnes Noble, 1981. £12·50. - Volume 62 Issue 2
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Ideational item Instability and the pursuit of civilization
by John S. Harlow
None
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Bioassay of Kinship in Populations of Middle Eastern Origin and Controls [and Comments and Replies]
by N. E. Morton|Ron S. Kenett|Shirley J. Yee|R. Lew|Milton Alter|Eliane S. Azevêdo|I. Barrai|L. L. Cavalli-Sporza|Ranajit Chakraborty|Marcus S. Goldstein|Patrick F. James|Mahdis Kamali|Eugene Kobyliansky|S. Micle|Kenneth M. Weiss
Gene frequencies for 32 populations show 3 Jewish and 4 gentile clusters. From phenotype the estimate of inbreeding F is .0110 in Middle East .0002 other populations. Differentiation region small (F =.026) compared with that species as a whole =.146). Kinship between appreciable within clusters but much less total groups (.004 .001, respectively). Isolation by distance similar groups. available data major appear to have undergone admixture gentiles at rate about 1% per generation, leading rates 50%. Estimates evolutionary size from these suggest substantial founder effects. These results are qualitatively consistent inferences Cavalli-Sforza Carmelli nonparametric analysis Karlin et al., not some interpretations latter.
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Geschichte Salzburgs: Stadt und Land. Heinz Dopsch
by John B. Freed
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsGeschichte Salzburgs: Stadt und Land. Heinz Dopsch John B. FreedJohn Freed Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmailPrint SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 4Oct., 1982 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2848779 Views: 2Total views on site Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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<i>Homéliaires liturgiques médiévaux: Analyse de manuscrits</i>. Réginald Grégoire
by Richard W. Pfaff
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviews Homéliaires liturgiques médiévaux: Analyse de manuscrits . Réginald Grégoire Richard W. PfaffRichard Pfaff Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmailPrint SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 4Oct., 1982 The journal of the Medieval Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2848789 Views: 2Total views on site Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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Archbishop Radbod, Regino of Prum and Late Carolingian Art and Music in Trier
by Warren Sanderson
None
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The Lamentations Commentaries of Hrabanus Maurus and Paschasius Radbertus
by E. Ann Matter
In the study of Carolingian Christianity, biblical commentaries are a vast and largely untapped resource. Exegesis, whether for teaching or homiletical purposes, dominated ninth-century school tradition; in this world, nearly all theologians were primarily expositors Bible. It is one ironies historical inquiry that non-exegetical treatises such figures as Hrabanus Maurus Paschasius Radbertus have been studied to exclusion their commentaries. Although situation beginning change, much remains be done, with crucial work on texts. Meanwhile, absence critical editions any major works exegetical tradition, scholarship field mere suggestion what might discovered when primary materials better presented. This no exception. The two discussed here received practically attention from modern historians, printed only uncritical Patrologia Latina. my hope analysis will encourage further into exegesis by showing some ways which commentaries, first Latin tradition book Lamentations, reveal theological pastoral concerns, methods, generations monastic authors.
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The Three Orders: Feudal Society Imagined (Lest Trois Ordres ou l'imaginaire du feodalisme)
by Bernard S. Bachrach|Georges Duby|Arthur Goldhammer
None
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A Distinction of Stories: The Medieval Unity of Chaucer's Fair Chain of Narratives for Canterbury. Judson Boyce Allen , Theresa Anne Moritz
by Thomas H. Bestul
Previous articleNext article No AccessReviewsA Distinction of Stories: The Medieval Unity Chaucer's Fair Chain Narratives for Canterbury. Judson Boyce Allen , Theresa Anne Moritz Thomas H. BestulThomas Bestul Search more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermissionsReprints Share onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail SectionsMoreDetailsFiguresReferencesCited Speculum Volume 57, Number 4Oct., 1982 journal the Academy America Article DOIhttps://doi.org/10.2307/2848766 Copyright AmericaPDF download Crossref reports no citing article.
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On the Endings of Wars
by Larry H. Addington|Stuart Albert|Edward C. Luck
None
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The Wars of the Roses: Military Activity and English Society, 1452-97
by James Gillespie|Anthony Goodman
None
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Women in Frankish Society: Marriage and the Cloister, 500 to 900
by Marc Meyer|Suzanne Fonay Wemple
Women in Frankish Society is a careful and thorough study of women their roles the Merovingian Carolingian periods Middle Ages. During 5th through 9th centuries, society transformed from relatively primitive tribal structure to more complex hierarchical organization. Suzanne Fonay Wemple sets out understand forces at work expanding limiting women's sphere activity influence during this time. Her goal explain gap between ideals laws on one hand social reality other. What effect did administrative structures stratification have equality sexes? Did emergence nuclear family enforcement monogamy era enhance or erode power status women? examines wealth primary sources, such deeds, testaments, formulae, genealogy, ecclesiastical secular court records, letters, treatises, poems order reveal enduring German, Roman, Christian cultural legacies Empire. She attends life matters law, economy, marriage, inheritance, as well chronicling changes experiences religious life, waning church rise female asceticism monasticism.
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Othmar Hageneder, Werner Maleczek, and Alfred A. Strnad, eds., Die Register Innocenz' III., 2: Pontifikatsjahr 1199/1200: Texte. (Publikationen des Österreichischen Kulturinstituts in Rom, II. Abteilung: Quellen, I. Reihe.) Rome and Vienna: Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1979. Paper. Pp. xlvii, 536. DM 100.
by Leonard E. Boyle
None
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Ruy Afonso da Costa Nunes, História de educação no Renascimento. São Paulo: Editora da Universidade de São Paulo, 1980. Paper. Pp. 232.
by Luke Demaitre
None
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THE GRAMMAR OF PREDESTINATION IN THE NINTH CENTURY
by G. R. Evans
Journal Article THE GRAMMAR OF PREDESTINATION IN NINTH CENTURY Get access G. R. EVANS Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The of Theological Studies, Volume XXXIII, Issue 1, April 1982, Pages 134–145, https://doi.org/10.1093/jts/XXXIII.1.134 Published: 01 1982
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Die Ikone mit Petrus und Paulus in Wien. Neue Aspekte zur Entwicklung dieser Rundkomposition (Taf. 95-98)
by Karoline Kreidl-Papadopoulos
None
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Post-Construction and the Rafter Roof
by F. W. B. Charles
(1981). Post-Construction and the Rafter Roof. Vernacular Architecture: Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 3-19.
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MILES DEI - GOTES RITTER: KONRAD'S ROLANDSLIED AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE CONCEPT OF CHRISTIAN CHIVALRY
by Jeffrey Ashcroft
None
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REVIEWS
by David Luscombe
Journal Article REVIEWS Get access Old Arts and New Theology: The Beginnings of Theology as an Academic Discipline. By G. R. EVANS. Pp. xiv+232. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980. £12.50. DAVID LUSCOMBE Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Google Scholar Theological Studies, Volume XXXII, Issue 1, April 1981, Page 539, https://doi.org/10.1093/jts/XXXII.1.539 Published: 01 1981
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REVIEWS OF BOOKS
by c. w. BROOKS
REVIEWS OF BOOKS Get access An Introduction to English Legal History. By J. H. BAKER(London: Butterworths, 1979, 2nd edition. £7.50). c. w. BROOKS University of Durham Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Historical Review, Volume XCVI, Issue CCCLXXX, July 1981, Pages 592–595, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/XCVI.CCCLXXX.592 Published: 01 1981
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Reviews of Books
by Michael Jones
None
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Priestly Ministry Or Hierarchy: The Sacrament of Order
by Edmund Hill
New BlackfriarsVolume 62, Issue 728 p. 78-86 Priestly Ministry Or Hierarchy: The Sacrament of Order Edmund Hill O P, PSearch for more papers by this author First published: February 1981 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1741-2005.1981.tb02492.xAboutPDF 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 Volume62, Issue728February 1981Pages RelatedInformation
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ARTS, LITERATURE AND RELIGION
by Samuel Laeuchli
Journal Article ARTS, LITERATURE AND RELIGION Get access The Plan of St. Gall. A Study the Architecture and Economy of, Life in a Paradigmatic Carolingian Monastery (California Studies History Art). By Walter Horn Ernest Born Translated by Charles W. JonesBerkeley: University California Press, 1979. Vol. 1: xxv+336 pages; ISBN 0-520-03590-9. 2: xxi+359 0-520-03591-7. 3. xxxiv+267 pages, 0-520-03592-5. $250 set. Set 0-520-01724-2. Samuel Laeuchli Temple Search for other works this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar American Academy Religion, Volume XLIX, Issue 3, September 1981, Pages 544-a–544, https://doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/XLIX.3.544-a Published: 01 1981
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Short Notices
by Barrie Dobson
Short Notices Get access BARRIE DOBSON University of York Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume XCVI, Issue CCCLXXXI, October 1981, Pages 897-b–898, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/XCVI.CCCLXXXI.897-b Published: 01 1981
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A proposed literary context for the Count of Barcelona episode of theCantar de Mio Cid
by G. B. West
Click to increase image sizeClick decrease sizeBSS Subject Index: ARTHURIAN LITERATUREHISTORIA RODERICIIMITATION OF MODELSPOEMA DE MIO CID/CANTAR CID Notes 1. The historical Cid defeated Berenguer Ramon II on two occasions: first at Almenar in 1082, then the Pinar de Tévar 1090. Cantar episode is based this second encounter. All quotations arc from Poema mio Cid, ed. Colin Smith (Oxford 1972). Numbers parenthesis refer lines. 2. poet errs when he refers Count as ‘don Remont’ (987). protagonist involved was II, known ‘el Fratricida’. I have observed Catalan spelling for latter, but adopted accented Castilian form ‘Ramón’ character. 3. early twelfth-century Historia Roderici its account of battle tells us that afterwards a feast prepared, it far clear whether invited. phrase ‘victualia quippe sibi largiter ibidem dari sollicite precepit’ suggests who feasted, historian continues: ‘tandem uero liberum ad terram reucrti concessit’, where ‘sibi’ must Count. passage confused, evidently Menéndez Pidal and chroniclers Estoria España felt constrained opt Cantar’s version. For relevant Historia, see Pidal's edition his La del 4th edn (Madrid 1947), II,919 69, p. 947. further references are edition. 4. ‘The Barcelona’, HR, XXX (1962), 1–11, 7. 5. ‘Corned, conde, deste pan e beved vino’, Mio Cid. Estudios endocrítica (Barcelona 1975), 113–32. 6. Various critics commented passing episode. Dámaso Alonso discusses poet's comic technique portrayal ‘Estilo y creación en el OC, 1973), 107–43, pp. 130–31. Harold Moon, ‘Humour Cid’, Hisp (USA), XLIV (1963), 700–04, 702–03, considers be thoroughly humiliated by shows broad sense humour expense social superior. Smith, ‘Did repay Jews?’, R, LXXXVI (1965), 520–38, 525, emphasizes which sees amounting deliberate cruelty. Américo Castro, other hand, claims Cid's behaviour ‘proceder elegante señorial’ (‘Poesía realidad Hacia Cervantes, 3rd [Madrid 1967], 29–44, 38). Even nearer Garci-Gómez's view Jules Horrent who, basis Historia’s allusion feast, may even threatened starve himself ‘si sus instancias no eran escuchadas’ (Historia poesia torno al [Barcelona 1973], 37–38, n.63). would appear fallen into error suggested note 3 above. Finally, am grateful Professor Peter Bly Queen's University, Kingston (Canada), allowing me read yet unpublished paper ‘Food Thought or Alimentary Patterns Cid’. events after designed highlight ability cater men spite rigours exile. At end cantar, socially lowly infanzón entertains lavishly noble accustomed civilized comfortable life-style. thus not much concerned with fast, though course views do conflict mine. terms ‘France’ ‘the French’ here used loosely any one, all, territories corresponding modern France inhabitants area. 8. Alfonso X, Primera crónica general [i.e. España], Ramón Pidal, 2nd 1955), 563b. Eslona 9. poem, found vernacular Crónica la población Ávila (c. 1255), has recently been edited illuminatingly studied Francisco Rico, ‘Çorraquín Sancho, Roldán Oliveros: un cantar paralclístico castellano siglo XI!’, Homenaje memoria Don Antonio Rodríguez Moñino, 1910–1970 537–64. 10. Almería forms incomplete third section Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris, Luis Sánchez Belda 1950). 11. Sítense, Dom Justo Pérez Urbel Atilano González Ruiz-Zorrilla 1959), 130. 12. Éginhard, Vie Charlemagne, trans. Louis Halphen, (Paris 1938), 68–69. 13. See 154–55 Oxford MS Chanson Roland, F. Whitehead, 1946), 14. Johan Huizinga, Waning Middle Ages (1924; repr. New York 1954), 109. 15. poem (no. 149) included José María Alín El cancionero español tipo tradicional 1968), 364. notes Correas Vocabulario refrán ‘La que baño viene, bien sabe lo quiere’, together explanation ‘juntarse con varón’. 16. Karoli Magni et Rotholandi ou Chronique du Pseudo-Turpin, C. Meredith-Jones 1936), 180–81. 17. Roderici, 942, 944. 18. Mío R. [Vocabulario], 1969), 580. 19. Garei-Gómez, 129. referred Bly's study n.6. 20. Le Charroi Nîmes, Duncan McMillan 1972), 96,11. 810–13. 21. Guillaume, 1949–50), I, 46–47, 1042–8, 1054, 1057–8. 22. Couronnement Louis, Ernest Langlois, 19, 580–82 585–87, 60, 1927–30. AU 23. rey don décimo, Crónicas los reyes Castilla, BAE, LXVI 1875), 3–66, 12b. 24. Ages, 91. 25. Claude Régnier, Les rédactions vers prise d'Orange’ 1966), 106, 283–89. 26. An earlier version article Mediaeval Spanish Research Seminar Westfield College. comments made occasion also Alan Deyermond offered valuable suggestions improving revised draft.
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Short Notices
by A. G. Woodhead
Journal Article Short Notices Get access A. GEOFFREY WOODHEAD Corpus Christi CollegeCambridge Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume XCVI, Issue CCCLXXVIII, January 1981, Pages 189–190, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/XCVI.CCCLXXVIII.189 Published: 01 1981
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Reviews of Books
by J. M. WALLACE–HADRILL
Journal Article Reviews of Books Get access Die Bussbücber Halitgars von Cambrai and des Hrabanus Maurus. By RAYMUND KOTTJE (Beiträge z. Geschichte u. Quellenkunde Mittelalters, vol. 8. Berlin: De Gruyter, 1980. DM 148). J. M. WALLACE-HADRILL All Souls CollegeOxford Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The English Historical Review, Volume XCVI, Issue CCCLXXXI, October 1981, Pages 846–848, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/XCVI.CCCLXXXI.846 Published: 01 1981
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Gregory the Great's Europe
by R. A. Markus
Gregory became pope in the summer of 590, to succeed his predecessor who had been carried away by plague. Nearly fifty years passed since first outbreak plague time Justinian. Let serve as our signpost a period upheaval across Europe. If 530s were ‘age hope’ disastrous reversal began 540s. The succeeding half-century was collapsing hopes and darkening horizons: prospect imperial reconquest peace receding after 540, never be more than ephemerally precariously realized; dreams spiritual political unification revealed illusory; war, obscure workings ‘demographic forces’ combined turn Italy Boethius into that Great course some sixty years. contours societies late Antiquity becoming displaced produce new social landscape. Some this transformation has left visible traces evidence extensively studied; much it concealed from us, either through lack or failure ask right questions. It is only recent years, take one example, subtle shifts Byzantine religiosity ideology discernible later sixth century have begun cohere something like unified picture ‘new integration’ culture society towns Eastern Empire. How far world Western Europe exposed analogous changes may question impossible answer; any case, needs approaching piecemeal with necessary discrimination place.
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