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The Renaissance in the Nineteenth Century
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 320

The Renaissance in the Nineteenth Century

  • Categories: Art

The nineteenth century witnessed rapid economic and social developments, profound political and intellectual upheaval, and startling innovations in art and literature. As Europeans peered into an uncertain future, they drew upon the Renaissance for meaning, precedents, and identity. Many claimed to find inspiration or models in the Renaissance, but as we move across the continent's borders and through the century's decades, we find that the Renaissance was many different things to many different people. This collection brings together the work of sixteen authors who examine the many Renaissances conceived by European novelists and poets, artists and composers, architects and city planners, political theorists and politicians, businessmen and advertisers. The essays fall into three groups: "Aesthetic Recoveries of Strategic Pasts"; "The Renaissance in Nineteenth-Century Culture Wars"; and "Material Culture and Manufactured Memories."

Marriage Litigation in the Western Church, 1215–1517
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

Marriage Litigation in the Western Church, 1215–1517

Examines how late medieval church courts were used for marriage cases, and how this varied dramatically across Europe.

Abbatial Authority and the Writing of History in the Middle Ages
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 433

Abbatial Authority and the Writing of History in the Middle Ages

This book argues that abbatial authority was fundamental to monastic historical writing in the period c.500-1500. Writing history was a collaborative enterprise integral to the life and identity of medieval monastic communities, but it was not an activity for which time and resources were set aside routinely. Each act of historiographical production constituted an extraordinary event, one for which singular provision had to be made, workers and materials assigned, time carved out from the monastic routine, and licence granted. This allocation of human and material resources was the responsibility and prerogative of the monastic superior. Drawing on a wide and diverse range of primary evidenc...

Itinéraire général de la France
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 664

Itinéraire général de la France

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1866
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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The Criminalization of Abortion in the West
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 279

The Criminalization of Abortion in the West

Anyone who wants to understand how abortion has been treated historically in the Western legal tradition must first come to terms with two quite different but interrelated historical trajectories. On one hand, there is the ancient Judeo-Christian condemnation of prenatal homicide as a wrong warranting retribution; on the other, there is the juristic definition of "crime" in the modern sense of the word, which distinguished the term sharply from "sin" and "tort" and was tied to the rise of Western jurisprudence. To find the act of abortion first identified as a crime in the West, one has to go back to the twelfth century, to the schools of ecclesiastical and Roman law in medieval Europe. In t...

The Monks of Tiron
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 281

The Monks of Tiron

Reinterpreting key twelfth-century sources, this book provides the first comprehensive history of the monastic Order of Tiron in France.

The Performance of Self
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 285

The Performance of Self

Medieval courtiers defined themselves in ceremonies and rituals. Tournaments, Maying, interludes, charivaris, and masking invited the English and French nobility to assert their identities in gesture and costume as well as in speech. These events presumed that performance makes a self, in contrast to the modern belief that identity precedes social performance and, indeed, that performance falsifies the true, inner self. Susan Crane resists the longstanding convictions that medieval rituals were trivial affairs, and that personal identity remained unarticulated until a later period. Focusing on England and France during the Hundred Years War, Crane draws on wardrobe accounts, manuscript illuminations, chronicles, archaeological evidence, and literature to recover the material as well as the verbal constructions of identity. She seeks intersections between theories of practice and performance that explain how appearances and language connect when courtiers dress as wild men to interrupt a wedding feast, when knights choose crests and badges to supplement their coats of arms, and when Joan of Arc cross-dresses for the court of inquisition after her capture.

La Révolution en Haute-Normandie (1789-1802)
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 467

La Révolution en Haute-Normandie (1789-1802)

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1987-12-31T23:00:00+01:00
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  • Publisher: FeniXX

Deux grandes parties : l'une, étudiant pas à pas et à la lumière des recherches universitaires les plus récentes, le déroulement et les conséquences de la Révolution dans les nouveaux départements de l'Eure et de la Seine-Inférieure, l'autre s'attardant sur des aspects souvent méconnus, telle l'importance de la presse... « Copyright Electre »

Medieval Scholarship
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 380

Medieval Scholarship

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-06-23
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Surveying the development of medieval scholarship through biography, this volume contains 23 original essays on scholars whose work shaped medieval historiography for the past 300 years. Their subject was Europe between 500 and 1500, and they labored to define that protean and multinational culture. Each of them pioneered or revolutionized traditional views on fields such as diplomatics (Mabillon); economic, social, and constitutional history (Power, Pirenne, Bloch, Stubbs, Waitz, Whitelock, Maitland); manuscript and archival studies (Delisle, Muratori); Jewish history and the history of Islam and Byzantium (von Grunebaum, Ostrogorsky); symbology and intellectual history (Kantorowicz, Schramm, Smalley); general and cultural history (Gibbon, Adams, Haskins, S nchez-Albornoz); and ecclesiastical history (Bolland, Lea) and the history of magic and science (Thorndike). Some of the scholars pioneered comparative and interdisciplinary studies; all published work that is still essential to our understanding of the past and, more important, the present.

Writing War
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 254

Writing War

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2004
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  • Publisher: DS Brewer

Essays consider the variety of responses to warfare and combat in medieval literature.