Results 251 to 260 of about 482,149 (308)

2000-year fish bone record reveals transition to commercial fisheries during climatic change

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Mittelalter (Medieval History)

Historische Zeitschrift, 2008
H.-J. Schmidt (Hrsg.), Tradition, Innovation, Invention. Fortschrittsverweigerung und Fortschrittsbewusstsein im Mittelalter (N. Schnitzler) 158 A. Baeriswyl, Stadt, Vorstadt und Stadterweiterung im Mittelalter. Archäologische und historische Studien zum Wachstum der drei Zähringerstädte Burgdorf, Bern und Freiburg ...
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Geography’s medieval history

Dialogues in Human Geography, 2011
This paper examines the marginal place of ‘medieval geography’ in contemporary geographical scholarship. Over the past two decades, geographers' studies of the subject’s historiography have tended to focus mainly on ‘modern’ and ‘early-modern’ rather than medieval geographies.
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Medieval Urban Environmental History

History Compass, 2013
Abstract Medieval urban environmental history lies at the intersection of environmental history, urban history, and the history of public health. For many years, medieval towns were thought to be universally foul and filthy, a stereotype that remains common in both academic and popular histories.
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Early Medieval Monetary History

2016
Contents: Foreword Introduction: Mark Blackburn and early medieval monetary history, Rory Naismith, Martin Allen and Elina Screen. Part I Progress in Early Medieval Monetary History: Coins and currency in Viking England, AD 865-954, Gareth Williams Prelude to reform: 10th-century English coinage in perspective, Rory Naismith Coinage and currency under ...
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Cultivating Medievalism: Feeling History

2002
This chapter surveys how both men and women influenced the gradual recovery of the medieval spirit for cultural consumption. The gendering of Romantic medievalism encodes the ambivalence of troubadourian masculinity from two directions: the first stems from the fact that women began to discuss publicly their interpretation of medievalism particularly ...
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Is Medieval History Relevant?

2005
What is medieval history actually for? What does it do? Why should we be bothered with it? At one level, the answers to these questions are rooted in the ways that cultures use the past. For individuals and for groups of all sizes the past is a fund of images and stories mobilized to instil a sense of direction and to create and sustain identities.
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