Results 11 to 20 of about 11,730 (138)
O Liber regum e a representação aristocrática da Espanha na obra do Conde D. Pedro de Barcelos
La fortune notable du Liber regum au royaume du Portugal trouve son aboutissement dans les écrits historiographiques du Comte de Barcelos, qui procède à l’appropriation extensive et même littérale de plusieurs sections de texte.
Maria do Rosário Ferreira
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Types de verbes et temps verbaux dans le Liber Regum
L’étude des types de verbes et des temps verbaux employés dans le Liber Regum nous permet de conclure que les concepts de devoir et de cause n’existent pas pour l’auteur de l’œuvre. Seule l’action en soi est importante pour lui.
José María GARCÍA MARTÍN
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En este artículo se da noticia de tres nuevos manuscritos de la versión toledana Libro de las generaciones y linajes de los reyes (o Liber regum), elaborada en torno a 1219. Esta versión se conocía hasta ahora básicamente a través de la edición publicada
Francisco Bautista
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Dans cet article, l’auteur présente quelques réflexions suscitées par la préparation d’une édition numérique du Liber regum (ou Libro de las generaciones y linajes de los reyes).
Hélène Thieulin-Pardo
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William the Conqueror's Lost Writ for London Rediscovered
Abstract William the Conqueror's writ for London has long been recognised as one of the key sources for the Norman Conquest of England, and has been discussed at length and printed many times. Yet the archives of the Corporation of the City of London contain another, hitherto unpublished, text of a writ of that king in favour of the citizens of London.
NICHOLAS KARN
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Looking Beyond Jerusalem: A Fifteenth‐Century Exercise in Image Comparison
Critical image comparison is a widespread art‐historical practice. This essay explores why a Brabantine artist encouraged viewers to exercise it in the late fifteenth century. At the time, northern European artists tested out how images could be means of transcending the visible world while simultaneously showcasing their very constructedness. The self‐
Hanna Vorholt
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Translating German Emperors: A Staufen–Sicilian Synthesis under Henry VI?
Abstract The Staufen conquest of the Kingdom of Sicily in 1194 can be understood as the violent destruction of a sophisticated and cosmopolitan Norman kingdom and its replacement by a new dynasty with starkly different cultural and political models. Indeed, many contemporary authors decried the brutality associated with Henry VI's conquest.
Philippa Byrne
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Around 1000, a new type of law‐book emerged in Catalonia and northern Italy that attests to new ways of handling legal material. Incorporating in full the Visigothic and Lombard law codes, respectively, these law‐books provided a base for studying and interpreting old law through comments, glosses etc., addressing new users such as lay judges.
Stefan Esders
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Early mechanisms of abbatial succession: the case of Iona (563–704)
Comments about succession to the Iona abbacy rarely go beyond the observation that most of the early abbots – but not all – belonged to the Cenél Conaill, the kindred of Iona’s founder, Saint Columba. This point privileges the role of eligibility criteria in the succession process at the expense of agency.
Patrick McAlary
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