Results 241 to 250 of about 1,355,299 (308)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
2001
Abstract When did the Early Middle Ages begin? When did they end? Is this just the usual euphemism for the Dark Ages? Were the Dark Ages dark in point of evidence or in point of humanity? Or both? Will this lecture be at best the lecturer whistling to keep his courage in a dark tunnel, peering for light at the end of it?
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Abstract When did the Early Middle Ages begin? When did they end? Is this just the usual euphemism for the Dark Ages? Were the Dark Ages dark in point of evidence or in point of humanity? Or both? Will this lecture be at best the lecturer whistling to keep his courage in a dark tunnel, peering for light at the end of it?
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Historical Materialism, 2011
AbstractChris Wickham’s important intervention in debates about the transformation of the Roman world from the fifth century onwards presents a vast array of evidence about the nature of social relations, the economy and the late-Roman and early-medieval state across the Mediterranean and Western-European world.
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AbstractChris Wickham’s important intervention in debates about the transformation of the Roman world from the fifth century onwards presents a vast array of evidence about the nature of social relations, the economy and the late-Roman and early-medieval state across the Mediterranean and Western-European world.
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Italy and the Early Middle Ages
2018The Introduction situates the chapters within the frame of Chris Wickham’s own trajectory of scholarship. It emphasizes Chris’s commitment to working across national linguistic and historiographical boundaries, and outlines how the editors to arrange the chapters so that they respond not only to Chris’s more recent, pan-European studies, but also to ...
Ross Balzaretti +2 more
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2006
As a global perspective grows and Eurocentricism wanes, it becomes more important, not less, to see where Europe came from. In this fascinating study, Lynette Olson explores the original formation of Europe from the fall of Rome to the First Crusade, and covers every European region, including the British Isles.
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As a global perspective grows and Eurocentricism wanes, it becomes more important, not less, to see where Europe came from. In this fascinating study, Lynette Olson explores the original formation of Europe from the fall of Rome to the First Crusade, and covers every European region, including the British Isles.
openaire +1 more source

