Brepols Online Books Other Monographs Collection 2013 - bob2013moot
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Metalogicon
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Metalogicon show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: MetalogiconJohn of Salisbury has long been celebrated as one of the foremost humanists of the twelfth-century renaissance, an erudite correspondent, legal expert, historian, poet, diplomat and political thinker, and clerk to two successive archbishops of Canterbury, Theobald and Thomas Becket. His Metalogicon, ostensibly a defence of the role of logic and of Aristotle’s Organon in the educational syllabus of the day, makes a powerful argument for an educational system of real practical utility for society, one whose intellectual coherence and rigour should underpin political morality and rational governance. As such, it has been seen to stand alongside the more famous Policraticus as an integral part of the intellectual contribution of one of Europe’s great political theorists. Based on John’s own experiences as a student and a teacher, the treatise offers unique evidence of the educational system of twelfth-century Paris at a critical stage in the early development of the schools, and of the earliest reception of the Aristotelian texts of the ‘new logic’. It is also an important contribution to the tradition of pedagogical and educational thought, with its unique attention to teaching methods and its belief in the purpose of education both for the formation of the person and for the good of society. The treatise has been accorded an important place in many modern scholarly debates, including those on the origins of the universities, on medieval philosophy and on medieval humanism. This new translation is based on the edition of J.B. Hall, auxiliata K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, which appeared in Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaeualis as Iohannes Saresberiensis - Metalogicon (CCCM 98), and so makes available to the student and general reader for the first time a translation of a text of this important work established on modern critical principles. References to the corresponding pages of the Corpus Christianorum edition are provided in the margins of this translation.
Professor J.B. Hall is Hildred Carlile Professor of Latin Emeritus, University of London. Apart from John of Salisbury, he has published books on the textual criticism of Claudian, Ovid and Statius.
Dr Julian P. Haseldine is Senior Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Hull. He has edited the letters of Peter of Celle and published widely on medieval friendship and friendship networks.
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Missions chrétiennes en terre d'islam (XVIIe-XIXe siècles)
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Missions chrétiennes en terre d'islam (XVIIe-XIXe siècles) show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Missions chrétiennes en terre d'islam (XVIIe-XIXe siècles)Hommes, femmes, catholiques, protestants, Européens, Américains, appartenant à des congrégations missionnaires prestigieuses ou membres de sociétés plus modestes, les missionnaires auteurs des textes réunis dans cette anthologie vivent tous en terre d’islam au contact, même distant, des musulmans : hommes de pouvoir et plus rarement de religion, élèves ou étudiants fréquentant leurs établissements scolaires, malades soignés dans leurs dispensaires ou leurs hôpitaux. Quelles étaient leurs relations avec ces musulmans ? Que savaient-ils de l’islam ? Ces différentes questions ont guidé les choix des textes de cette anthologie qui évoquent l’Algérie, la Tunisie, la Syrie, la Palestine, l’Anatolie et l’Iran.
Chantal Verdeil est maître de conférences en histoire du Moyen-Orient contemporain à l’INALCO (Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales). Elle a notamment publié en 2011 La mission jésuite du Mont-Liban et de Syrie (1830-1864) et, en collaboration avec A.-L. Dupont et C. Mayeur-Jaouen, Le Moyen-Orient par les textes.
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