Brepols Online Books Other Monographs Collection 2015 - bob2015moot
Collection Contents
3 results
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Memory, Mission, and Identity
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Memory, Mission, and Identity show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Memory, Mission, and IdentityBy: Brandon WalkerThis book uses social memory theory to evaluate the miracle stories of Peter and Paul in three second-century texts: canonical Acts, the Acts of Peter and the Acts of Paul. Far from negligible to the spread of early Christianity, the memory of Jesus' miracles and those related to apostles Peter and Paul were important for establishing early Christian identity and promoted discipleship. The memory of miracles of Peter and Paul were retained and developed in an effort to promote imitation of Jesus in second-century Christian communities.
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Missionnaires et églises en Afrique et à Madagascar (XIXe-XXe siècles)
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Missionnaires et églises en Afrique et à Madagascar (XIXe-XXe siècles) show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Missionnaires et églises en Afrique et à Madagascar (XIXe-XXe siècles)L’Afrique et Madagascar ont été, aux xix e et xx e siècles, un continent parcouru en tous sens par des missionnaires, catholiques comme protestants. Ils ont laissé beaucoup de témoignages. Cette anthologie réunit des documents inédits - souvent à usage interne - qui permettent de revivre un certain nombre de faits saillants de leurs actions, ordinaires ou extra-ordinaires. La variété des textes et des illustrations emmène le lecteur du Maghreb à l’Afrique du Sud ou du Sénégal à la Tanzanie voire aux Congos ou en Zambie, du Burkina Faso à Madagascar en passant par toute la côte du Golfe de Guinée, le Rwanda ou le Burundi. Autant d’occasions d’évoquer, appareil scientifique à l’appui, la Mission dans tous ses états, ses difficultés et ses réalisations, dans des époques et des milieux différents.
Annie Lenoble-Bart, agrégée d’histoire, professeur émérite en sciences de l’information et de la communication de l’Université Bordeaux-Montaigne, a collaboré ici avec des chercheurs d’horizons et de disciplines variés (archivistes, historiens, géographes, théologiens…), parmi lesquels: François Bart, Jean-Marie Bouron, Edouard Brion, Jean-Claude Ceillier, Jean-Pierre Chrétien, Paul Coulon, Gérard Demeerseman, Catherine Foisy, Didier Galibert, Émilie Gangnat, Geneviève Lecuir-Nemo, Catherine Marin, François Richard, Hildegunde Schmidt, Marc Spindler, Pierre Trichet, Gérard Vieira, Waltraud Verlaguet.
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The Myth of Republicanism in Renaissance Italy
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The Myth of Republicanism in Renaissance Italy show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The Myth of Republicanism in Renaissance ItalyThe period between the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries saw significant discussion in Italy about the two different political models of republicanism and seignorialism, reaching a climax at the end of the Trecento when the most influential scholars of Florence and Venice began to attack the despotism imposed on Milan by the Visconti. The arguments put forward by both sides were largely predictable: supporters of a Republic argued that liberty — represented by an elective government and independence from foreign powers — was of greatest importance, while those in favour of seignorialism instead claimed that they brought order, unity, and social peace.
In this book, the two systems of government represented in Italy are revisited, the arguments put forward by their supporters are compared and contrasted, and the development in the use of political language, especially in the city-states of Central and Northern Italy, is explored. The reality, it is suggested, is that the political systems of republicanism and seignorialism were not so very different. Republican governments ignored universal suffrage, those supported by signori did not always run totalitarian governments, and in both cases, power continued to be held by recurring oligarchical groups who were unwilling to enter into constructive dialogue with their opponents. However, as the two sides fought for power, the political arena became the testing ground for new forms of communication that could be used to manage and manipulate public opinion.
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