Brepols Online Books Medieval Monographs Collection 2018 - bob2018mome
Collection Contents
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Merovingian Letters and Letter Writers
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Merovingian Letters and Letter Writers show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Merovingian Letters and Letter WritersBy: V. Alice TyrrellPrimary sources from the Frankish kingdom during the Merovingian era (ca. 500-750) are few and far between. This volume is a survey of more than 600 Latin letters, selected by the author, that were exchanged between persons in Gaul during that time period. Many are almost entirely unknown and have never been translated into any modern language. While most of the letters were authored by clerics and highly-placed laymen, a small but significant number was composed by women, both religious and lay.
For elite individuals, letter networks were the social media of their day. Letters were written to maintain the bonds of friendship, to seek or extend patronage and political alliance, to instruct, rebuke, defend, console, and recommend. Many have come down to us in collections; others are strays embedded in other texts or deperdita that come to light only in the replies of others.
This book is a valuable tool for scholars and students alike. In seven readable chapters, the author discusses numerous aspects of the letters and explores how they fit with, and enlarge upon, the better-known sources of the period such as the works of Gregory of Tours, Fredegar, the anonymous History of the Franks (LHF), and various saints’ vitae. An appendix containing a summary of each letter in translation renders these texts more readily accessible to the English speaker.
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Moïse b. Sabbataï, lecteur juif du Livre des causes et adversaire de la kabbale, en Italie, vers 1340
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Moïse b. Sabbataï, lecteur juif du Livre des causes et adversaire de la kabbale, en Italie, vers 1340 show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Moïse b. Sabbataï, lecteur juif du Livre des causes et adversaire de la kabbale, en Italie, vers 1340This previously unknown Hebrew writer is a unique witness of the blend of Aristotelianism and Neoplatonism as well as of Jewish and Christian sources in Jewish philosophy in Italy (first half of the 14th century).
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