Brepols Online Books Medieval Miscellanea Collection 2020 - bob2020mime
Collection Contents
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Architecture and Visual Culture in the Late Antique and Medieval Mediterranean
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Architecture and Visual Culture in the Late Antique and Medieval Mediterranean show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Architecture and Visual Culture in the Late Antique and Medieval MediterraneanThis book comprises sixteen essays addressing issues of art and architecture together with archaeology within the context of sacred space, broadly defined. It encompasses a wide range of territories, methodologies, perspectives, and scholarly concerns. Our point of departure is the built environment, with all that this entails, including religious and political ceremony, painted interiors, patronage, contested spaces, structural and environmental concerns, sensory properties, the written word as it pertains to architectural projects, and imagined spaces. In all, the scholars involved in this project find fresh approaches and uncover new meanings and interpretations in the material examined within this volume, including buildings and objects from Europe to Asia, and spanning from Late Antiquity through the end of the Middle Ages.
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Before and After Wyclif: Sources and Textual Influences
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Before and After Wyclif: Sources and Textual Influences show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Before and After Wyclif: Sources and Textual InfluencesIn the almost twenty years between the two international conferences on John Wyclif organised by the University of Milan, the most recent of which (September 2016) lies to some extent at the origin of the present volume, an increasing number of studies have been devoted to this great English thinker, theologian and reformer. These have enhanced our knowledge of his philosophical, theological and pastoral work, which had long remained in the shadows. The essays collected in the present book take further steps along this path, through the contribution of a range of specialists who have been called to further reconstruct Wyclif’s place in his intellectual milieu from the standpoint of his textual and doctrinal dependence and influence: the collected essays deal with the antecedents of Wyclif’s thought, his sources, and his role as a source for countless followers and opponents.The following authors have contributed to the volume: Mark Thakkar, Alessandro Conti, Aurélien Robert, Stephen E. Lahey, Ian Christopher Levy, Sean Otto, Kantik Ghosh, Jindřich Marek and Graziana Ciola.
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Historiography and Identity III: Carolingian Approaches
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Historiography and Identity III: Carolingian Approaches show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Historiography and Identity III: Carolingian ApproachesThis volume explores the extent to which the reinstitution of the Empire in Western Europe brought about new ways of reconciling the multitude of post-Roman identities with the way the past was shaped in historiographical narratives. From universal histories to local chronicles, and from narratives that support Carolingian rule to histories with a more local focus, the centralization of power and authority in the course of the eighth and ninth centuries forced those who engaged with their own past and that of their community to acknowledge the new situation, and situate themselves in it. The contributions in this volume each depart from a single source, event, or community, and relate their findings to the broader issue of whether the rise of the multi-ethnic Carolingian court allowed for more inclusive narratives to be created, or if their self-proclaimed place at the centre of the Frankish world actually created a context in which local communities were given new tools to assert themselves.
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Labeur, production et économie monastique dans l’Occident médiéval
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Labeur, production et économie monastique dans l’Occident médiéval show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Labeur, production et économie monastique dans l’Occident médiévalTous les groupes humains produisent afin d’assurer leur subsistance, mais il n’y a pas de « travail » ni a fortiori de « travailleurs » dans nombre de sociétés, au sens du moins que ces notions ont pris en Europe à l’époque de l’industrie et de l’économie politique. Reste que beaucoup d’historiens considèrent le monachisme du Moyen Âge comme une sorte de laboratoire des formes du « travail » en Occident, du reste à l’origine du processus de « croissance » qui caractérisa cette partie du monde.
Les quatorze auteurs de ce volume ont entrepris de reprendre sur nouveaux frais la question des représentations et des pratiques du labeur, en examinant tout à la fois les modèles, les règlements et les rapports sociaux à l’œuvre au sein des monastères occidentaux, depuis les premiers écrits latins et les premières traces archéologiques jusqu’au développement des établissements cisterciens aux XIIe-XIIIe siècles. Plusieurs contributions s’efforcent de reconstituer les catégories médiévales de l’activité humaine tout en interrogeant les modalités concrètes d’exploitation des ressources. L’ouvrage accorde une large place aux débats historiographiques en s’attachant notamment à saisir la genèse, entre xixe et xxe siècle, de la figure du « moine civilisateur » et de l’idéal du « travail monastique », souvent bien éloignés des réalités du Moyen Âge.
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Accounts and Accountability in Late Medieval Europe: Records, Procedures, and Socio-Political Impact
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Accounts and Accountability in Late Medieval Europe: Records, Procedures, and Socio-Political Impact show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Accounts and Accountability in Late Medieval Europe: Records, Procedures, and Socio-Political ImpactAccounts and Accountability in Late Medieval Europe traces the momentous transformation of institutions and administration under the impact of accounting records and procedures, c. 1250-1500. The volume’s focus on the materiality and organising logic of a range of accounts is complemented by close attention to the socio-political contexts in which they functioned and the agency of central and local officials.
The volume is divided into three parts: the role of financial accountability in the political designs of late medieval states, the uses of accounts auditing and information management as tools for governance, and their impact on the everyday life of local communities. Covering both the centre and the periphery of medieval Europe, from England and the Papal curia to Savoy and Transylvania, the case studies evince the difficult passage from the early experiments with financial accounts towards an accountability of office.
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Acquisition through Translation
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Acquisition through Translation show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Acquisition through TranslationThe definition of translation in Renaissance Europe is here proposed as a process of acquisition: the book studies how a number of European languages, finding their identification in the newly evolving concept of nation, shape their countries’ vernacular libraries by appropriating ancient and contemporary classics.
The emergence of standard modern languages in early modern Europa entailed a competition with the dominant Latin culture, which remained the prevalent medium for the language of science, philosophy, theology and philology until at least the eighteenth century. In this process, translation played a very special role: in a number of significant instances we can identify in the undertaking of a specific translation a policy of acquisition of classical - and by definition authoritative - texts that contributed to the building of an intellectual library for the emerging nation. At the same time, the transmission of ideas and texts across Europe constructed a diasporic and transnational culture: the emerging vernacular cultures acquired not only the classical Latin models, incorporating them in their own intellectual libraries, but turned their attention also to contemporary, or near-contemporary, vernacular texts, conferring on them, through the act of translation, the status of classics. Through the examination of case studies, that take into account both literary and scientific texts, this volume offers an overview of how early modern Europe developed its vernacular national literatures, following the model suggested in the late Middle Ages, through a process of acquisition and translation.
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Authority and Power in the Medieval Church, c. 1000–c. 1500
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Authority and Power in the Medieval Church, c. 1000–c. 1500 show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Authority and Power in the Medieval Church, c. 1000–c. 1500While they often go hand-in-hand and the distinction between the two is frequently blurred, authority and power are distinct concepts and abilities - this was a problem that the Church tussled with throughout the High and Late Middle Ages. Claims of authority, efforts to have that authority recognized, and the struggle to transform it into more tangible forms of power were defining factors of the medieval Church’s existence.
As the studies assembled here demonstrate, claims to authority by members of the Church were often in inverse proportion to their actual power - a problematic paradox which resulted from the uneven and uncertain acceptance of ecclesiastical authority by lay powers and, indeed, fellow members of the ecclesia. The chapters of this book reveal how clerical claims to authority and power were frequently debated, refined, opposed, and resisted in their expression and implementation. The clergy had to negotiate a complex landscape of overlapping and competing claims in pursuit of their rights. They waged these struggles in arenas that ranged from papal, royal, and imperial curiae, through monastic houses, law courts and parliaments, urban religious communities and devotional networks, to contact and conflict with the laity on the ground; the weapons deployed included art, manuscripts, dress, letters, petitions, treatises, legal claims, legates, and the physical arms of allied lay powers.
In an effort to further our understanding of this central aspect of ecclesiastical history, this interdisciplinary volume, which effects a broad temporal, geographical, and thematic sweep, points the way to new avenues of research and new approaches to a traditional topic. It fuses historical methodologies with art history, gender studies, musicology, and material culture, and presents fresh insights into one of the most significant institutions of the medieval world.
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Beasts, Humans, and Transhumans in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Beasts, Humans, and Transhumans in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Beasts, Humans, and Transhumans in the Middle Ages and the RenaissanceFrom shape-shifting Merlin to the homunculi of Paracelsus, the nine fascinating essays of this collection explore the contested boundaries between human and non-human animals, between the body and the spirit, and between the demonic and the divine. Drawing on recent work in animal studies, posthumanism, and transhumanism, these innovative articles show how contemporary debates about the nature and future of humanity have deep roots in the myths, literature, philosophy, and art of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The authors of these essays demonstrate how classical stories of monsters and metamorphoses offered philosophers, artists, and poets a rich source for reflection on marriage, resurrection, and the passions of love. The ambiguous and shifting distinctions between human, animal, demon, and angel have long been contentious. Beasts can elevate humanity: for Renaissance courtiers, horsemanship defined nobility. But animals are also associated with the demonic, and medieval illuminators portrayed Satan with bestial features. Divided into three sections that examine metamorphoses, human-animal relations, and the demonic and monstrous, this volume raises intriguing questions about the ways humans have understood their kinship with animals, nature, and the supernatural.
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Cities, Saints, and Communities in Early Medieval Europe
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Cities, Saints, and Communities in Early Medieval Europe show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Cities, Saints, and Communities in Early Medieval EuropeThis book honours the scholarship of English historian Dr. Alan Thacker by exploring the insular, the European and, more broadly, the Mediterranean connections and contexts of the history and culture of Anglo-Saxon England in the age of Bede, and beyond. It brings together original contributions by leading European and North American scholars of Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages working across a range of disciplines: history, theology, epigraphy, and art history. Moving from the Irish Sea to the Bosporus, this collection presents a linked world in which saints, scholars, and the city of Rome all played powerful connective roles, creating communities, generating relationships, linking east to west, north to south, and present to past.
As in Thacker’s own work, Bede’s life and thought is a central presence. Bede’s attitudes to historical and contemporaneous conceptions of heresy, to the Irish church, and the evidence for his often complex relationships with his Northumbrian contemporaries all come under scrutiny, together with groundbreaking studies of his exegesis, christology, and historical method. Many of the contributions offer original insights into figures and phenomena that have been the focus of Dr. Thacker’s highly influential scholarship.
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Communautés maritimes et insulaires du premier Moyen Âge
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Communautés maritimes et insulaires du premier Moyen Âge show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Communautés maritimes et insulaires du premier Moyen ÂgeComment les hommes et les femmes du premier Moyen Âge formaient-ils des communautés lorsqu’ils se trouvaient vivre près de l’eau - sur les littoraux, dans les zones humides ou le long des fleuves, mais aussi dans les îles ? La familiarité entretenue avec le milieu aquatique, objet de crainte ou source d’opportunités, signifie que les groupes humains « faisaient communauté » autrement, mais aussi que l’historien appréhende ces phénomènes d’une manière différente. Cela est vrai de toutes les communautés qui, dans la pratique des interactions quotidiennes, se formaient près de l’eau, grâce à elle ou face à elle : communautés d’habitants, communautés cléricales ou monastiques, communautés fondées sur une activité commune comme le commerce ou la pêche. Les douze contributions que compte ce livre constituent les actes d’un colloque tenu à Boulogne-sur-Mer en mars 2017. Leurs auteurs s’attachent à croiser les sources écrites et archéologiques pour offrir un regard équilibré sur des espaces et une période qui semblent à première vue moins bien documentés que d’autres. La question de la construction et de l’existence des communautés « du bord de l’eau » y est traitée à travers toute l’Europe latine, du vii e au xi e siècle, sur ses versants adriatique (à travers les lagunes de Venise et de Comacchio), atlantique (du littoral ibérique à l’Angleterre en passant par l’île de Noirmoutier) et septentrional (des Fens d’Est-Anglie à la mer Baltique et dans les emporia des mers du Nord), ainsi que dans la vallée de la Saône (de Lyon à Tournus).
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Epirus Revisited. New Perceptions of its History and Material Culture
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Epirus Revisited. New Perceptions of its History and Material Culture show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Epirus Revisited. New Perceptions of its History and Material CultureThe opening of the borders of Albania in the 1990s stimulated an increased interest in its cultural heritage and led to extensive research, as well as archaeological investigations. These, however, have mainly concentrated within Albania's present-day borders and have lacked broader contextualization. Very recent excavations in Greece, which resulted from the construction of the new Ionia Odos highway, have, however brought to light unexpected and interesting material that changes our image of the monumental topography and the settlements in Epirus. New studies concerning Epirus and its broader connections during the early and later Ottoman periods provide a broader impression of the region and its relationships with the large economic centres of the West, as well as with the spiritual-religious and political centres of the Balkans.
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Episcopal Power and Personality in Medieval Europe, c. 900–c. 1480
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Episcopal Power and Personality in Medieval Europe, c. 900–c. 1480 show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Episcopal Power and Personality in Medieval Europe, c. 900–c. 1480The question of personality is a problematic one, beset by complications of cultural distance, the layers of the past, and the limitations of the source material.
Recognising these difficulties, this volume draws together character sketches based upon historical narratives and a range of sources, including architecture, liturgical manuscripts, chronicles, and hagiographical material, to show a multifaceted range of means by which historians can construct, reconstruct, and deconstruct episcopal power through the person of the bishop.
Building on a previous volume of essays, Episcopal Power and Local Society in Medieval Europe, 900-1400, which examined the construction, augmentation, and expression of episcopal power in local society, this second volume seeks to uncover the impact of the personalities behind that power. Through essays dealing with the construction of cultural and political personalities, the shadows they cast, and the contexts that forged them, this volume brings to life the careers of bishops across medieval Europe from c. 900 to c. 1480. This geographical range and broad time span throws up the similarity in applications and bene ts of interdisciplinarity which can be applied to ecclesiastical history, and presents a fascinating range of case studies for consideration.
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Famagusta
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Famagusta show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: FamagustaThis is the second of two volumes on the history and archaeology of the port city of Famagusta in Cyprus from the beginning of the island’s Frankish rule in 1191 to the Ottoman conquest in 1571. The first volume, entitled Art and Architecture and edited by Annemarie Weyl Carr, was published in this series in 2014.
The volume provides a comprehensive survey of the four-century history of Famagusta under Frankish, Genoese, and Venetian rule down to the Ottoman siege and conquest, supplemented by an account of the image of the medieval and Renaissance city in retrospect. Based on original research and often using unpublished sources, fourteen acknowledged specialists study Famagusta’s political, social, economic, and ecclesiastical history from a multi- and interdisciplinary approach that involves aspects such as institutional continuities and discontinuities, military and spatial organisation, religious and cultural exchanges, gender roles, and the city’s image in travelogues, literature and art. Such an approach allows a better understanding of the evolution of the ethnically and religiously diverse Famagustian society from a rich commercial centre under the Lusignans to an enclave under the Genoese and a military outpost under the Venetians.
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Games and Visual Culture in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Games and Visual Culture in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Games and Visual Culture in the Middle Ages and the RenaissanceDuring the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, games were not an idle pastime, but were in fact important tools for exploring, transmitting, enhancing, subverting, and challenging social practices and their rules. Their study, through both visual and material sources, offers a unique insight into medieval and early modern gaming culture, shedding light not only on why, where, when, with whom and in what conditions and circumstances people played games, but also on the variety of interpretations that they had of games and play. Representations of games, and of artefacts associated with games, also often served to communicate complex ideas on topics that ranged from war to love, and from politics to theology.
This volume offers a particular focus onto the type of games that required little or no physical exertion and that, consequently, all people could enjoy, regardless of age, gender, status, occupation, or religion. The representations and artefacts discussed here by contributors, who come from varied disciplines including history, literary studies, art history, and archaeology, cover a wide geographical and chronological range, from Spain to Scandinavia to the Ottoman Turkey and from the early medieval period to the seventeenth century and beyond. Far from offering the ‘last word’ on the subject, it is hoped that this volume will encourage further studies.
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Historiography and Identity II: Post-Roman Multiplicity and New Political Identities
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Historiography and Identity II: Post-Roman Multiplicity and New Political Identities show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Historiography and Identity II: Post-Roman Multiplicity and New Political IdentitiesThe six-volume sub-series Historiography and Identity unites a wide variety of case studies from Antiquity to the Late Middle Ages, from the Latin West to the emerging polities in Northern and Eastern Europe, and also incorporates a Eurasian perspective which includes the Islamic World and China. The series aims to develop a critical methodology that harnesses the potential of identity studies to enhance our understanding of the construction and impact of historiography.
This second volume of the series studies the social function of historiography in the Justinianic age and the post-Roman kingdoms of the West. The papers explore how writers in Constantinople and in the various kingdoms from Italy to Britain adopted late antique historiographical traditions and adapted them in response to the new needs and challenges created by the transformation of the political and social order. What was the significance of their choices between different models (or their creation of new ones) for their ‘vision of community’? The volume provides a representative analysis of the historiographical resources of ethnic, political, and religious identifications created in the various Western kingdoms. In doing so, it seeks to understand the extant works as part of a once much wider and more polyphonic historiographical debate.
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Homo, Natura, Mundus: Human Beings and Their Relationships
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Homo, Natura, Mundus: Human Beings and Their Relationships show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Homo, Natura, Mundus: Human Beings and Their RelationshipsThe present volumes contain a number of studies first presented at the XIV International Congress of the Société Internationale pour l’Étude de la Philosophie Médiévale, July 24-28, 2017, Porto Alegre, Brazil - which happened to be the first SIEPM Congress in Latin America and the first in the Southern Hemisphere. In 65 essays on current research questions in Latin, Jewish, and Arabic Philosophy, and Early Modern Scholasticism, the contributors explore the general theme of "Homo - Natura - Mundus: Human Beings and their Relationships," and lead us to new perspectives. These essays relate to the following areas of interest: the human being’s self-understanding as a rational creature in multiple relationships (with God, the other, the community, the fellow and the different); the human being’s place in the natural world and the possibility of relating to nature through knowledge; medieval philosophical traditions and the challenges introduced by the "discovery" of the "New World" (dominium, war, hierarchies, and new areas of concern with respect to justice, the human good, and the law). Thus, these volumes offer a unique sample of scholarly studies that work with the idea of "relationships" in two distinct, but not opposing, directions. Firstly, they explore the ways in which human beings, according to the reach of their soul’s powers, construct their self-understanding and existence in relation to God, themselves, others and the natural world. Secondly, they explore the ways in which the philosophical bases for the understanding of these relationships were challenged by the transportation of medieval ideas to the "New World" and by the reception of these ideas in early modern times.
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I Longobardi a Venezia
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:I Longobardi a Venezia show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: I Longobardi a VeneziaGli scritti di Stefano Gasparri hanno contribuito in modo fondamentale allo sviluppo della medievistica in Italia ed Europa. La sua capacità di leggere le fonti con uno sguardo sempre nuovo e attento, ci ha offerto originali interpretazioni degli intricati secoli medievali. Argomenti di rilevanza internazionale, come la storia sociale, culturale e politica italiana ed europea, le origini di Venezia o le molteplici identità etniche delle gentes altomedievali, sono sempre stati affrontati con fresca criticità e avvalendosi di discipline, quali la paleografia, l’epigrafia o l’archeologia.
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Leadership and Community in Late Antiquity
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Leadership and Community in Late Antiquity show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Leadership and Community in Late AntiquityThroughout a distinguished career, Raymond Van Dam has contributed significantly to our understanding of Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages with ground-breaking studies on Gaul, Cappadocia, and the emperor Constantine. The hallmarks of his scholarship are critical study of a wide variety of written and material sources and careful historical analysis, insightfully rooted in sociological and anthropological methodologies. The essays in this volume, written by Van Dam’s former students, colleagues, and friends, explore the dynamics between leaders and their communities in the fourth through seventh centuries. During this period, people negotiated profound religious, intellectual, and cultural change while still deeply enmeshed in the legacy of the Roman Empire. The memory of the classical past was a powerful and compelling social and political force for the denizens of Late Antiquity, even as their physical surroundings came to resemble less and less the ideals of the Greco-Roman city. These themes - leadership, community, and memory - have been central to Van Dam’s work, and the contributors to this volume build on the legacy of his scholarship. Their papers examine how leaders exercised their authority in their communities, at times exhibiting continuity with ancient patterns of leadership, but in other cases shifting toward new paradigms characteristic of a post-classical world. Taken together, the essays produce a fuller picture of the Mediterranean world and add further nuance to our understanding of Late Antiquity and early Middle Ages as a time of both continuity and transformation.
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Les récits de la destruction de Jérusalem (70 ap. J.-C.) : contextes, représentations et enjeux, entre Antiquité et Moyen Âge
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Les récits de la destruction de Jérusalem (70 ap. J.-C.) : contextes, représentations et enjeux, entre Antiquité et Moyen Âge show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Les récits de la destruction de Jérusalem (70 ap. J.-C.) : contextes, représentations et enjeux, entre Antiquité et Moyen ÂgeLes années 70-135 ont constitué un tournant pour le judaïsme et le christianisme mais c'est l'année 70, avec la chute de Jérusalem et la destruction du Temple, qui a joué le rôle de date symbolique de ce processus. Flavius Josèphe fit le récit des événements dans les derniers livres de sa Guerre des Juifs, et son œuvre connut un vaste retentissement, jusqu'à devenir le point de départ d'une longue tradition chrétienne.
Cet ouvrage collectif se propose d'explorer les traditions, juives et chrétiennes, du récit de la destruction de Jérusalem dans l'Antiquité et jusqu'au Haut Moyen Âge, en s'intéressant essentiellement à la perception et à la mise en récit qu'ont suscitées les événements. La démarche retenue consiste donc principalement à partir des textes, pour cerner les intentions qui ont présidé à leur rédaction, définir leur interprétation de l'événement, évaluer la portée qu'ils lui accordent. Deux volets composent cette enquête : le premier se propose de situer le récit de Flavius Josèphe dans l'histoire des « destructions » de ville et l'histoire des récits de prise de ville ; le second explore les lectures, interprétations et réécritures des événements et des sources qui les relatent.
Ce livre est le fruit d'un séminaire de recherche qui s'est tenu, pendant plusieurs années, à l'Université de Strasbourg, réunissant des chercheurs de cet établissement et d'autres universités (Evry-Val d'Essonne, Haute-Alsace, Lorraine, Tübingen).
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Making the Profane Sacred in the Viking Age
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Making the Profane Sacred in the Viking Age show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Making the Profane Sacred in the Viking AgeThe term ‘sacred’ is often used in relation to the pre-Christian religions of Iron Age and medieval Scandinavia. But what did sacred really mean? What made something sacred for people? Why was one particular person, place, act, or text perceived to hold a sacral quality, while others remained profane? And what impact did such sacrality have on wider society, culture, politics, and economics, both for contemporaries and for future generations?
This volume seeks to engage with such questions by drawing together essays from many of the pre-eminent scholars of Old Norse in order to reinterpret the concept of the sacred in the Viking Age North and to challenge pre-existing frameworks for understanding the sacred in this space and time. Including essays from Margaret Clunies Ross, Stephen Mitchell, John Lindow, and Judy Quinn, it is a treasury of commentary and information that ranges widely across theories and sources of evidence to present significant primary research and reconsiderations of existing scholarship. This edited collection is dedicated to Stefan Brink, an outstanding figure in the study of early Scandinavian language, society, and culture, and it takes as its inspiration the diversity, interdisciplinarity and vitality of his own research in order to make a major new contribution to the field of Old Norse studies.
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