EMISCS14
Collection Contents
41 - 43 of 43 results
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Writing and the Administration of Medieval Towns
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Writing and the Administration of Medieval Towns show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Writing and the Administration of Medieval TownsIn medieval towns, written statements of law and administration appear more prevalent than in non-urban spaces. Certain urban milieus participating in written culture, however, have been the focus of more scholarship than others. Considering the variety among town dwellers, we may assume that literacy skills differed from one social group to another. This raises several questions: Did attitudes towards the written word result from an experience of the urban educational system? On which levels, and in which registers, did different groups of people have access to writing? The need and the usefulness of written texts may not have been the same for communities and for individuals. In this volume we concentrate on the institutional written records that were most indispensable to communal order, including collections of written law, charters of liberties, and municipal registers.
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Craft Treatises and Handbooks
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Craft Treatises and Handbooks show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Craft Treatises and HandbooksThis book is devoted to the study of medieval manuscripts of a technical nature that provide information about manual activities such as textile industry, metallurgy, painting and illumination. The high level of specialization of these crafts involved the need to rely on recipe books, handbooks and treatises. These texts illustrate the various aspects of transmission and dissemination of technical knowledge as well as the written culture of medieval craftsmen.
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Italy, 888-962: a turning point. Italia, 888-962: una svolta
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Italy, 888-962: a turning point. Italia, 888-962: una svolta show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Italy, 888-962: a turning point. Italia, 888-962: una svoltaThe years 888-962 are a period in which the Kingdom of Italy was not ruled by kings from across the Alps, the only such period from the end of the eighth century to the end of the eleventh. They were for a long time accepted as a period of major political breakdown and failure, and, in north-central (not southern) Italy, the start of the long run in to the early city communes and Italy’s future history as a radically disunited peninsula. In the light of not only recent historical reanalyses but also the emergence of a large quantity of archaeological data, this image can be tested, and in this book is, by both historians and archaeologists. A far more subtle and nuanced picture emerges from the interdisciplinary work in this volume. This book will be an essential starting-point for all future work on Italy in this period.
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