Hortus Artium Medievalium
Volume 23, Issue 2, 2017
- With a Glance Beyond Time
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The Untimely Tomb: Death in the Spirituality of the Desert
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The Untimely Tomb: Death in the Spirituality of the Desert show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The Untimely Tomb: Death in the Spirituality of the DesertBy: Daniel LemeniAbstractIn this paper we will explore the “practice of death” in the spirituality of the desert. The paper is divided into two sections. Section 1 explores the desert as place of the death. The monk has symbolized this death by locating his existence in the desert, because the renunciation of secular life led the monk to regard himself as dead. Section 2 points out depictions of monks as dead or entombed. We will examine here the role played by “daily dying” in the Life of Antony. Antony the Great characterizes his life as a kind of “death”, because he lives as though dying each day. In other words, the monk, though not actually dead, effectively dies each day. This kind of “death” (daily dying) contains the seeds of later ascetic tradition on a “practice of death”.
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Morire in monastero
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Morire in monastero show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Morire in monasteroBy: Giuseppe MottaAbstractThe theme of death accompanied the monastic reflection through the centuries and it has been the subject of punctual reflections also including by the most recent historiography. For each life the death is a moment of crucial and terrible step, joyful and desired in the christian and cenobitic perspective. Inside the monasteries it was the focus of a rituality rich of symbols and of gestures full of hope in eternal life, actions which do not have mitigated the human fears and the uncertainties in front of the end of life, feelings that in different ways and forms are documented attestations in the sources.
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You Only Die Twice? Abbots between Community and Empire. The Cases of Martin of Tours and Benedict of Aniane
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:You Only Die Twice? Abbots between Community and Empire. The Cases of Martin of Tours and Benedict of Aniane show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: You Only Die Twice? Abbots between Community and Empire. The Cases of Martin of Tours and Benedict of AnianeAuthors: Rutger Kramer and Veronika WieserAbstractThis article compares the deaths of two abbots as told by contemporary observers, and shows how the relationship between these saints and their ascetic communities on the one hand and secular imperial authorities on the other hand would be consolidated in the way people were shown to react to their demise. First, the life and death Saint Martin of Tours (c. 316-397) are analysed through the Vita Martini and the letters by Sulpicius Severus. Against the backdrop of a strenuous relation between Roman imperial interests and a burgeoning Christendom, the author uses Martin’s post-mortem reputation to appropriate the authority of his erstwhile rival, the emperor Maximus. In doing so, an attempt is made to resolve the conundrum of how to be Christian under Roman authority. Then, two different descriptions of the death of Benedict of Aniane (c. 750-821) are presented, one by his hagiographer Ardo, the other a supposed eye-witness account by the monks of Inda. By contrasting these two accounts, it will be shown how different observers dealt with the tensions between personal salvation, imperial reform efforts and monastic idealism that emerged when secular and religious authority converged in the Carolingian era. The juxtaposition of the fifth-century situation with the ninth-century accounts, finally, will highlight how understanding of authority has evolved in the wake of the spread of Christianity - both in the eyes of those in power, and according to those dealing with them in word and deed.
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La morte del monaco nelle più antiche fonti figurative bizantine: dalle origini al secolo XI
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:La morte del monaco nelle più antiche fonti figurative bizantine: dalle origini al secolo XI show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: La morte del monaco nelle più antiche fonti figurative bizantine: dalle origini al secolo XIBy: Simona MorettiAbstractThis paper focuses on the theme of the Dormition of monks - hermits and/or coenobites - as represented in the earliest figurative sources of Byzantine art, and especially in illustrated manuscripts. The study of the material led to the identification of some recurrent features, such as the sobriety of the composition and details, the inevitable monastic habit, the enhancement of humility and asceticism. An attempt has been made to create a dialogue between images and written sources, thanks to which a complex and vivid picture has emerged, reflecting multiple meanings that have to be analyzed through the eyes of the past. This paper also deals with the issue of the origin of this iconographic subject and its relationship with other models.
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Death and memory at the monastery: privileged burials and their patrons in the newly founded Kingdom of Portugal
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Death and memory at the monastery: privileged burials and their patrons in the newly founded Kingdom of Portugal show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Death and memory at the monastery: privileged burials and their patrons in the newly founded Kingdom of PortugalBy: Jorge RodriguesAbstractThis paper aims to establish the artistic and symbolical context associated with the evolution of the architectonically structured burial spaces in the newly founded kingdom of Portugal, between the end of the 11th and the early years of the 13th centuries, with an emphasis on monastic institutes and the transport of its models from beyond the Pyrenees, crossing through the peninsular kingdoms and finally arriving to Portugal. The examples of the first galilee named as such - that of Cluny II - was followed by those of Romainmôtier, Tournus, León or Sahagún.
We successively approached the first type of pantheons identified in Portugal - that of the galilees which precede the temple, used by their founders - concentrating initially on the first royal pantheon of Santa Cruz in Coimbra, and subsequently trying to understand how this model was used in a vast group of burial spaces sponsored by the noble landlords and patrons of the Church, following the territorial expansion of the kingdom but mainly concentrated on its northern territories, around major cities such as Braga or Guimarães, relevant towns like Amarante and Oporto, or closer to the borders as in Valença, over the river Minho. Two case studies will best show the use of this model on Portuguese rural Romanesque architecture, either associated to the Augustinians, as in São Pedro of Ferreira, or to the Benedictins, like in Sanfins of Friestas.
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I luoghi della memoria funeraria: riflessioni su forme e contesti delle epigrafi sepolcrali di ambito monastico (età Longobarda e Carolingia)
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:I luoghi della memoria funeraria: riflessioni su forme e contesti delle epigrafi sepolcrali di ambito monastico (età Longobarda e Carolingia) show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: I luoghi della memoria funeraria: riflessioni su forme e contesti delle epigrafi sepolcrali di ambito monastico (età Longobarda e Carolingia)AbstractStarting from italian, swiss and french documentation in lombard and carolingian age, the study examines the relationships between inscriptions and the space in which they themselves are inserted. This paper, concerning specifically the monastic context, proposes various hypotheses on burial signaling mode, taking into account the physical appearance of epigraphs, as well as their degree of visibility in relation to its surroundings. Through a comparative analysis, which also involves the main historical sources of the time, it is reflected on the location of the tombs of monks, abbots and laity within the monastic space, thus arriving at a number of proposals on the original location of the epigraphic artifacts.
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Cura mortuorum – Cura pro institutione Memoria, die Gemeinschaft stiftet, als Basis für die Historiographie
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Cura mortuorum – Cura pro institutione Memoria, die Gemeinschaft stiftet, als Basis für die Historiographie show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Cura mortuorum – Cura pro institutione Memoria, die Gemeinschaft stiftet, als Basis für die HistoriographieAbstractSpatial Turn sets different marks in investigation which lead especially to broader interdisciplinarity. When we have a look to monastic networks in the early middle ages (liber Vitae from Salzburg) we find a high level of communication tension. Therefore it is not surprising to see that monastic space defined by fraternitas and confoederatio confirms of course connections to monasteries of the same order on the one to monasteries of other religious groups and at last to monasteries in „Athos“ on the other hand.
Analizing calendars and Necrologies from the high and late middle ages we find out the same intention in those, who wrote down the names in Necrologies. Monastic Space is defined by influence and political power from those who stand in fraternity to the monastery. Monastic space finally is defined by faith in resurrection.
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Sancti Cirici de Colera/Sant Quirze de Colera (Alt Empordà, Girona). Estudio preliminar del conjunto monástico, siglos VIII al XVI
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Sancti Cirici de Colera/Sant Quirze de Colera (Alt Empordà, Girona). Estudio preliminar del conjunto monástico, siglos VIII al XVI show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Sancti Cirici de Colera/Sant Quirze de Colera (Alt Empordà, Girona). Estudio preliminar del conjunto monástico, siglos VIII al XVIAbstractSancti Cirici de Colera/Sant Quirze de Colera is a Benedictine monastic foundation on the southern face of the eastern Pyrenees. The various structures that have survived as well as the documentary sources provide a wide chronological range of the 8th to 16th centuries, when the monastic community moved to another location. In the 19th century the site became private property and in the 1990s the first efforts at restoration and archaeological excavation began. Our programme of new research into this very special complex began two years ago with a multi-disciplinary approach focusing on the entire complex and all its aspects: the analysis of written sources and preserved remains in order to understand and outline its principal phases of development, not only structural but also functional and liturgical, using all the most modern instruments and technologies of the various disciplines concerned. In order to achieve the maximum results, our analyses have followed a number of different techniques which include a topographic map, photogrammetry, plans and 3D modelling-reconstruction, as well as chrono-stratigraphical, architectural and liturgical analyses, that have allowed us to define the various historical phases in which this monastic site was founded, developed and finally abandoned. We present here some of the first results which, although preliminary, serve to illustrate the work being undertaken and the consequent reinterpretation of the abbatial church now possible.
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Sepolture privilegiate nei monasteri alto medievali ravennati
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Sepolture privilegiate nei monasteri alto medievali ravennati show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Sepolture privilegiate nei monasteri alto medievali ravennatiBy: Paola NovaraAbstractIn Ravenna, the monastic phenomenon came early. The investigations conducted during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and some materials that are preserved in local museums make it possible to summarize some important considerations regarding the privileged burials in high medieval monasteries. Special attention should be paid to the monasteries of San Vitale and of Santa Maria della Rotonda. The first of the two had been founded at the ancient basilica of S Vitale; the second was founded at the ancient tomb of King Theodoric, transformed into the church of S. Maria della Rotonda or in Faro. Investigations carried out on several occasions in the first half of the twentieth century have identified in the monastery of San Vitale traces of some sepulchral contexts, from which come some important epigrafic claims. The same goes for S. Maria della Rotonda.
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Seppellire un vescovo, seppellire un monaco. La gestione della morte all’interno del complesso di San Severo in Classe a Ravenna
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Seppellire un vescovo, seppellire un monaco. La gestione della morte all’interno del complesso di San Severo in Classe a Ravenna show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Seppellire un vescovo, seppellire un monaco. La gestione della morte all’interno del complesso di San Severo in Classe a RavennaBy: Debora FerreriAbstractThe complex of San Severo in Classe, in south of Ravenna, is an emblematic place of memory to understand the funerary practice in this area. The monastery was built in the late ninth century, close to the basilica and to the mausoleum dedicated to one of the most important bishops of Ravenna, who lived in the fourth century. The political and religious importance of the monastic center is attested by written sources since the tenth century. The monastery was a Benedectine foundation, which passed to the Cistercensian between the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.
The current excavation is being conducted by the University of Bologna, which is investigating extensively the entire complex, bringing to light the different areas of the monastery around the large rectangular cloister. The funerary practice changed and developed according to the life of the basilica and the monastic complex. Different funerary areas found outside the church and in the monastery have different characteristics and may be linked to different chronological phases as well as to different functions or perceptions of the areas themselves. The organization of the monastery cemetery indicating funerary spaces for members of the monastic community and clergy, separate from those of the laity.
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- Varia
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Podvršje – Glavčine: Results of the most Recent Research
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Podvršje – Glavčine: Results of the most Recent Research show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Podvršje – Glavčine: Results of the most Recent ResearchBy: Ante UglešićAbstractThe paper offers an overview of the systematic archaeological research of the early Christian complex Glavčine in the village of Podvršje, situated about 18 km north-east of Zadar (Ražanac municipality). In eight archaeological campaigns, in the period from 2002 to 2015 a complex of double churches (geminae) with auxiliary rooms was excavated, made in two building phases in the 5th and 6th century. The early Christian complex was built at the position of an earlier round structure which is assumed to might have been a Roman temple dedicated to Syrian gods (tholos?). A smaller room with an apse also predates the building of the churches. It was built within the ruins of the round structure, and it is believed to have been an Early Christian oratory.
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The Late Antique Church of Saint Lawrence, Banjol (Island of Rab, Croatia) - Results of the First Two Archaeological Campaigns (2015-2016)
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The Late Antique Church of Saint Lawrence, Banjol (Island of Rab, Croatia) - Results of the First Two Archaeological Campaigns (2015-2016) show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The Late Antique Church of Saint Lawrence, Banjol (Island of Rab, Croatia) - Results of the First Two Archaeological Campaigns (2015-2016)AbstractPreliminary results of the first excavation campaigns at the site of Saint Lawrence in Banjol on the island of Rab are presented. These excavations revealed the remains of two consecutive churches, a large Late Antique and a smaller medieval one. An in situ grave and a secondary skeletal mass burial were also discovered. Finds of stone sculptural decoration belonging to the first church and contemporary metal finds from the mass burial are also discussed.
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Finding invisible Arians: An archaeological perspective on churches, baptism and religious competition in 6th century Spain.
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Finding invisible Arians: An archaeological perspective on churches, baptism and religious competition in 6th century Spain. show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Finding invisible Arians: An archaeological perspective on churches, baptism and religious competition in 6th century Spain.AbstractThe sixth century witnessed the installation of the Visigoths in the Peninsula following their defeat by the Franks in 507; Ostrogothic domination, first by Theodoric (509-527) and later by Theudis (531-548); and the presence of imperial troops in the South-East. The end of the century saw the conversion of arian goths to catholicism in the Third Council of Toledo (589). As written sources were extremely biased and influenced by the eventual outcome, the archaeology of churches is an essential tool for reconstructing this period of history in the iberian peninsula and particularly the religious and political competition between Arians and followers of the nicene creed.
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Un ejemplo de apropiación semántica de la iconografía imperial en el siglo VI: el tema de la Ascensión de Cristo
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Un ejemplo de apropiación semántica de la iconografía imperial en el siglo VI: el tema de la Ascensión de Cristo show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Un ejemplo de apropiación semántica de la iconografía imperial en el siglo VI: el tema de la Ascensión de CristoAuthors: Carles Buenacasa, Marta Fernández Lahosa and Carles ManchoAbstractThe iconography of the Ascension of Christ, is a recurring theme in numerous supports, monumental or not in the late antiquity. This image of the triumph of the God-Man over death was forged during the fourth and fifth centuries, clearly in imitation of the parallel concept of imperial apotheosis. However, it is during the sixth century that, in Eastern territories, it assumes the formal characteristics that will define the iconographic model of the following centuries. On the one hand, our target is to highlight the precedents that give rise to this iconographic type in the sixth century and to justify the reasons why the theme of the Ascension reaches its maturity in that century in the East while in the West the theme seems to fall. On the other hand, we would like to emphasize the context and the ideological sources that explain both the late appearance of the subject at the end of the fourth century, as well as its importance in the struggles for the definition of an orthodoxy boosted but not always controlled by the imperial court.
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The Apse Mosaics in the Church of San Mauro at Parentium: a Justinianic Interpretation
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The Apse Mosaics in the Church of San Mauro at Parentium: a Justinianic Interpretation show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The Apse Mosaics in the Church of San Mauro at Parentium: a Justinianic InterpretationAbstractThe mosaics of the church of San Mauro in ancient Parentium are published in an invaluable study by Terry and Maguire (Dynamic Splendor). They accept that bishop Eufrasius, a “Three Chapters” schismatic, was the intellectual author of the mosaics which contain schismatic elements. I contend the church was consecrated before the 559 schism, which was a break with Rome over ecclesial authority, rather than opposition to Justinian’s Fifth Ecumenical Council Constantinople II. I see San Mauro as a rare survival, a Justinianic church of the Theotokos, and an example of imperial/urban renewal in an Istria definitively reconquered in the first months of the Gothic War. The central apse mosaic can be read as a visual statement of three canons from Constantinople II: 1) the doctrine of Theotokos, Mary as mother of the incarnate Word; 2) the oneness of Christ after the hypostatic union; 3) the Theopaschite Formula, “One of the Trinity suffered in the flesh”. The side apses reflect Justinian’s personal devotion to Saints Cosmas and Damian and his elevation of the see of Ravenna to arch-episcopal status under his close associate, Maximian.
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Forme e funzioni dello spazio urbano in Campania nella tarda antichità
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Forme e funzioni dello spazio urbano in Campania nella tarda antichità show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Forme e funzioni dello spazio urbano in Campania nella tarda antichitàBy: Marcello RotiliAbstractDuring the transition time from Late Antiquity to Middle Ages, urban structures in Campania region, in Southern Italy, were involved in a deep transformation process. Many towns were scaled down or even disappeared, due to many factors, namely earthquakes, wars, drop in population and so on. In this context, the Lombard conquest represented the peak of the decay and the consequent dismantling of towns and urban network in the whole Campania. The paper analyzes that process in the light of documents coming from the rich literature, epigraphic sources and, mainly, from archeological campaigns.
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La rete ecclesiastica in Toscana settentrionale (IV-X secolo). Dati e riflessioni alla luce del progetto CARE
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:La rete ecclesiastica in Toscana settentrionale (IV-X secolo). Dati e riflessioni alla luce del progetto CARE show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: La rete ecclesiastica in Toscana settentrionale (IV-X secolo). Dati e riflessioni alla luce del progetto CAREAbstractThe aim of this paper is to present a general overview of the formation and diffusion of the ecclesiastical network, both urban and rural, in the territory corresponding to the actual boundaries of Northern Tuscany, from the 4th century A.D. to the 10th. The research is based on the CARE project (directed by M. Jurković and G.P. Brogiolo), in which the author is studying and recording all the churches for such area. The diffusion of a topography of the christian buildings starts from the late 4th-early 5th century in the major towns, such as Lucca and Firenze where, by the end of the 6th, is fully spread, comprehending also important funerary buildings in the suburbia; in the rural areas, instead, the diffusion of the churches in the Late Antique centuries seems to be weaker, even though significant buildings are well known, like San Piero a Grado and others, signs of a progressive christianization of the countrysides, which will reach its heyday from the Lombard era onwards and, even more, in the Carolingian period.
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The Early Medieval Stirrup from Bribir
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The Early Medieval Stirrup from Bribir show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The Early Medieval Stirrup from BribirBy: Ante MiloševićAbstractThe text discusses an iron ornamented stirrup from Bribirska Glavica. This finding does add a great deal to the picture of the Bribir past, from the 9th to the 12th century, and yet in their fundamental cultural indicators do not depart from the framework that we know of for this site, from earlier work, and from other finds of the early medieval period. Analysis in terms of typology and chronology was used to try to show the different influences on the making of these objects or their direct import from the then bigger workshop centres in Central Europe or the Byzantine Empire. His quality and excellence of workmanship tellingly documents the high level of life in Bribir in the centuries in which the nobiles Breberienses started their economic, military and political rise.
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The ancient city of Osor, northern Adriatic, in integrated archaeological prospection
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The ancient city of Osor, northern Adriatic, in integrated archaeological prospection show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The ancient city of Osor, northern Adriatic, in integrated archaeological prospectionAuthors: Nives Doneus, Michael Doneus and Zrinka Ettinger-StarčićAbstractIn 2012, the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for archaeological prospection and virtual archaeology (LBI ArchPro) launched a strategic project with the focus on Mediterranean environments. It seemed to be necessary to test the applicability of various prospection techniques to achieve an integrative approach for documentation and investigation of archaeological sites in this environmental context. Therefore, adequate geographical areas have been selected to be systematically investigated within the project. This paper presents an overview of this research in the area of Osor. First, the case study area is presented, along with its specific archaeological questions. Next, the methodologies used to investigate these questions are detailed. Finally, the results are presented and discussed.
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Volumes & issues
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Volume 28 (2022)
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Volume 27 (2021)
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Volume 26 (2020)
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Volume 25 (2019)
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Volume 24 (2018)
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Volume 23 (2017)
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Volume 22 (2016)
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Volume 21 (2015)
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Volume 20 (2014)
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Volume 19 (2013)
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Volume 18 (2012)
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Volume 17 (2011)
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Volume 16 (2010)
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Volume 15 (2009)
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Volume 14 (2008)
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Volume 13 (2007)
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Volume 12 (2006)
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Volume 11 (2005)
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Volume 10 (2004)
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Volume 9 (2003)
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Volume 8 (2002)
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Volume 7 (2001)
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Volume 6 (2000)
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Volume 5 (1999)
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Volume 4 (1998)
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Volume 3 (1997)
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Volume 2 (1996)
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Volume 1 (1995)
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