The Later Middle Ages
In: The economic history review, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 328
ISSN: 1468-0289
193847 Ergebnisse
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In: The economic history review, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 328
ISSN: 1468-0289
In: Filolog: časopis za jezik književnost i kulturu, Band 17, Heft 17, S. 731-733
ISSN: 2233-1158
In: Deutsches Schiffahrtsarchiv, Band 17, S. 23-50
In: The Western political quarterly: official journal of Western Political Science Association, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 193
ISSN: 0043-4078
In: Cambridge studies in medieval life and thought Ser. 3, 8
"Jewish Life in the Middle Ages" is a fascinating and well-known look at life in the middle ages for the Jewish community. The author also gives attention to how the European movements of the middle ages were affected by Jewish influences. Topics addressed include: social functions of the synagogue, decay of the sermon in the middle ages, the origin of the word "ghetto," family feasts and fasts, and the ethics of dress
In: Problems of Sustainable Development, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 71-79
SSRN
In: Cambridge studies in medieval literature 65
Reading in the Middle Ages. Literal reading ; Figurative reading -- Women and reading in the Middle Ages. Categories of women readers ; Women's engagement with literature
In: Historical materialism: research in critical marxist theory, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 47-72
ISSN: 1569-206X
AbstractChris Wickham's important intervention in debates about the transformation of the Roman world from the fifth century onwards presents a vast array of evidence about the nature of social relations, the economy and the late-Roman and early-medieval state across the Mediterranean and Western-European world. Wickham is successful in taking into account both the high level of regional variation and differentiation across the Roman world and, at the same time, the various key unifying elements which bound these regions together. But, in arguing that the nature of the fiscal apparatus and structures of extraction, redistribution and consumption of surpluses of the late-Roman state were formative in the structure and appearance of the late-Roman élites in East and West as well as in the evolution of their early-medieval successors, a number of structural tensions in the model become apparent. This discussion highlights some of the issues at stake, while, at the same time, affirming the critical importance of the book, more especially its emphasis on the structural force of late-Roman institutions and social relations for the successor-states of the early-medieval West.
In: Telos, Heft 169
ISSN: 0040-2842, 0090-6514
A review essay covering a book by Andrew Cole, The Birth of Theory (2014).
In: Family Life Through History Series
Intro -- Contents -- Introduction: Investigating the Medieval Family -- Section I: Defining the Family in the Middle Ages -- 1. The Late Roman Family and Transition to the Middle Ages -- 2. The Family in the Medieval West -- 3. The Family in the Byzantine East -- 4. The Family in the Islamic World -- 5. The Jewish Family in the Middle Ages -- Section II: The Environment of the Family in the Middle Ages -- 6. The Physical Environment of the Medieval Family -- 7. Grooms and Brides, Husbands and Wives, Fathers and Mothers -- 8. Children and the Family -- 9. Religion and the Family -- 10. Families, Labor, and the Laboring Family -- 11. The Family as Rhetorical Device: Traditional, Transitional, and Non-traditional Families -- Glossary -- Bibliography and Recommended Further Reading -- Index.