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In: Studies in medieval and early modern canon law volume 17, book 1
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Abbreviations -- Sigla -- Introduction -- 1 A background to the Hibernensis -- 1.1 Authorship -- 1.2 Date of composition -- 1.3 Structure -- 1.4 Sources: general discussion -- 1.5 Sources: the Bible -- 1.6 Sources: Irish synods -- 1.7 The late antique and early medieval canonical background -- 1.8 The Hibernensis and Irish vernacular law -- 1.9 Remarks on Latinity -- 2 Recensions and textual varieties -- 2.1 Distinguishing between the recensions: a formal approach -- 2.2 Different recensions, different sources -- 2.3 The recensions and their Irish sources -- 2.4 Vestiges of a pre-recensional text -- 2.5 An early secondary witness to the undivided text -- 2.6 Postulating an undivided text -- 3 Editing the Hibernensis -- 3.1 The present edition -- 3.2 The main copy -- 3.3 Principles of the present edition -- The main text -- Book, chapter, and other numbers -- Cited sources -- Grammar, orthography, and translation -- Variant readings and emendations -- 4 Manuscripts studied for the present edition -- A Orléans, Bibliothèque municipale, 221 (193) -- B Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, lat. 3182 -- D Monte Cassino, Archivio e Biblioteca dell'Abbazia, 297 -- H Oxford, Bodleian Library, Hatton 42 -- O London, British Library, Cotton Otho E. XIII -- P Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, lat. 12021 -- S St. Gall, Stiftsbibliothek 243 -- V Rome, Biblioteca Vallicelliana, T. XVIII -- Q Würzburg, Universitätsbibliothek, Mp. th. q. 31 -- Tables -- 1: Texts attributed to Sinodus Hibernensis and Hibernenses -- 2: Sinodus Romana and Romani in Hib.A and Hib.B -- 3: Texts attributed to Patrick -- 4: Irish sources not mentioned in previous tables -- 5: Q and the present edition - a synoptic table -- Editorial conventions -- Text of the Hibernensis.
In: Brill's studies in intellectual history 127
In: Studies and texts / Pontifical Institute of mediaeval studies 2
Bryson's Management of the estate : English translation -- Background. Introduction ; Text and transmission -- Economy. Property ; Slaves -- Family. The wife ; The boy -- Text and translations of Bryson
In: Harvard economic studies 18
In: Collectanea serica
In: New series 4
"The author focuses on one of the most fascinating texts of the 17th and 18th century China mission - the Tianxue benyi (The Original Meaning of the Heavenly Teachings) and the more elaborate Gujin jingtian jian (Mirror on the Worship of Heaven in Ancient Times and Nowadays), both written and compiled by the Jesuit Joachim Bouvet (1656-1730) with the assistance of Chinese converts. The two works were even translated into Latin in order to support the Jesuit position in the Chinese Rites Controversy in the Roman Curia. Through them, Bouvet presented the Jesuit missionary strategy of accommodation in a nutshell: He aimed at introducing Christianity in the terms of Chinese traditional culture. Thus, Bouvet's approach can be characterised as an early attempt at a contextualized theology which is meaningful even for contemporary discussions. The present study offers an introduction to Bouvet's thoughts and works and their respective historical and theological context, a transcription of the Latin texts - the Cœlestis Disciplinæ vera notitia and the De cultu cœlesti Sinarum veterum & modernorum - with an annotated German translation"--
In: Crusades
In: Subsidia 12
"For almost sixty years Professor David Jacoby devoted his research to the economic, social and cultural history of the Eastern Mediterranean and this new collection reflects his impact on the study of the interactions between the Italian city-states, Byzantium, the Latin East and the realm of Islam. Contributors to this volume are prominent scholars from across Medieval Studies and leading historians of the younger generation"--
In: Bibliothek des Deutschen Historischen Instituts in Rom 98
The 14th century was the high-point of German mercenary activity in the service of Italian princes and cities. For the first time in 60 years, this study addresses the multifarious implications of this intriguing subject. On the basis of newly discovered sources, it analyzes the general parameters defining international mercenary service in 14th century Italy and describes the life-situations of German mercenaries in war and peacetime. Inquiry into the motives of the mercenaries extends the purview to their geographical origins north of the Alps.
The concept of fontes has shown its ever decreasing suitability to reflect the richness and complexity of humanistic literature. In the fontes printed as footnotes is reflected, mechanically and almost physically, the idea of a subaltern and gregarious modernity with regard to classical thought. This article presents a different approach to the study of the humanistic text, based on the identification of cultural genealogies which display all the elements of doctrine that make up a written work at various levels. The work examined is the De republica by Lauro Quirini, a fifteenth-century political treatise in which the author consciously inserts elements of the political thought of the Latin, classical and medieval traditions to an Aristotelian base, adapting such an ensemble to the ideological circumstances of his era.
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