I problemi nell'Anonimo di Erfurt e in Andrea Cappellano
In: Studi e documenti sulle teorie d'amore 1
In: Il libero amore nel medioevo Pt. 1
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In: Studi e documenti sulle teorie d'amore 1
In: Il libero amore nel medioevo Pt. 1
In: Studi e documenti sulle teorie d'amore 2
In: Il libero amore nel medioevo Pt. 2
In: Münchener Beiträge zur Papyrusforschung und antiken Rechtsgeschichte 10
In: Records of social and economic history N.s., 11
In: Records of social and economic history 42
In: Records of social and economic history N.S., 33
In: Illinois Studies in the social sciences 31,2
In: Records of social and economic history N.S., 32
In: Slovenský historický archív 1
In: University of Southern Denmark studies in history and social sciences 314
In: Cambridge library collection. Medieval history
Frederick Levi Attenborough (1887-1973) studied at Cambridge and was a Fellow of Emmanuel College between 1920 and 1925. He later became the Principal of University College, Leicester. In 1922 Cambridge University Press published his edition of the early Anglo-Saxon laws, with a facing-page modern English translation. A few years earlier, Felix Lieberman had published his monumental three-volume Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen, which is still the definitive specialist edition of the laws (as Attenborough rightly predicted), and which is also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection. Attenborough explains that his work is for social and legal historians who do not read German, or do not require the full critical apparatus and contextual material provided by Lieberman. Attenborough's book covers the laws from Aethelbert to Aethelstan; in 1925 Cambridge published a continuation by Agnes Robertson, The Laws of the Kings of England from Edmund to Henry I, which is also available
In: Fonti e studi per la storia economica e sociale di Roma e dello Stato pontificio nel tardo medioevo 2
In: Biblioteca storica toscana 32
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"--