Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association, vol. 3, 2007 (original) (raw)
Related papers
Early Medieval Europe, 2011
Book reviews Économie rurale et société dans l'Europe franque (VI e-IX e siècles). Tome 1: Fondements matériels, échanges et lien social. By Jean-Pierre Devroey. Paris: Editions Belin. 2003. 391 pp. + 31 tables and diagrams, 25 b/w figures, 11 maps, 9 graphs. ISBN 2 7011 2618 5. Puissants et misérables. Système social et monde paysan dans l'Europe des Francs (VI e-IX e siècles). By Jean-Pierre Devroey. Brussels: Académie royale de Belgique. 2006. 727 pp. + 1 colour figure, 8 maps, 28 tables and diagrams. €55. ISBN 2 8031 0227 7.
XI International Medieval Meeting (Lleida, 26-28 de junio de 2023)
Special strand: Medieval Roots of Europe FREE SESSION "Shaping perceptions of borders and their people from Late Antiquity to the early Middle Ages" organized by Sergi Tella (Universitat de Lleida) and chaired by Amancio Isla (Universitat Rovira i Virgili): Oriol Dinarès (Universidad de Alcalá), 'Sicut participamur affinitatis origine'. Solidarity among barbarians? Perception of foreign gentes within the post-Roman kingdoms. Fernando Ruchesi (Universitat de Lleida), Memory and perceptions of the Gothic identity in the Ninth Century. Francesco Borri (Università Venecia Ca'Foscari), Hearth of Darkness: The Edges of Christianity at the Dawn of the Middle Ages. 10:00-11:15 Room: Sala de Juntes 2 nd floor 10:00-11:15 Room: 2.15 Strand: Palaeography and documentation FREE SESSION "Fonts documentals i les seves possibilitats: casos d'estudi de la documentació pública i privada (I)" organized by Enric Casas (Universitat de Barcelona) and chaired by Elisenda Gràcia (Universitat de Barcelona): Begoña Pons (Universitat de Barcelona), Llibres de comptes, una font per l'estudi d'una comunitat monàstica femenina.
XI International Medieval Meeting Lleida, Lleida, 26-28 June 2023.
Special strand: Medieval Roots of Europe FREE SESSION "Shaping perceptions of borders and their people from Late Antiquity to the early Middle Ages" organized by Sergi Tella (Universitat de Lleida) and chaired by Amancio Isla (Universitat Rovira i Virgili): Oriol Dinarès (Universidad de Alcalá), 'Sicut participamur affinitatis origine'. Solidarity among barbarians? Perception of foreign gentes within the post-Roman kingdoms. Fernando Ruchesi (Universitat de Lleida), Memory and perceptions of the Gothic identity in the Ninth Century. Francesco Borri (Università Venecia Ca'Foscari), Hearth of Darkness: The Edges of Christianity at the Dawn of the Middle Ages. 10:00-11:15 Room: Sala de Juntes 2 nd floor 10:00-11:15 Room: 2.15 Strand: Palaeography and documentation FREE SESSION "Fonts documentals i les seves possibilitats: casos d'estudi de la documentació pública i privada (I)" organized by Enric Casas (Universitat de Barcelona) and chaired by Elisenda Gràcia (Universitat de Barcelona): Begoña Pons (Universitat de Barcelona), Llibres de comptes, una font per l'estudi d'una comunitat monàstica femenina.
IV The Central Middle Ages (900–1200) (i) British History
Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature, 1993
of Worcesrer, c.1008-1095 (Blackwell, f49.95) makes a major contribution to the study of English ecclesiastical and more general history across the Norman Conquest. It emphasizes that whilst Wulfstan came from an ecclesiastical dynasty, the principal reason for his rise was his personal virtues. He takes on a further importance because of his key role in the 'transmission of English values to the Norman world'. Also of particular interest is a fine chapter on Wulfstan's pastoral care within his diocese. Classic essays are collected in E.G. Stanley (ed.), British Academy papers on Anglo-Saxon England (OUP, €22.50). including F. Wormald. 'The survival of Anglo-Saxon illumination after the Norman Conquest', A. Mclntosh, 'Wulfstan's prose', D. Whitelock. 'The Old English Bede'. J. Bately, 'The compilation of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 60 BC to AD 890: Vocabulary as evidence', and M. Biddle. 'The study of Winchester: Archaeology and history in a British town, 1961-1983'. New series of detailed studies provide some interesting early issues. B.C. Raw, Anglo-Saron crucifiion iconography and rhe art of the monastic revival (CUP, f35) treats an important subject upon which little has previously been published. She finds that the iconography points to an understanding of the Crucifixion which emphasizes 'Christ's passover from death to life'; his two natures, as God and man; the reversal, in the context of Redemption, of man's Fall; and close links to the Church's sacraments. J. Whybra, A lost English county: Winchcombshire in the tenth and eleventh centuries (Boydell, f35) begins very usefully with a survey of