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James M. Harland deposited Imagining the Saxons in Late Antique Gaul in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoPublished in Sächsische Leute und Länder Benennung und Lokalisierung von Gruppenidentitäten im ersten Jahrtausend, and a considerably expanded version of a paper delivered at the Internationales Sachsensymposion in Leipzig, 2015.
The article considers the literary representation of Saxons in the works of the late antique authors Sidonius Ap…[Read more]
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Gregor M. Schwarb deposited Patrologia Graeca – Versiones Arabicae in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThis is an enhanced compilation of relevant entries from Clavis Patrum Graecorum which was compiled by me (GS) for the “Patristic Literature in Arabic Translations” volume up to Nov. 2015. It is an embryonic version of what was later substantially enlarged and published as “A Bibliographical Guide to Arabic Patristic Translations and Related T…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited The Broken Body in Eleventh to Thirteenth-Century Anglo-Scandinavian Literature in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoAnglo-Scandinavian literary and legal texts give evidence of two cultures which shared similar attitudes to punitive acts of violence; whether as literary trope or legislative recourse, deliberate mutilation was a familiar form of retribution. Why this is the case is not always clear within the context of the texts in which such episodes are…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited The Politics of Hegemony and the ‘Empires’ of Anglo-Saxon England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThe term ’empire’ is frequently applied retrospectively by historians to historical trans-cultural political entities that are notable either for their geographic breadth, unprecedented expansionary ambitions, or extensive political hegemony. Yet the use of the terminology of empire in historical studies is often ill-defined, as exemplified by the…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited Constructing a King: William of Malmesbury and the Life of Æthelstan in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoGesta regum Anglorum, written by William of Malmesbury in the twelfth century, is a key source for the life of the tenth-century Anglo-Saxon king, Æthelstan (924–939). Contemporary narrative histories provide little detail relating to Æthelstan’s kingship, and the account of Gesta regum Anglorum purports to grant an unparalleled insight into his l…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited Allegories of Sight: Blinding and Power in Late Anglo-Saxon England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThe practical necessity of sight to effective participation in Anglo-Saxon life is reflected in the multifaceted depictions of punitive blinding in late Anglo-Saxon literature. As a motif of empowerment or disempowerment, acts of blinding permeate the histories and hagiographies of the eleventh and twelfth centuries and each narrative mode…[Read more]
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Matthew Firth deposited London Under Danish Rule: Cnut’s Politics and Policies as a Demonstration of Power in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years agoIn 1016 the young Danish prince who was to become Cnut the Great, King of England, Denmark, and Norway, laid siege to the city of London as part of a program of conquest that would see him crowned as King of England by 1017. This millennial year is an appropriate time to reflect on the consequences of London’s defiance as a city that was rapidly…[Read more]
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William Caraher deposited The Ambivalent Landscape of Christian Corinth: The Archaeology of Place, Theology, and Politics in a Late Antique City in the group
Byzantine Archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThis chapter argues that the textual and archaeological evidence for imperial involvement in the Corinthia provides faint traces of what Jas Elsner has called “internal friction” in the manifestation of imperial and Corinthian authority in the region.
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William Caraher deposited Reflowing Legacy Data from Polis Chyrsochous on Cyprus in the group
Byzantine Archaeology on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoA short paper on legacy data, flow, and time in archaeology based on my experiences at Polis on Cyprus.
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited “The Exotic in the Early Middle Ages,” with Susan Kim, Literature Compass, ed. Elaine Treharne (Blackwell Publishing, 2008) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoThe dominant literate culture of early medieval England – male, European, and Christian – often represented itself through comparison to exotic beings and monsters, in traditions developed from native mythologies, and Classical and Biblical sources. So pervasive was this reflexive identification that the language of the monstrous occurs not onl…[Read more]
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited “Monsters and the Exotic in Early Medieval England,” The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Literature in English, ed. Elaine Treharne and Greg Walker (Oxford University Press, March 2010) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoThe dominant literate culture of early medieval England – male, European, and Christian – often represented itself through comparison to exotic beings and monsters, in traditions developed from native mythologies, and Classical and Biblical sources. So pervasive was this reflexive identification that the language of the monstrous occurs not onl…[Read more]
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited Susan Kim and Asa Simon Mittman, “Keeping History: Images, Texts, Ciphers, and the Franks Casket,” with Susan Kim, in A Material History of Medieval and Early Modern Ciphers, ed. K Ellison and S Kim (New York: Routledge, 2017) in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoSusan Kim and Asa Simon Mittman, “Keeping History: Images, Texts, Ciphers, and the Franks Casket,” with Susan Kim, in A Material History of Medieval and Early Modern Ciphers, ed. K Ellison and S Kim (New York: Routledge, 2017)
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Asa Simon Mittman deposited England is the World and the World is England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoMedieval Christians arguably lived in a ‘real’ world – a tangible place in which they lived, worked, loved, hated, and died – but through a process of worldbuilding continually reconstructed it anew around themselves as the mythical land they called ‘Christendom.’ This was predicated first on reconceptualizing and then ultimately on removing (o…[Read more]
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Andrew Jacobs deposited “I Want to Be Alone”: Ascetic Celebrity and the Splendid Isolation of Simeon Stylites in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoAn exploration of the paradoxical celebrity of ascetic renunciants in early Christianity, using the example of Simeon Stylites, the pillar saint.
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Olivier Dufault deposited Review of Nicolaidis (ed.) Greek Alchemy from Late Antiquity to Early Modernity in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoReview of Greek Alchemy from Late Antiquity to Early Modernity. Edited by EFTHYMIOS NICOLAIDIS. Pp. 198, illus., index. Brepols: Turnhout. 2018. £72. ISBN: 978-2-503-58191-0.
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Peter Martens deposited Response to Mark Edwards in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoMy essay highlights differences between how Edwards and I approach ancient sources and the scholarship on them. My response also provides a dossier of a dozen or so passages where Origen portrays paradise as a divine or incorporeal place, distinct from this earth, and as a residence for pre-existent rational creatures. Edwards denies such a portrait.
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Rachel Rafael Neis deposited Interspecies and Cross-species Generation: in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoThis article treats late ancient rabbinic texts (ca. 1st-early 3rd cents. CE), reading them as biology, and following their ideas about the limits and possibilities of reproductive and species variation. I read sources from the tractates of Niddah, Kil’ayim, and Bekhorot, in the Mishnah and Toseta, as expressions of a science of generation, or a b…[Read more]
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Dirk Kruisheer deposited A Bibliographical Clavis to the Works of Jacob of Edessa (revised and expanded) in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoD. Kruisheer, ‘A Bibliographical Clavis to the Works of Jacob of Edessa (revised and expanded)’, in B. ter Haar Romeny (ed.), Jacob of Edessa and the Syriac Culture of His Day (Monographs of the Peshitta Institute Leiden 18; Leiden: Brill, 2008), 265–293.
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Dirk Kruisheer deposited Ephrem, Jacob of Edessa, and the Monk Severus. An Analysis of Ms. Vat. Syr. 103, ff. 1–72 in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoD. Kruisheer, ‘Ephrem, Jacob of Edessa, and the Monk Severus. An Analysis of Ms. Vat. Syr. 103, ff. 1–72’, in R. Lavenant (ed.), Symposium Syriacum VII (Orientalia Christiana Analecta 256; Rome: Pontificio Istituto Orientale, 1998), 599–605.
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Dirk Kruisheer deposited Reconstructing Jacob of Edessa’s Scholia in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 3 months agoD. Kruisheer, ‘Reconstructing Jacob of Edessa’s Scholia’, in J. Frishman and L. Van Rompay (eds.), The Book of Genesis in Jewish and Oriental Christian Interpretation. A Collection of Essays (Traditio Exegetica Graeca 5; Leuven: Peeters, 1997), 187–196.
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