Produktbild: Reading the Middle Ages Volume II

Reading the Middle Ages Volume II From C.900 to C.1500

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

03.05.2018

Herausgeber

Barbara H. Rosenwein

Verlag

University of Toronto Press

Seitenzahl

384

Maße (L/B/H)

25,4/20,3/1,8 cm

Gewicht

635 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4426-3680-4

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

03.05.2018

Herausgeber

Barbara H. Rosenwein

Verlag

University of Toronto Press

Seitenzahl

384

Maße (L/B/H)

25,4/20,3/1,8 cm

Gewicht

635 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-4426-3680-4

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Reading the Middle Ages Volume II
  • Reading through Looking
    Preface
    Abbreviations and Symbols
    Authorized Version of the Bible

    IV. Political Communities Reordered (c.900-c.1050)

    Regionalism: Its Advantages and Its Discontents
    4.1 Fragmentation in the Islamic world: Al-Tabari, The Defeat of the Zanj Revolt (c.915)
    4.2 The powerful in the Byzantine countryside: Romanus I Lecapenus, Novel (934)
    4.3 Evanescent centralization in al-Andalus: Ibn ‘Abd Rabbihi, Praise Be to Him (929-940)
    4.4 Donating to Cluny: Cluny’s Foundation Charter (910) and various charters of donation (10th-11th cent.)
    Genealogy 4.1: The Grossi
    4.5 Love and complaints in Angoulême: Agreement between Count William of the Aquitainians and Hugh IV of Lusignan (1028)
    4.6 The Peace of God at Bourges: Andrew of Fleury, The Miracles of St. Benedict (1040-1043)

    Byzantium in Ascendance
    4.7 Patronage of the arts: "Theophanes Continuatus," Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (before 963)
    4.8 The toils of war: The Epitaph of Basil II (1025)
    4.9 Imperial rule under two sisters: Michael Psellus, Zoe and Theodora (before 1063)

    Scholarship and the Arts across the Islamic World
    4.10 Political theory: Al-Farabi, The Perfect State (c.940-942)
    4.11 A Jewish poet in al-Andalus: Dunash ben Labrat, There Came a Voice (mid-10th cent.)
    4.12 Education: Al-Qabisi, A Treatise Detailing the Circumstances of Students and the Rules Governing Teachers and Students (before 1012)

    Kingdoms in East Central Europe
    4.13 Hungary as heir of Rome: King Stephen, Laws (1000-1038)
    4.14 Coming to terms with Catholic Poland: Thietmar of Merseburg, Chronicle (1013-1018)
    4.15 Poland’s self-image: Boleslaw’s Coin (992-1000)
    4.16 Kievan Rus’: The Russian Primary Chronicle (c.1113, incorporating earlier materials)

    Northern Europe
    4.17 An Ottonian courtier-bishop: Ruotger, Life of Bruno, Archbishop of Cologne (late 960s)
    4.18 Law: King Æthelred II, Law Code (1008)
    4.19 Christianity comes to Denmark: The Jelling Monument (960s)
    4.20 The Vikings as enemies: The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (c.1048?)
    Map 4.1: Southern England
    4.21 The Vikings as heroes: Egil’s Saga (10th cent./13th cent.)

    Timeline for Chapter Four

    V. New Configurations (c.1050-c.1150)

    The Seljuk Transformation
    5.1 The Seljuks as enemies: Abu’l-Fazl Beyhaqi, The Battle of Dandanqan (before 1077)
    Map 5.1: The Early Seljuk Empire
    5.2 Shi‘ites vilified: Nizam al-Mulk, The Book of Policy (1091)

    A Profit Economy
    5.3 Cultivating new lands: Frederick of Hamburg’s Agreement with Colonists from Holland (1106)
    5.4 Urban commerce: Ibn ‘Abdun, Regulations for the Market at Seville (early 12th cent.)
    5.5 The role of royal patronage: Henry I, Privileges for the Citizens of London (1130-1133)

    Church Reform
    5.6 The pope’s challenge: Gregory VII, Admonition to Henry IV (1075)
    5.7 The royal response: Henry IV, Letter to Gregory VII (1075)
    5.8 The papal view: Gregory VII, Letter to Hermann of Metz (1076)

    The Clergy in Action
    5.9 Dressing for the liturgy: Vesting Prayers (c.1000?)
    5.10 Keeping tabs: A Visitation Record (1268)

    The First Crusade
    5.11 Calling the crusade: Robert the Monk, Pope Urban II Preaches the First Crusade (1095)
    5.12 Jewish martyrs: Solomon bar Samson, Chronicle (c.1140)
    5.13 A Westerner in the Holy Land: Stephen of Blois, Letter to His Wife (March 1098)
    5.14 The Muslim view: Ibn al-Qalanisi, The Damascus Chronicle of the Crusades (before 1160)

    The Norman Conquest of England
    5.15 The pro-Norman position: William of Jumièges, The Deeds of the Dukes of the Normans (c.1070)
    5.16 The native position: "Florence of Worcester," Chronicle of Chronicles (early 12th cent.)
    5.17 The Conquest depicted: The Bayeux Tapestry (end of the 11th cent.)
    5.18 Exploiting the Conquest: Domesday Book (1087)

    The Twelfth-Century Renaissance
    5.19 Logic: Peter Abelard, Glosses on Porphyry (c.1100)
    5.20 Medical science: Constantine the African’s translation of Johannitius’s Isagoge (before 1098)

    Cluniacs and Cistercians
    5.21 The Cistercian view: St. Bernard, Apologia (1125)
    5.22 The Cluniac view: Peter the Venerable, Miracles (mid-1130s-mid-1150s)

    Timeline for Chapter Five

    VI. Institutionalizing Aspirations (c.1150-c.1250)

    Wars Holy and Unholy
    6.1 The Northern Crusades: Helmold, The Chronicle of the Slavs (1167-1168)
    6.2 Saladin’s jihad: Ibn Shaddad, The Rare and Excellent History of Saladin (1195-1216)
    6.3 The Fourth Crusade: Nicetas Choniates, O City of Byzantium (c.1215)

    Grounding Justice in Royal Law
    6.4 English common law: The Assize of Clarendon (1166)
    6.5 The legislation of a Spanish king: The Laws of Cuenca (1189-1193)

    Local Arrangements
    6.6 A Byzantine monastery on Cyprus: Neophytos, Testamentary Rule for the Hermitage of the Holy Cross (1214)
    6.7 Doing business: A Genoese societas (1253)
    6.8 Women’s work: Guild Regulations of the Parisian Silk Fabric Makers (13th cent.)

    Bureaucracy at the Papal Curia
    6.9 The growth of papal business: Innocent III, Letters (1200-1202)
    6.10 Petitioning the papacy: Register of Thomas of Hereford (1281)
    6.11 Mocking the papal bureaucracy: The Gospel According to the Marks of Silver (c.1200)

    Confrontations
    6.12 Henry II and Becket: The Constitutions of Clarendon (1164)
    6.13 Emperor and pope: The Diet of Besançon (1157)
    6.14 King and nobles: Magna Carta (1215)

    New Literary Forms
    6.15 Byzantine romantic fiction: Niketas Eugenianos, Drosilla and Charikles (c.1156)
    6.16 Love and propriety in al-Andalus: Anonymous, The Tale of Bayad and Riyad (early 13th cent.)
    6.17 A troubadour love song: Bernart de Ventadorn, When I see the lark (c.1147-after 1172)
    6.18 A trobairitz love song: La Comtessa de Dia, I have been in heavy grief (late 12th-early 13th cent.)
    6.19 A political song from the south of France: Bertran de Born, Half a sirventés I’ll sing (1190)
    6.20 Fabliaux: The Piece of Shit and The Ring That Controlled Erections (13th cent.)
    6.21 Romance: Chrétien de Troyes, Lancelot (c.1177-1181)

    Developments in Religious Sensibilities
    6.22 Disciplining and purifying Christendom: Decrees of Lateran IV (1215)
    6.23 Devotion through poverty: Peter Waldo in The Chronicle of Laon (1173-1178)
    6.24 Devotion through mysticism: Jacques de Vitry, The Life of Mary of Oignies (1213)
    6.25 The mendicant movement: St. Francis, A Rule for Hermitages (1217-1221) and The Testament (1226)
    6.26 Religious feeling turned violent: Chronicle of Trier (1231)

    Timeline for Chapter Six

    VII. Tensions and Reconciliations (c.1250-c.1350)

    The Mongols and the Mamluks
    7.1 A spokesman for Mongol rule: Rashid al-Din, Universal History (before 1318)
    Genealogy 7.1: The Mongol Khans
    7.2 A Mongol reply to the pope: Guyuk Khan, Letter to Pope Innocent IV (1246)
    7.3 The Hungarian king bewails the Mongol invasions: Béla IV, Letter to Pope Innocent IV (c.1250)
    7.4 An Islamic account of the fall of Acre: Abu’l-Fida, A Short History of Mankind (1318-1319)
    7.5 A Christian account of the fall of Acre: "The Templar of Tyre," Deeds of the Cypriots (before 1343)
    7.6 The global economy: Francesco Balducci Pegolotti, The Practice of Trade (c.1340s)
    Map 7.1: Place Names from Azov to Hangzhou

    New Formations in Eastern Europe
    7.7 Poland as a frontier society: The Henryków Book (c.1268)
    7.8 The Lithuanian duke flirts with Christianity: Duke Gediminas, Letter to Pope John XXII (1322) and Letter to the townspeople of Lübeck, Rostock, Stralsund, Greifswald, Stettin, and Gotland (May 26, 1323)
    7.9 Pagan Lithuania in Christian Europe: Peter of Dusburg, Chronicle of the Prussian Land (c.1320-1326)
    7.10 Bulgaria claims a saint: The Short Life of St. Petka (Paraskeve) of Tarnov (13th cent.)

    Transformations in the Cities
    7.11 The popolo gains power: The Ghibelline Annals of Piacenza (1250)
    7.12 The Hanseatic League: Decrees of the League (1260-1264)
    7.13 Too big to fail? A Great Bank Petitions the City Council of Siena (1298)

    Heresies and Persecutions
    7.14 Inquisition: Jacques Fournier, Episcopal Register (1318-1325)
    7.15 Jews in England: Statute of the Jewry (1275) and Petition of the "Commonalty" of the Jews (shortly after 1275)

    Rulers and Ruled
    7.16 The Spanish Cortes: Alfonso X, Cortes of Valladolid (1258)
    7.17 The commons participate: Summons of Representatives of Shires and Towns to Parliament (1295)
    7.18 A charismatic ruler: Joinville, The Life of St. Louis (1272)
    7.19 The papal challenge: Boniface VIII, Unam sanctam (1302)

    Modes of Thought, Feeling, and Devotion
    7.20 Scholasticism: Thomas Aquinas, On Love (1271)
    7.21 The vernacular comes into its own: Dante, Inferno, Canto V (Paolo and Francesca) (1313-1321)
    7.22 Medieval drama: Directions for an Annunciation Play (14th cent.)

    Timeline for Chapter Seven

    VIII. Catastrophe and Creativity (c.1350-c.1500)

    The Black Death
    8.1 The effects of the plague: Giovanni Boccaccio, The Decameron (1348-1351)
    8.2 Warding off the plague through processions: Ibn Battuta, Travels (before 1368)
    8.3 Warding off the plague through prayer: Archbishop William, Letter to His Official at York (July 1348)
    8.4 Blaming the Jews for the Black Death: Heinrich von Diessenhoven, On the Persecution of the Jews (c.1350)

    The Ottomans
    8.5 A Turkish hero: Ashikpashazade, Othman Comes to Power (late 15th cent.)
    8.6 Diplomacy: Peace Agreement between the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II and the Signoria of Venice (January 25, 1478)

    Byzantium: Decline and Fall
    8.7 Before the fall: Patriarch Anthony, Letter to the Russian Church (1395)
    8.8 The fall bewailed: George Sphrantzes, Chronicle (before 1477)
    8.9 Byzantine culture persists: Petitions from the Greek Community at Venice (1470-1511)

    War and Social Unrest
    8.10 Chivalric and non-chivalric models: Froissart, Chronicles (c.1400)
    8.11 National feeling: Jeanne d’Arc, Letter to the English (1429)
    8.12 The woolworkers (ciompi) revolt at Siena: Donato di Neri and his son, Chronicle of Siena (1371)
    8.13 The commons revolt: Wat Tyler’s Rebellion (after 1381)

    Crises and Changes in the Church and Religion
    8.14 The conciliarist movement: Jean Gerson, Sermon at the Council of Constance (1415)
    8.15 The Hussite program: The Four Articles of Prague (1420)

    The Renaissance
    8.16 Re-evaluating antiquity: Cincius Romanus, Letter to His Most Learned Teacher Franciscus de Fiana (1416)
    8.17 A new theory of art: Leon Battista Alberti, On Painting (1435-1436)
    8.18 Defending women: Christine de Pisan, The Book of the City of Ladies (1404-1407)

    Finding a New World
    8.19 Mapping the New World: Juan de la Cosa, World Chart (1500)
    8.20 Taking Mexico: Hernán Cortés, The Second Letter (1520)

    Timeline for Chapter Eight

    Sources
    Index of Names, Places, and Readings