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Bøker i Cambridge Library Collection - Medieval History-serien

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  • - A History of Ancient Alban
    av William Forbes Skene
    578,-

    This three-volume history, regarded as William Forbes Skene's most important work, was published between 1876 and 1880. Volume 2 deals with 'church and culture', including the Celtic churches of Scotland, Ireland and Cumbria, particularly the great centre of Iona, and the tradition of learning associated with Celtic monasticism.

  • av William Stubbs
    661 - 730,-

    William Stubbs (1825-1901) became Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford in 1866. His research on medieval England, based on primary sources, was foundational in its field. Volume 1 of this influential three-volume study (published 1874-8) highlights the importance of Germanic and Anglo-Saxon traditions in English political institutions.

  • - A History of the English Commonwealth till the Period of the Norman Conquest
    av John Mitchell Kemble
    661,-

    This monumental 1849 publication was the first detailed analysis to compare Anglo-Saxon institutions with those of other Germanic peoples. Drawing on the evidence of early charters, Volume 1 discusses the Saxons' arrival in Britain and their laws and institutions, emphasising the relationship between land ownership and rank in Anglo-Saxon society.

  • - Its Causes, and Its Consequences, in England, Scotland, Ireland, and on the Continent
    av Augustin Thierry
    551,-

    Thierry's two-volume account of the Norman conquest of England was originally published in French in 1825, the English translation following in 1847. Volume 1 is divided into seven parts and accounts for the period from 55 BCE until the final battle of the English against the Norman conqueror in 1137.

  • - A Collection of Cases Decided in the King's Courts during the Reign of Henry the Third
    av Henry de Bracton
    509 - 827,-

    Henry of Bracton (or Bratton) (c. 1210-1268) was an English jurist. These volumes contain a collection of 2,000 law cases, each with a description of how the law should be applied. Volume 2 contains the texts of Pleas in the Bench from 1218 to 1234.

  • av Ferdinand Gregorovius
    468 - 661,-

    Ferdinand Gregorovius (1821-1891) was a celebrated German medieval historian. His monumental study of medieval Rome, first published in 1872 and translated into English between 1894 and 1902, was the first modern account of the medieval history of the city. Volume 1 covers the period 400-568.

  • av Sharon Turner
    482 - 578,-

    Sharon Turner (1768-1847) practised as a solicitor in London, but as a young man he had become involved in the study of Anglo-Saxon and Icelandic literature and history. Published 1799-1805, this four-volume work was a benchmark in Anglo-Saxon studies, drawing on manuscripts in the British Museum.

  • - Accedunt notitia urbis Constantinopolitanae et laterculi provinciarum
     
    468,-

    Otto Seeck (1850-1921) was a student of Theodor Mommsen, to whom he dedicated this, his first major work, published in 1876. The 'Notitia dignitatum' edited here is an unparalleled source of data about the administrative structure of the later Roman empire, east and west.

  •  
    578,-

    Published in 1868, this edition of a thirteenth-century Latin manuscript contains charters from the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries. It documents the property transactions and finances of a Benedictine abbey in south-west France, and also contains a substantial introduction, a thorough index, a glossary of place-names and a chronological table.

  • - Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Savigny-Stiftung
     
    551,-

    Published by Felix Lieberman (1851-1925) between 1903 and 1916, this three-volume edition of laws promulgated by successive Anglo-Saxon rulers is still regarded as authoritative. Unparalleled in other Germanic languages, it is a unique body of early medieval legal writing. The work features a facing translation into modern German.

  • - Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Savigny-Stiftung
     
    868,-

    Published by Felix Lieberman (1851-1925) between 1903 and 1916, this three-volume edition of laws promulgated by successive Anglo-Saxon rulers is still regarded as authoritative. Unparalleled in other Germanic languages, it is a unique body of early medieval legal writing. The work features a facing translation into modern German.

  • - Herausgegeben im Auftrage der Savigny-Stiftung
     
    854,-

    Published by Felix Lieberman (1851-1925) between 1903 and 1916, this three-volume edition of laws promulgated by successive Anglo-Saxon rulers is still regarded as authoritative. Unparalleled in other Germanic languages, it is a unique body of early medieval legal writing. The work features a facing translation into modern German.

  • - With a Revised Text of the Kletorologion of Philotheos
    av J. B. Bury
    330,-

    This 1911 work examines the text (of which Bury provides an edition) of the 'Kletorologion' of Philotheos, an otherwise unknown administrative official at the Byzantine court of Leo VI in the late ninth century. The work is a guide to precedence, which at this time was of great political importance.

  • - The Landing of Augustine; The Murder of Becket; Edward the Black Prince; Becket's Shrine
    av Arthur Penrhyn Stanley
    385,-

    Arthur Penrhyn Stanley was a canon of Canterbury when he published this work - four essays on the history of the cathedral - in 1855. Taking events associated with Canterbury, he puts them in a wider historical context, describing the locations in which they were enacted, and including fascinating details from literary sources.

  •  
    385,-

    Frederick Levi Attenborough (1887-1973) published this work in 1922 for social and legal historians who did not require the full critical apparatus and contextual material previously provided in German by Felix Lieberman. The book covers the early Anglo-Saxon laws from Aethelbert to Aethelstan, with a facing-page modern English translation.

  • - Compiled, about AD 1390, by the Master-Cooks of King Richard II
     
    371,-

    One of the oldest English-language cookbooks, compiled originally in the late fourteenth century by the master cooks of Richard II. This 1780 transcription from the manuscript roll then belonging to Gustavus Brander, a trustee of the British Museum, was made and annotated by the antiquary Samuel Pegge (1704-96).

  •  
    399,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    399,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    399,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    413,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    413,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    399,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    399,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    385,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    426,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  •  
    468,-

    Principally comprising records found in private collections and those held by the Yorkshire Archaeological Society, this ten-volume collection, published between 1909 and 1955, is an annotated calendar of abstracts and transcriptions of documents relating to the whole of Yorkshire, dating from the twelfth to the seventeenth century.

  • - Extracts from the Hull Customs' Rolls, and Complete Transcripts of the Ulnagers' Rolls
     
    371,-

    John Lister (1847-1933) was a philanthropist, politician and landowner near Halifax. He edited for the Yorkshire Archaeological Society this 1924 publication. Containing transcriptions of customs records of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the work illuminates the development and social impact of an important local industry.

  • - From the Original Document in the Possession of Godfrey Wentworth, Esq., of Woolley Park
     
    578,-

    This detailed two-volume chartulary of the Cluniac priory of St John of Pontefract, is a valuable resource for Yorkshire history in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Compiled in the mid-thirteenth century, and published 1899-1902, it contains 556 Latin charters arranged by type, with comprehensive notes and English summaries throughout.

  • - From the Original Document in the Possession of Godfrey Wentworth, Esq., of Woolley Park
     
    523,-

    This detailed two-volume chartulary of the Cluniac priory of St John of Pontefract, is a valuable resource for Yorkshire history in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Compiled in the mid-thirteenth century, and published 1899-1902, it contains 556 Latin charters arranged by type, with comprehensive notes and English summaries throughout.

  • - From the Original MS. in the Possession of Thomas Brooke
     
    634,-

    This two-volume work, published 1891-3, contains a fourteenth-century cartulary charting the history of Selby Abbey from its foundation under William the Conqueror in 1069 to the mid-fifteenth century. Volume 2 includes an architectural description of the abbey and a discussion of some personal names of interest.

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