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Religio Augustini: Jordan of Quedlinburg and the Augustinian tradition in late medieval Germany.Saak, Eric Leland. January 1993 (has links)
This study focuses on the Expositio Orationis Dominicae of the little known Augustinian friar Jordan of Quedlinburg (d. 1370/80). An edition of this work is presented in Part One. Jordan's treatise originated from lectures he held in the Order's studium at Erfurt in 1327. As such, they offer insight into the 'other side' of the Augustinian School, the teaching in the studia not associated with a university. In the fourteenth century there were 32 studia generalia in which Augustinians could receive the prerequisite instruction for the 'degree' lector, the license to teach in any school of the Order except for those associated with a university. The theology of the other side of the Augustinian school was more representative of the Order's theology than were the Sentences commentaries of the Order's magistri. Furthermore, the office of lector was not merely a stage within the Order's educational system. The lectors were the legislators of the Order's doctrine. Jordan's theology was thoroughly Augustinian. This becomes apparent when his theology is placed in context of the religio Augustini. Jordan exhorted his brothers to be the imitators of Augustine and to follow Augustine's religion. Thus, they were not to remain cloistered in their cells, but were to bring the riches of the contemplative life to society at large by teaching and preaching. In this light, the religio Augustini offers the foundation for an historical interpretation of late medieval Augustinianism, rather than one based on theological definitions of the term Augustinian. For the late medieval Augustinian Hermit, it was the religio Augustini that made one an Augustinian.
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Die individualität der mittelalterlichen Geschichtschreiberbis zum Ende des 11. JahrhundertsMünnich, F. R. January 1907 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Friedrichs-Universität, 1907.
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Die individualität der mittelalterlichen Geschichtschreiberbis zum Ende des 11. JahrhundertsMünnich, F. R. January 1907 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Friedrichs-Universität, 1907.
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Land and cult : society and radical religion in the diocese of Milan, c.990-1130Norrie, James January 2017 (has links)
This thesis asks how cities changed the world, by conducting a close study of urban change in Milan during the long eleventh-century. The growth of the city both transformed and responded to religion and the rural landscape around it. The radicalism of social change in this period is above all reflected by the emergence of the popular movement for religious reform known as the Pataria. Between 1057 and 1075 this social campaign against simony and clerical marriage revolted against episcopal authority, and the kinship groups which stood behind it. In size and radicalism, the social movement had no parallel in contemporary Europe. In order to account for the extent of social and religious change in eleventh century Milan, this thesis engage with both the historiography of socio-economic change, and contemporary religious reform. Chapter 1 characterises the political and religious institutions which shaped Milan in this period. Chapter 2 studies how property relations and land management changed under the pressure of urban growth, underlining the precocious extension of city market relations from the 1050s in the north-east of the diocese. These rural changes enabled rapidly expanding growth and complexity in the city, mapped using a range of evidence in Chapter 3. Chapter 4 offers a new social account of the origins of the Pataria, which foregrounds the transformation of social relations in the north-east of the diocese especially. Chapters 5 and 6 explore how saints' cults and urban ritual and liturgy were crucial to the reproduction of authority in an evermore complex urban environment, and how for this reason these structures were contested by the Pataria.
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AUSTRIA AS A CAROLINGIAN FRONTIER, (700-907).BOWLUS, CHARLES RUSSELL 01 January 1973 (has links)
Abstract not available
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"BASILEOS ANGLORUM": A STUDY OF THE LIFE AND REIGN OF KING ATHELSTAN OF ENGLAND, 924-939.CRONENWETT, PHILIP NATHANIEL 01 January 1975 (has links)
Abstract not available
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A HISTORY OF THE NORTH OF ENGLAND FROM 1000 TO 1135.KAPELLE, WILLIAM EARL 01 January 1975 (has links)
Abstract not available
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Landscapes of faith and philosophy in selected late Middle English textsKraman, Cynthia January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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The mercery trade and the Mercers' Company of London : from the 1130s to 1348Sutton, Anne Frances January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Arthurian legend in fine and applied art of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuriesPoulson, Christine January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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