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The Congress of Arras, 1435 a study in medieval diplomacy /Dickinson, Joycelyne Gledhill. January 1955 (has links)
Thesis--Oxford. / Includes index. "Unpublished sources": p [209]-234. "Fundamental sources published and unpublished": p. [235]-238. "Bibliography": p. [245]-257.
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The Congress of Arras, 1435 a study in medieval diplomacy /Dickinson, Joycelyne Gledhill. January 1955 (has links)
Thesis--Oxford. / Includes index. "Unpublished sources": p [209]-234. "Fundamental sources published and unpublished": p. [235]-238. "Bibliography": p. [245]-257.
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Littérature et société arrageoises au XIIIe siècle les chansons et dits artésiens /Berger, Roger. January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Université de Paris IV, 1979. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [9]-14).
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Littérature et société arrageoises au XIII5 siècle, les "Chansons et dits artésiens" /Berger, Roger. January 1981 (has links)
Thèse--Lettres--Paris IV, 1979M. / Contient le texte des "Chansons et dits artésiens" Bibliogr. p. 9-14.
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The Congress of Arras, 1435Russell, Joycelyne Gledhill January 1951 (has links)
No description available.
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Die Errichtung des Bistums Arras 1093/1094 /Kéry, Lotte. January 1994 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Diss.--Philosophische Fakultät, Fachbereich 7--Aachen--Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule, 1991. / Contient le texte latin de : "Gesta Atrebatensium" et de "De restitutione episcopi in Atrebatensi ȩcclesia"
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British Iron Age chariot burials of the Arras culture: a multi-isotope approach to investigating mobility levels and subsistence practicesJay, Mandy, Montgomery, Janet, Nehlich, O., Towers, Jacqueline R., Evans, J. 01 August 2013 (has links)
Yes / Iron Age chariot burials in the UK are rare and restricted in their distribution. Historically it has been suggested that their Arras culture affinities with Continental Europe, particularly with the Paris basin in France, may be indicative of migration. The majority of them are found on chalk and the putative source region is also chalk. This has meant that a study using only strontium isotopes to identify mobile individuals is problematic. Here we present a range of isotope ratio data (strontium, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen and sulphur) for seven chariot burials from Wetwang, Garton Station and Kirkburn. The majority of them are of men and women who were born and lived locally, although the individual from Kirkburn is likely to have spent his childhood elsewhere. They do, however, differ quite subtly from others in the local population, probably in their relationship to a local land-use pattern operating between two distinct biospheres. / The British Academy provided funding (SG-51722)
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Le diocèse d'Arras de 1093 au milieu du XIVe siècle : recherches sur la vie religieuse dans le nord de la France au Moyen âge /Delmaire, Bernard, January 1994 (has links)
Extr. de :: Th.--Hist.--Paris 1, 1988. / Bibliogr. p.595-622. Index.
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Le registre de Lambert, évêque d'Arras : 1093-1115 /Lambert de Guînes, Giodanengo, Claire, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Thèse de doctorat--Histoire--Paris--École des Chartes, 1999. Titre de soutenance : Le Codex de Lambert, évêque d'Arras, 1093-1115 : introduction, édition et traduction. / Choix de textes latins et trad. française en regard. Bibliogr. p. 77-90. Index.
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'Open-weave, close-knit' : archaeologies of identity in the later prehistoric landscape of East YorkshireGiles, Melanie C. January 2000 (has links)
This thesis is concerned with approaches to identity in archaeology, specifically the later prehistory of East Yorkshire, during the first millennium B. C. The region is characterised by a middle-late Iron Age square barrow burial rite, which has been interpreted as the product of the 'Arras' culture. It tackles the problem that identity has traditionally been understood as a social given (as part of an evolutionary process or an innate condition of a social group) that can be read from material remains. It argues that such models fail to make a critical enquiry into how identity is reproduced, with damaging social and political implications. In contrast, the thesis argues that identity is the project through which people come to know themselves as social beings, through the webs of their relations with others and the material world. Identity always takes work, and is constituted through that work. Archaeology therefore explores how identities were reproduced and mobilised over time, through an analysis of material fragments which are both the product and conditions of identity practice The thesis explores the contrasting character of practices of inhabitation from the later Bronze Age - late Iron Age (c. 8 th -I' century B. C. /A. D. ). It interprets the emergence and disappearance of the burial rite in terms of the political projects and discourses of identity which were reproduced through the strategic manipulation of the dead. More broadly, it argues that archaeology is both an analytical and interpretative endeavour. It presents the theoretical grounds of its approach, a methodology for exploring identity, and the results of its analysis (including a report on original fieldwork undertaken at Wharram Grange Crossroads, East Yorkshire). It also argues that the way in which this interpretative process is returned to the reader is constitutive of the meaning that they make, and it develops ways in which this can be made explicit in the writing of a thesis.
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