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Millennium transcends boundaries - between epochs and regions, and
between disciplines. Like the Millennium-Jahrbuch, the journal
Millennium-Studien pursues an international, interdisciplinary
approach that cuts across historical eras. Composed of scholars
from various disciplines, the editorial and advisory boards welcome
submissions from a range of fields, including history, literary
studies, art history, theology, and philosophy. Millennium-Studien
also accepts manuscripts on Latin, Greek, and Oriental cultures. In
addition to offering a forum for monographs and edited collections
on diverse topics, Millennium-Studien publishes commentaries and
editions. The journal primary accepts publications in German and
English, but also considers submissions in French, Italian, and
Spanish. If you want to submit a manuscript please send it to the
editor from the most relevant discipline: Wolfram Brandes,
Frankfurt (Byzantine Studies and Early Middle Ages):
[email protected] Peter von Moellendorff, Giessen (Greek
language and literature):
[email protected] Dennis Pausch,
Dresden (Latin language and literature):
[email protected] Rene Pfeilschifter, Wurzburg (Ancient
History): [email protected] Karla Pollmann,
Bristol (Early Christianity and Patristics):
[email protected] All manuscript submissions will be
reviewed by the editor and one outside specialist (single-blind
peer review).
Theodor Mommsen, who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in
1902 for his "Roman History" is one of the outstanding German
historians of all time. His scholarship is as impressive as it is
seminal, and is appreciated even today: every path in Roman
historical studies leads to him. However, Mommsen's importance is
not limited to his work as an historian and organiser of historical
research; as a convinced liberal, he also took an energetic part in
political affairs of his time. The present volume contains lectures
delivered by renowned scholars from Germany, Italy and Norway at
the Free University of Berlin to mark the 100th anniversary of
Mommsen's death on 1st November 2003. The authors pay tribute to
thevarious aspects of Mommsen's personality and work - from his
scholarly achievements to his political commitment and his private
life and the verdict of posterity - and thus provide a vivid and
multi-facetted picture of this great scholar and his age.
The process of transformation which saw the Byzantine Empire and
the world of the Early Middle Ages develop from the Late Antique
Imperium Romanum led to changes in all areas of life. The central
topic of this volume of international contributions is the question
of how the historiography of the period confronted these changes.
"As a statesman a genius of the first order" was Theodor Mommsen's
verdict in 1886 on Diocletian, the Dalmatian whose career took him
from a released slave to Emperor. Diocletian stabilised the
Imperium after it had been thrown into turmoil in the imperial
crisis of the period of military anarchy. After his abdication in
305, he retired to the magnificent palace of Spalato (Split,
Croatia) built for his old age. Although his arrangements for the
succession, his price controls and his anti-Christian policies were
not a lasting success, his comprehensive reforms created the basis
for Constantine and the transition to the Late Classical Age.
Renowned scholars from Germany, Great Britain, Croatia, Slovenia
and Switzerland contributed to an international conference held in
Split in 2003. Their papers collected here show the present state
of research on the Tetrarchy in its political, social, economic,
ideological, historico-religious and archaeological aspects and on
the reception of Diocletian up to modern times.
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