|
Showing 1 - 25 of
26 matches in All Departments
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
A concise and accessible history of four of the monastic orders in
the middle ages. In 1274 the Council of Lyons decreed the end of
various 'new orders' of Mendicants which had emerged during the
great push for evangelism and poverty in the thirteenth-century
Latin Church. The Franciscans and Dominicans were explicitly
excluded, while the Carmelites and Austin friars were allowed a
stay of execution. These last two were eventually able to acquire
approval, but other smaller groups, in particular the Friars of the
Sack and Pied Friars, were forced to disband. This book outlines
the history of those who were threatened by 1274, tracing the
development of the two larger orders down to the Council of Trent,
and following the fragmentary sources for the brief histories of
the discontinued friaries. For the first time these orders are
treated comparatively: the volume offers a total history, from
their origins, spirituality and pastoral impact, to their music,
buildings and runaways. FRANCES ANDREWS teaches at the University
of St Andrews and is the author of The Early Humiliati (CUP 1999).
Why, when so driven by the impetus for autonomy, did the city
elites of thirteenth-century Italy turn to men bound to religious
orders whose purpose and reach stretched far beyond the boundaries
of their often disputed territories? Churchmen and Urban Government
in Late Medieval Italy, c.1200–c.1450 brings together a team of
international contributors to provide the first comparative
response to this pivotal question. Presenting a series of urban
cases and contexts, the book explores the secular-religious
boundaries of the period and evaluates the role of the clergy in
the administration and government of Italy's city-states. With an
extensive introduction and epilogue, it exposes for consideration
the beginnings of the phenomenon, the varying responses of
churchmen, the reasons why practices changed and how politics and
religious identity relate to each other. This important new study
has significant implications for our understanding of power,
negotiation, bureaucracy and religious identity.
This book is the first major study in English of a group of late
twelfth-century religious enthusiasts, the early Humiliati, who
were condemned by the Church as heretics in 1184. However, in a
remarkable transition, they were reconciled seventeen years later
and went on to establish a highly successful religious order in
north Italy. The Humiliati have been accorded little attention in
previous studies both because of their local nature and because of
the suppression of the Order in 1571, after one of their number
made a disastrous attempt to murder Charles Borromeo. Using a
combination of a wide range of sources, the nature of the early
movement and its processes of institutional development are
reconstructed. The book also includes a Bullarium Humiliatorum, a
calendar of papal and episcopal letters and privileges, which will
be of great use to scholars in the field.
This book is the first major study in English of a group of late twelfth-century religious enthusiasts, the early Humiliati, who were condemned by the Church as heretics in 1184 but--in a remarkable transition--were reconciled seventeen years later and went on to establish a highly successful religious order in northern Italy. Using a wide range of sources, the nature of the early movement and its processes of institutional development are reconstructed. The book also includes a Bullarium Humiliatorum, a list of papal and episcopal letters and privileges.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. This book explores a key issue in
linguistic theory, the systematic variation in form between
semantic equivalents across languages. Two contrasting views of the
role of lexical meaning in the analysis of such variation can be
found in the literature: (i) uniformity, whereby lexical meaning is
universal, and variation arises from idiosyncratic differences in
the inventory and phonological shape of language-particular
functional material, and (ii) transparency, whereby systematic
variation in form arises from systematic variation in the meaning
of basic lexical items. In this volume, Itamar Francez and Andrew
Koontz-Garboden contrast these views as applied to the empirical
domain of property concept sentences - sentences expressing
adjectival predication and their translational equivalents across
languages. They demonstrate that property concept sentences vary
systematically between possessive and predicative form, and propose
a transparentist analysis of this variation that links it to the
lexical denotations of basic property concept lexemes. At the heart
of the analysis are qualities: mass-like model theoretic objects
that closely resemble scales. The authors contrast their
transparentist analysis with uniformitarian alternatives,
demonstrating its theoretical and empirical advantages. They then
show that the proposed theory of qualities can account for
interesting and novel observations in two central domains of
grammatical theory: the theory of syntactic categories, and the
theory of mass nouns. The overall results highlight the importance
of the lexicon as a locus of generalizations about the limits of
crosslinguistic variation. This is an open access title available
under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is
free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF
download from OUP and selected open access locations.
A concise and accessible history of four of the monastic orders in
the middle ages. In 1274 the Council of Lyons decreed the end of
various "new orders" of Mendicants which had emerged during the
great push for evangelism and poverty in the thirteenth-century
Latin Church. The Franciscans and Dominicans were explicitly
excluded, while the Carmelites and Austin friars were allowed a
stay of execution. These last two were eventually able to acquire
approval, but other smaller groups, in particular the Friars of the
Sack and Pied Friars, were forced to disband. This book outlines
the history of those who were threatened by 1274, tracing the
development of the two larger orders down to the Council of Trent,
and following the fragmentary sources for the brief histories of
the discontinued friaries. For the first time these orders are
treated comparatively: the volume offers a total history, from
their origins, spirituality and pastoral impact, to their music,
buildings and runaways. FRANCES ANDREWS is Professor in Mediaeval
History at the University of St Andrews.
"Medieval Italy" gathers together an unparalleled selection of
newly translated primary sources from the central and later Middle
Ages, a period during which Italy was famous for its diverse
cultural landscape of urban towers and fortified castles, the
spirituality of Saints Francis and Clare, and the vernacular poetry
of Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. The texts highlight the
continuities with the medieval Latin West while simultaneously
emphasizing the ways in which Italy was exceptional, particularly
for its cities that drove Mediterranean trade, its new communal
forms of government, the impact of the papacy's temporal claims on
the central peninsula, and the richly textured religious life of
the mainland and its islands.A unique feature of this volume is its
incorporation of the southern part of the peninsula and Sicily--the
glittering Norman court at Palermo, the multicultural emporium of
the south, and the kingdoms of Frederick II--into a larger
narrative of Italian history. Including Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, and
Lombard sources, the documents speak in ethnically and religiously
differentiated voices, while providing wider chronological and
geographical coverage than previously available.Rich in
interdisciplinary texts and organized to enable the reader to focus
by specific region, topic, or period, this is a volume that will be
an essential resource for anyone with a professional or private
interest in the history, religion, literature, politics, and built
environment of Italy from ca. 1000 to 1400.
Evidence for childhood and youth from the sixth century to the
sixteenth, but with particular emphasis on later medieval England.
Moving on from the legacy of Aries, these essays address evidence
for childhood and youth from the sixth century to the sixteenth,
but with particular emphasis on later medieval England. The
contents include the idea of childhoodin the writing of Gregory of
Tours, skaldic verse narratives and their implications for the
understanding of kingship, Jewish communities of Northern Europe
for whom children represented the continuity of a persecuted faith,
children in the records of the northern Italian Humiliati, the
meaning of romance narratives centred around the departure of the
hero or heroine from the natal hearth, the age at which later
medieval English youngsters left home, how far they travelled and
where they went, literary sources revealing the politicisation of
the idea of the child, and the response of young, affluent females
to homiletic literature and the iconography of the virgin martyrs
in the later middle ages. Contributors: FRANCES E. ANDREWS, HELEN
COOPER, P.J.P.GOLDBERG, SIMCHA GOLDIN, EDWARD F. JAMES, JUDITH
JESCH, KIM M. PHILLIPS, MIKE TYLER, ROSALYNN VOADEN.
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. This book explores a key issue in
linguistic theory, the systematic variation in form between
semantic equivalents across languages. Two contrasting views of the
role of lexical meaning in the analysis of such variation can be
found in the literature: (i) uniformity, whereby lexical meaning is
universal, and variation arises from idiosyncratic differences in
the inventory and phonological shape of language-particular
functional material, and (ii) transparency, whereby systematic
variation in form arises from systematic variation in the meaning
of basic lexical items. In this volume, Itamar Francez and Andrew
Koontz-Garboden contrast these views as applied to the empirical
domain of property concept sentences - sentences expressing
adjectival predication and their translational equivalents across
languages. They demonstrate that property concept sentences vary
systematically between possessive and predicative form, and propose
a transparentist analysis of this variation that links it to the
lexical denotations of basic property concept lexemes. At the heart
of the analysis are qualities: mass-like model theoretic objects
that closely resemble scales. The authors contrast their
transparentist analysis with uniformitarian alternatives,
demonstrating its theoretical and empirical advantages. They then
show that the proposed theory of qualities can account for
interesting and novel observations in two central domains of
grammatical theory: the theory of syntactic categories, and the
theory of mass nouns. The overall results highlight the importance
of the lexicon as a locus of generalizations about the limits of
crosslinguistic variation. This is an open access title available
under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is
free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF
download from OUP and selected open access locations.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1908 Edition.
1908. The Civil War is drawing to a close in Georgia. Sherman has
left devastation in his wake, and Union prisoners are dying at
Andersonville. An entire society is dissolving. Amidst this
turmoil, a young woman of 24 is traveling through Georgia. In this
absorbing and significant work, Franny Andrews paints an enduring
picture of the hardships and travail of the home front during the
war. Contents: Prologue; Across Sherman's Track; Plantation Life; A
Race with the Enemy; The Passing of the Confederacy; In the Dust
and Ashes of Defeat; Foreshadowings of the Race Problem; The
Prologue of Reconstruction; and Epilogue.
1908. The Civil War is drawing to a close in Georgia. Sherman has
left devastation in his wake, and Union prisoners are dying at
Andersonville. An entire society is dissolving. Amidst this
turmoil, a young woman of 24 is traveling through Georgia. In this
absorbing and significant work, Franny Andrews paints an enduring
picture of the hardships and travail of the home front during the
war. Contents: Prologue; Across Sherman's Track; Plantation Life; A
Race with the Enemy; The Passing of the Confederacy; In the Dust
and Ashes of Defeat; Foreshadowings of the Race Problem; The
Prologue of Reconstruction; and Epilogue.
1908. The Civil War is drawing to a close in Georgia. Sherman has
left devastation in his wake, and Union prisoners are dying at
Andersonville. An entire society is dissolving. Amidst this
turmoil, a young woman of 24 is traveling through Georgia. In this
absorbing and significant work, Franny Andrews paints an enduring
picture of the hardships and travail of the home front during the
war. Contents: Prologue; Across Sherman's Track; Plantation Life; A
Race with the Enemy; The Passing of the Confederacy; In the Dust
and Ashes of Defeat; Foreshadowings of the Race Problem; The
Prologue of Reconstruction; and Epilogue.
The fifty-second volume of Studies in Church History explores the
myriad ways in which doubt has tested Christianity and the life of
individual Christians. Men and women have always had doubts about
ideas, or individual doctrines, if not faith itself; they have also
doubted how truth can be authenticated. The means and the
implications of expressing either kind of doubt are shaped by
historical circumstance. Led by scholars including Kirstie Blair,
Janet Nelson, Charles Stang and Rowan Williams, the essays explore
doubt from the Early Church to the contemporary world. They
investigate a range of questions, from the familiar 'doubting
Thomas', and the more surprising 'doubting John', through the
pressing concerns of the Middle Ages, the emphasis on rationalism
of the Enlightenment, to the competing ideological and confessional
perspectives of the modern world. This fascinating collection
offers an introduction to the complex relationship between doubt,
faith and the Christian Churches.
|
|