
REMEMBERING THE FIRST CRUSADE
... most of which were of considerable length. The first chapter therefore makes up a major part of the thesis. Although displaying significant differences between themselves, the texts up to c.1135 shared certain traits such as concern for legitimacy - both regarding the work itself and the idea of the ...
... most of which were of considerable length. The first chapter therefore makes up a major part of the thesis. Although displaying significant differences between themselves, the texts up to c.1135 shared certain traits such as concern for legitimacy - both regarding the work itself and the idea of the ...
James Plumtree FORMING THE FIRST CRUSADE
... historical texts resulted in the cutting and pasting of any mention of Hungary from any chronicle, and publication of these severed sources with little comment on their original context. 11 This nationalistic intent means the relationship between Hungary and the crusade as a whole is never fully es ...
... historical texts resulted in the cutting and pasting of any mention of Hungary from any chronicle, and publication of these severed sources with little comment on their original context. 11 This nationalistic intent means the relationship between Hungary and the crusade as a whole is never fully es ...
Chapter 16: The Two Worlds of Christendom
... The Dissolution of the Carolingian Empire (843 C.E.) and the Invasions of Early Medieval Europe24 ©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries ...
... The Dissolution of the Carolingian Empire (843 C.E.) and the Invasions of Early Medieval Europe24 ©2011, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries ...
Fear and its Representation in the First Crusade
... structures, incapable of making sense of the world around them’.7 ...
... structures, incapable of making sense of the world around them’.7 ...
AP EUROPEAN HISTORY Chapter 1 "The Long
... 8. When Christian armies took Muslim cities, what typically became of the inhabitants? 9. How successful were the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Crusades in terms of the overall goal of conquering the Holy Land? ...
... 8. When Christian armies took Muslim cities, what typically became of the inhabitants? 9. How successful were the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Crusades in terms of the overall goal of conquering the Holy Land? ...
PAGE 1 Windows on the Past 1. Francesca was Gentile`s a. servant
... b. was skilled in non-artistic professions. c. painted a vast number of pictures. d. discovered his artistic talent later in life. 27. The only way to read Leonardo's notebooks is to a. learn Greek, because they are written in that language. b. crack his secret code. c. use a mirror, as the writing ...
... b. was skilled in non-artistic professions. c. painted a vast number of pictures. d. discovered his artistic talent later in life. 27. The only way to read Leonardo's notebooks is to a. learn Greek, because they are written in that language. b. crack his secret code. c. use a mirror, as the writing ...
Chapter 7 _ 8 Study Guide
... serf, Benedictine rule, secular, papal supremacy, excommunication, interdict, charter, capital, tenant farmer, middle class -Charlemagne & his purpose - Feudalism: How society is set up( class system), what is a feudal contract, what is exchange in feudalism, What does each person in feudalism owe t ...
... serf, Benedictine rule, secular, papal supremacy, excommunication, interdict, charter, capital, tenant farmer, middle class -Charlemagne & his purpose - Feudalism: How society is set up( class system), what is a feudal contract, what is exchange in feudalism, What does each person in feudalism owe t ...
Historia de Sancto Cuthberto

The Historia de Sancto Cuthberto (""History of St Cuthbert"") is a historical compilation finished some time after 1031. It is an account of the history of the bishopric of St Cuthbert—based successively at Lindisfarne, Norham, Chester-le-Street and finally Durham—from the life of St Cuthbert himself onwards. The latest event documented is a grant by King Cnut, c. 1031. The work is a cartulary chronicle recording grants and losses of property as well as miracles of retribution, under a loose narrative of temporal progression. The text survives in three manuscripts, the earliest of which dates from around 1100. The original version of the text is not thought to be extant; rather, all surviving manuscripts are thought to be copies of an earlier but lost exemplar. The Historia is one of the important sources behind the higher quality expanded histories produced at Durham in the early 12th century, particularly the Historia Regum and Symeon of Durham's Libellus de Exordio.