The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning mediaeval Slavdom, which is William of Malmesbury’s Chronicle of English Kings. The author analyzes a passage devoted to the cult of “Fortune” among the pagan Lutici tribes which is described in a fragment of the chapter ‘De Henrico Imperatore’ devoted to the allies of the empire. The fragment in question concerns the Veletis – the pagan allies of emperor Henry III in the years 1045–1055. On the basis of an analysis of the description of prophesies from the horn of the statue of Fortune, the author tries to justify a hypothesis that the presently missing German source of this fragment (dating back to the middle of the 11th c.) was based on a ...
Includes bibliographical references.This study of selected Old English texts, from the canons of Ael...
As Professor Rod Thomson noted in 1997 ('William of Malmesbury, Historian of Crusade', Reading Medie...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning ...
William of Malmesbury’s “Fortune” (Gesta Rerum Anglorum II 12) – An Attempt at a New Interpretation ...
The article brings to the attention of the scholarly world a hardly known medieval source Gesta Regu...
This article offers an effective and original interpretation of two crucial sources that have long b...
The great Benedictine historian William of Malmesbury has divided scholarly interpretation over rece...
William of Malmesbury wrote his Gesta Regum ‘out of love for his homeland’ (‘propter patriae caritat...
This thesis suggests that four twelfth-century English historians – Orderic Vitalis, William of Malm...
Describing William of Malmesbury, scholars have often found it appropriate to draw upon superlatives...
William of Malmesbury was fascinated by Rome and romanitas. He wrote about the city, the Romans and ...
This article argues that the Old English Orosius, a work traditionally viewed as a product of the ed...
The article is devoted to the existence of myths in modern texts. As an example it was selected a se...
The article focuses on the localization of the martyrdom of the British saints Aaron and Julius, kno...
Includes bibliographical references.This study of selected Old English texts, from the canons of Ael...
As Professor Rod Thomson noted in 1997 ('William of Malmesbury, Historian of Crusade', Reading Medie...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...
The article constitutes an attempt to interpret one of the newly discovered source texts concerning ...
William of Malmesbury’s “Fortune” (Gesta Rerum Anglorum II 12) – An Attempt at a New Interpretation ...
The article brings to the attention of the scholarly world a hardly known medieval source Gesta Regu...
This article offers an effective and original interpretation of two crucial sources that have long b...
The great Benedictine historian William of Malmesbury has divided scholarly interpretation over rece...
William of Malmesbury wrote his Gesta Regum ‘out of love for his homeland’ (‘propter patriae caritat...
This thesis suggests that four twelfth-century English historians – Orderic Vitalis, William of Malm...
Describing William of Malmesbury, scholars have often found it appropriate to draw upon superlatives...
William of Malmesbury was fascinated by Rome and romanitas. He wrote about the city, the Romans and ...
This article argues that the Old English Orosius, a work traditionally viewed as a product of the ed...
The article is devoted to the existence of myths in modern texts. As an example it was selected a se...
The article focuses on the localization of the martyrdom of the British saints Aaron and Julius, kno...
Includes bibliographical references.This study of selected Old English texts, from the canons of Ael...
As Professor Rod Thomson noted in 1997 ('William of Malmesbury, Historian of Crusade', Reading Medie...
This dissertation is a diachronic study of when and how the first five Plantagenet kings of England ...