The article discusses two Old English cases of walking through cities that no longer exist and the implications that such visions entail for early medieval philosophical perspectives. The first part proposes a conjectural vision of the city of Rome from around the time of the visits of young Prince Alfred of Wessex, future King Alfred the Great, in 853 and in 855 A.D. The second part is constructed upon an understanding of one of the Exeter Book elegies, The Ruin, presenting musings on whatever remained from another Roman city, conceivably identifiable with Aqua Sulis, that is, Bath. The reflections of the former encounter with the city may be, perhaps, found in the Meters that accompany Alfred-inspired translation of Boethius’s De consol...
Wild and unforgiving natural landscapes are well known to be the haunts of monsters in Old English p...
Do fixed geographic features such as coastlines and rivers determine town locations, or can historic...
Ancient Roman writers such as Dionysius of Halicarnassus (4.13.4-5) observed the impossibility of lo...
This article examines how modern historiography has developed quite differentiated views on the way ...
Early nineteenth-century London is often seen as the architecturally poor cousin of other European c...
The mega-sites of Late Iron Age Europe (traditionally known as ‘oppida’) provide an important datase...
One of the attractions of medieval urban history is the fact that major conceptual problems in the f...
“Cities are magical places, however their magic is not evenly distributed”— writes Chris Jenks in hi...
Ever since the publication in 1948 of Sylvia Thrupp's seminal book, The Merchant Class of Medieval L...
Just as the making of a patron saint was an important event in baroque devotional and urban history,...
Of the surviving eighteen folios illustrating the Genesis and Exodus narratives in the late antique ...
The urban way of life is considered to be a major milestone in human development. It has attracted u...
This article concerns Peter Ackroyd’s depiction of London as an arcane labyrinth within which demar...
The article deals with the change of paradigms in European urban thinking through time. The principl...
This chapter considers some of the ways in which the ruins of Roman Britain, and in particular its w...
Wild and unforgiving natural landscapes are well known to be the haunts of monsters in Old English p...
Do fixed geographic features such as coastlines and rivers determine town locations, or can historic...
Ancient Roman writers such as Dionysius of Halicarnassus (4.13.4-5) observed the impossibility of lo...
This article examines how modern historiography has developed quite differentiated views on the way ...
Early nineteenth-century London is often seen as the architecturally poor cousin of other European c...
The mega-sites of Late Iron Age Europe (traditionally known as ‘oppida’) provide an important datase...
One of the attractions of medieval urban history is the fact that major conceptual problems in the f...
“Cities are magical places, however their magic is not evenly distributed”— writes Chris Jenks in hi...
Ever since the publication in 1948 of Sylvia Thrupp's seminal book, The Merchant Class of Medieval L...
Just as the making of a patron saint was an important event in baroque devotional and urban history,...
Of the surviving eighteen folios illustrating the Genesis and Exodus narratives in the late antique ...
The urban way of life is considered to be a major milestone in human development. It has attracted u...
This article concerns Peter Ackroyd’s depiction of London as an arcane labyrinth within which demar...
The article deals with the change of paradigms in European urban thinking through time. The principl...
This chapter considers some of the ways in which the ruins of Roman Britain, and in particular its w...
Wild and unforgiving natural landscapes are well known to be the haunts of monsters in Old English p...
Do fixed geographic features such as coastlines and rivers determine town locations, or can historic...
Ancient Roman writers such as Dionysius of Halicarnassus (4.13.4-5) observed the impossibility of lo...