This paper considers the modern concept of a ›universal chronicle‹, examining its validity for Latin texts written before the mid-ninth century. It notes that while modern historians of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages concentrate on the most recent material in chronicles and other historical writings, the original authors were usually concerned to set events of their own day within a framework that began with the Creation, the Birth of Adam, or of Abraham, and that as a result most historical texts should be seen primarily as tracing the history of Salvation. As such they need to be understood as one manifestation of a more general concern with the nature of Time
Au cours de la « Renaissance du XIIe siècle », l'écriture de l'histoire s'épanouit dans l'Europe Lat...
he purpose of this article is to express, expand and sharpen views concerning history, historiograph...
Various concepts guide discussions on global literature, not least ›transnational‹. The present text...
This paper uses two Arabic chronicles of the mid ninth to early tenth centuries – the History of Ibn...
This paper argues that the new Leipzig world chronicle (see above Colomo et al.), dated to the first...
The article deals with the development of graphical systems of presenting history in universal chron...
The Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle brings together the latest research in chronicle studies ...
Richard W. Burgess and Michael Kulikowski’s A Historical Introduction to the Chronicle Genre from it...
This contribution proposes to compare, but also to connect, the rise of a new type of unlearned hist...
For medieval Irish scholars, written history was Christian history, an account of past deeds of rele...
This volume is composed of selected papers from the main strand, \u27Time and Eternity\u27, at the s...
This dissertation examines the way historical writing was structured in Latin and Old French works o...
Recent advances in research show that the distinctive features of high medieval civilization began d...
Universal chronicles written on scrolls enjoyed an increase in popularity in the late Middle Ages, a...
Depuis les années 1960, les historiens ont étudié les chroniqueurs médiévaux en tant qu'écrivains ca...
Au cours de la « Renaissance du XIIe siècle », l'écriture de l'histoire s'épanouit dans l'Europe Lat...
he purpose of this article is to express, expand and sharpen views concerning history, historiograph...
Various concepts guide discussions on global literature, not least ›transnational‹. The present text...
This paper uses two Arabic chronicles of the mid ninth to early tenth centuries – the History of Ibn...
This paper argues that the new Leipzig world chronicle (see above Colomo et al.), dated to the first...
The article deals with the development of graphical systems of presenting history in universal chron...
The Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle brings together the latest research in chronicle studies ...
Richard W. Burgess and Michael Kulikowski’s A Historical Introduction to the Chronicle Genre from it...
This contribution proposes to compare, but also to connect, the rise of a new type of unlearned hist...
For medieval Irish scholars, written history was Christian history, an account of past deeds of rele...
This volume is composed of selected papers from the main strand, \u27Time and Eternity\u27, at the s...
This dissertation examines the way historical writing was structured in Latin and Old French works o...
Recent advances in research show that the distinctive features of high medieval civilization began d...
Universal chronicles written on scrolls enjoyed an increase in popularity in the late Middle Ages, a...
Depuis les années 1960, les historiens ont étudié les chroniqueurs médiévaux en tant qu'écrivains ca...
Au cours de la « Renaissance du XIIe siècle », l'écriture de l'histoire s'épanouit dans l'Europe Lat...
he purpose of this article is to express, expand and sharpen views concerning history, historiograph...
Various concepts guide discussions on global literature, not least ›transnational‹. The present text...