open1noThis essay takes into account the Germanic personal names and their name-giving in the area of Ravenna from the sixth up to the end of tenth century. The middle of the sixth century records the peak of Gothic names in charters, in many cases connected to donations or sales of real estate due to material necessities after the loss of the Ostrogothic kingdom. Even when the Gothic community struggles to survive, the linguistic analysis on personal names shows that their language is still alive and in good health. Surprisingly enough, from the end of the same century, Germanic names completely disappear from charters: what did it happen to the community? The study of the charters of the following centuries demonstrates that Germa...
The surnames have been widely used in biodemographic analysis of populations as genetics markers in ...
none1noRavenna was one of the most important cities of the Mediterranean in Late Antiquity. The city...
Sedulius sive Ilarleh. Bynames (cognomina) in the early medieval memorial tradition. – More than 2.0...
open1noThis essay takes into account the Germanic personal names and their name-giving in the area ...
Where are the Lombards in the Italian Charters? Identity, Kinship and Name-giving. — Questions of id...
Apart from the Germania of Tacitus, Jordanes´s History of the Goths is the preeminent source for Ger...
The Gothic people enter European history during the Roman Iron Age. Several groups of Goths come und...
In the 4th century the Gothic alphabet and script suddenly and abruptly appeared, thanks to the acti...
Development of Names and Name-Giving in Upper and Lower Classes in Early Ninth-Century Île-de-France...
Rare personal names in the Early Middle Ages. – Numerous Germanic personal names can only be evidenc...
The Way of the Goths to Literacy as a Search for Identity. It is well known that the Goths, throug...
In Ravenna’s hagiographic traditions, including the Liber pontificalis of its bishops, the translati...
Documents (such as wills, property transfers etc....) written in Campania in the Lombard period are ...
in this article i examine personal names in late (post-Viking) runic in- scriptions in Gotland (1200...
The personal naming system of England underwent a profound transformation during the medieval period...
The surnames have been widely used in biodemographic analysis of populations as genetics markers in ...
none1noRavenna was one of the most important cities of the Mediterranean in Late Antiquity. The city...
Sedulius sive Ilarleh. Bynames (cognomina) in the early medieval memorial tradition. – More than 2.0...
open1noThis essay takes into account the Germanic personal names and their name-giving in the area ...
Where are the Lombards in the Italian Charters? Identity, Kinship and Name-giving. — Questions of id...
Apart from the Germania of Tacitus, Jordanes´s History of the Goths is the preeminent source for Ger...
The Gothic people enter European history during the Roman Iron Age. Several groups of Goths come und...
In the 4th century the Gothic alphabet and script suddenly and abruptly appeared, thanks to the acti...
Development of Names and Name-Giving in Upper and Lower Classes in Early Ninth-Century Île-de-France...
Rare personal names in the Early Middle Ages. – Numerous Germanic personal names can only be evidenc...
The Way of the Goths to Literacy as a Search for Identity. It is well known that the Goths, throug...
In Ravenna’s hagiographic traditions, including the Liber pontificalis of its bishops, the translati...
Documents (such as wills, property transfers etc....) written in Campania in the Lombard period are ...
in this article i examine personal names in late (post-Viking) runic in- scriptions in Gotland (1200...
The personal naming system of England underwent a profound transformation during the medieval period...
The surnames have been widely used in biodemographic analysis of populations as genetics markers in ...
none1noRavenna was one of the most important cities of the Mediterranean in Late Antiquity. The city...
Sedulius sive Ilarleh. Bynames (cognomina) in the early medieval memorial tradition. – More than 2.0...