This paper focuses on medieval time-reckoning as it was conceived and experienced by the Scandinavians, both in historical perspective and in everyday life. The relevant sources have been selected from the rich Old Icelandic historical and literary corpus, but also from the vast range of runic epigraphic documents produced in Scandinavia – mostly in Sweden – from the Viking Age until late and post-medieval times. The Author’s purpose is to show how time-keeping gradually changed in the North under the influence of the Western Christian tradition, taking into account both ‘linear’ systems and ‘cyclic’ regular patterns of time, from the oldest Icelandic computus to the portable runic calendars and almanacs dating to the end of the Mid...
The aim of this paper is not to give a full description of how the runic alphabet was used and devel...
The dissertation discusses the construction of Europe's new political geography after the Roman empi...
In recent years, intensive archaeological research in Iceland has produced much new dating evidence...
This paper focuses on medieval time-reckoning as it was conceived and experienced by the Scandinavi...
This work investigates the multivalent and dynamic portrayal of time in a selec-tion of early Old Ic...
The topic of the medieval Icelandic world view during the Commonwealth period has attracted many sch...
The thesis is concerned with time reckoning and time perception in Old Norse culture. Based on the a...
This work is intended as an exploration of methods of time-reckoning and conception in Medieval Scan...
This paper analyzes some problems connected with time calculus and medieval calendars, in particular...
In 2014, the present author came across a runic calendar — that is a perpetual calendar in which gol...
The aim of this thesis is to set up characteristic attributes of saga time structure and with concer...
Celem niniejszej pracy jest przybliżenie dawnych rachub czasu, szczególnie zaś sposobu datowania zas...
Large medieval clocks were built in a number of Hanseatic towns in the Baltic region from the end of...
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3116000
In 930, at the close of the settlement period in Iceland, a week-based calendar was adopted. Observa...
The aim of this paper is not to give a full description of how the runic alphabet was used and devel...
The dissertation discusses the construction of Europe's new political geography after the Roman empi...
In recent years, intensive archaeological research in Iceland has produced much new dating evidence...
This paper focuses on medieval time-reckoning as it was conceived and experienced by the Scandinavi...
This work investigates the multivalent and dynamic portrayal of time in a selec-tion of early Old Ic...
The topic of the medieval Icelandic world view during the Commonwealth period has attracted many sch...
The thesis is concerned with time reckoning and time perception in Old Norse culture. Based on the a...
This work is intended as an exploration of methods of time-reckoning and conception in Medieval Scan...
This paper analyzes some problems connected with time calculus and medieval calendars, in particular...
In 2014, the present author came across a runic calendar — that is a perpetual calendar in which gol...
The aim of this thesis is to set up characteristic attributes of saga time structure and with concer...
Celem niniejszej pracy jest przybliżenie dawnych rachub czasu, szczególnie zaś sposobu datowania zas...
Large medieval clocks were built in a number of Hanseatic towns in the Baltic region from the end of...
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3116000
In 930, at the close of the settlement period in Iceland, a week-based calendar was adopted. Observa...
The aim of this paper is not to give a full description of how the runic alphabet was used and devel...
The dissertation discusses the construction of Europe's new political geography after the Roman empi...
In recent years, intensive archaeological research in Iceland has produced much new dating evidence...