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| 13 March 2010 | ||||||
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| New Arrivals | Text Only | View by: title, author, featured books |
| Browse | Sandpiper Editions | Classical Studies > Late Antiquity > Medieval > Modern History | ||
| Page: 1 2 3 ยป |
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The Patriarch Nicephorus of Constantinople | |||
| Ecclesiastical Policy and Image Worship in the Byzantine Empire | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Paul J Alexander | ||||
| Oxford University Press 2001 304 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198264011 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| The subject of Alexander's study is the Iconoclastic Controversy: the arguments concerning the legitimacy of Christian images that raged in the Byzantine Empire during the 8th and 9th centuries. The Controversy is studied through the Emperor Nicephorus, who became Patriarch of Constantinople in 806. As well as providing a complete picture of the issues involved in the struggle over religious images in his own Refutatio et Eversio and other writings, Nicephorus was almost alone in preserving documents of the Iconoclasts. The volume includes a paraphrase of Nicephorus' (unpublished) Refutatio et Eversio. (1958) | ||||
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Anna Comnena | |||
| A Study | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Georgina Buckler | ||||
| Oxford University Press 2000 576 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198214715 | ||||
| Published Price £19.99 | Our Price £15.99 | |||
| The first woman historian, Anna Comnena (1083-1148) was a princess of the Comneni dynasty, the eldest daughter of the Byzantine emperor Alexius I. Written in a monastery after the deaths of her father and husband, Nikephorus, her celebrated biography of her father, the Alexias is the only Greek contemporary account of the court of Alexius and of the First Crusade. First published in 1929, long before any English translation of the Alexias, Buckler's book remains the only full length study of Anna Comnena as a woman, a historian and a writer. (1929, reprinted 1968). | ||||
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The Medieval English Borough | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| James Tait | ||||
| Manchester University Press 1999 400 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0719003393 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £14.99 | |||
| Long regarded as the definitive work on the early history of the medieval English borough, this study begins by reviewing debate on 'the thorny question of origins.' Tait then describes urban settlement before the Danish wars and fortification in response to the Danish threat, and discusses its significance in the origin of boroughs. In the post-Conquest period, he examines the growth of merchant and class guilds, the evolution of the concept of 'free borough' and of the fee farm system. The book concludes with a lecture on the study of early municipal history. Our own Sandpiper reprint (1936/1968) | ||||
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The Loss of Normandy | |||
| 1198-1204: Studies in the History of the Angevin Empire | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Sir Maurice Powicke | ||||
| Manchester University Press 1999 448 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 071905740X | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| In the early years of the 13th century, after three centuries of independence, Normandy fell to Philip Augustus of France. An advanced and self-sufficient state with good resources, a tradition of unity and an elaborate system of government, Normandy proved unable to protect itself against the French king. Focusing on this crisis in the reigns of Richard I and John, Powicke uses surviving sources to study a medieval state in action, to understand its military organisation, and to estimate the influence of personal and impersonal forces. (1913. Revised 1960) | ||||
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Heresy in the Later Middle Ages | |||
| The Relation of Heterodoxy to Dissent c1250-c1450 | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Gordon Leff | ||||
| Manchester University Press 1999 800 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0719057434 | ||||
| Published Price £19.99 | Our Price £15.99 | |||
| In this history of heretical movements in medieval Europe, Leff's major premise is that 'heresy, far from being alien to Christian society, had its source in the tensions between Christian precept and religious practice.' With emphasis on the medieval outlook, the place of heretical beliefs within the intellectual and spiritual climate, and the role of heresy as 'the outlet of a society with no outlets', Leff examines the Franciscan disputes over the poverty of Christ; the prophecy of Joachim de Fiore; the mysticism of Meister Eckhart, Ockhamism and the Free Spirit; and the popular movements led by Wyclif and Hus. (1967) | ||||
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The English Parliament in the Middle Ages | |||
| A Tribute to J S Roskell | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| L G Davies; J H Denton (Edited by) | ||||
| Manchester University Press 1999 224 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0719008336 | ||||
| Published Price £9.99 | Our Price £7.99 | |||
| The origins, development and character of the 'Mother of Parliaments' have always been subjects of controversy among medievalists. In this volume seven leading scholars review past debates and explore fresh lines of enquiry. They clarify the procedures and influences which created the distinctive features of the English representative assembly and deal with topics including the 'pre-history' of Parliament, its development in relation to royal demands and the needs of war, and the relationship between clerical and parliamentary assemblies. Our own Sandpiper reprint. (1981) | ||||
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The Cult of Kingship in Anglo-Saxon England | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| William A Chaney | ||||
| Manchester University Press 1999 288 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0719003725 | ||||
| Published Price £9.99 | Our Price £10.99 | |||
| A fundamental element of Anglo-Saxon pagan culture was sacral kingship. This study examines the continuity from paganism to Christianity with regard to kingship and the religious nature that permeated the institution in both old and new cults. In the first full analysis of the integration of the political and religious functions of early English kingship and its descent from Germanic culture, Chaney investigates the sources which illuminate the way in which the Anglo-Saxons saw their king as a sacral figure, and the place of the king in their world view. Our own Sandpiper reprint. (1970) | ||||
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Six Byzantine Portraits | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| Dimitri Obolensky | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 240 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 0198219512 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| In a biographical sequel to 'The Byzantine Commonwealth', Obolensky assesses the contribution of six outstanding personalities to the Byzantine international community between the 9th and 16th centuries: Clement of Ohrid, Theophylact of Ohrid, Vladimir Monomakh, Sava of Serbia, Cyprian of Kiev and Moscow, and Maximos the Greek. These men all belonged simultaneously to the Greek and Slav worlds and acted as bridges between the two. The study of their achievements and failures offers insights both into their individual roles in Byzantine cultural history and into the cosmopolitan Eastern Europe in which they lived. (1988) | ||||
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The Italian Crusades | |||
| The Papal-Angevin Alliance and the Crusades against Christian Lay | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Norman Housley | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 303 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198219253 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| First published in 1982, this was the first detailed account of the crusades launched by the popes against their political opponents in the West. Drawing on contemporary sources, Housley analyzes the arguments used to justify the crusades and examines the papal crusade policy in practice; he describes how the crusades were preached and organised, and assesses the popular response to the preaching. He also looks in depth at the complex issue of financing the crusades, the sources of revenue and the problems of crusade taxation. (1982) | ||||
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German Knighthood | |||
| 1050-1300 | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Benjamin Arnold | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 320 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198219601 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| The medieval German empire founded by Otto the Great was led by emperors committed to pursuing martial glory abroad, and comprised a large number of regional powers engaged in constant feuding at home. Huge retinues of armed men - unfree knights - were maintained to sustain the level of conflict. This study focuses on the impact of unfree knighthood on German society, examining the knights' legal rights and obligations, their functions in peace and war, restrictions on knightly marriage, their habitual use of violence, and the role of the imperial knights within German politics. (1985) | ||||
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Saracenic Heraldry | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| L A Mayer | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1999 302 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 019817120X | ||||
| Published Price £16.99 | Our Price £13.99 | |||
| This volume presents a fully documented armorial roll of Saracenic sultans and emirs, designed to meet the requirements of students of Muslim archaeology and covering the geographical area of Syria, Palestine and Egypt during the period from the end of the Crusades to the Ottoman conquest. A comprehensive introduction discusses the origins and forms of Saracenic heraldry and its place in Ayyubid and Mamluk society. The armorial roll contains descriptions of blazons, explanations of inscriptions and bibliographic references. Inscriptions are given in Arabic with English translations. (1933) | ||||
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Medieval Latin and Rise of European Love Lyric | |||
| (Two volumes in one) | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| Peter Dronke | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1998 634 pages | ||||
| Hardback 019814346X | ||||
| Published Price £19.99 | Our Price £15.99 | |||
| An interpretation rather than a history of medieval lyrical love- poetry, Dronke's book illuminates certain modes of thought in medieval poetry, and certain kinds of language, particularly that of courtly love. Volume I investigates the beginnings of vernacular love poetry in Europe and explores its relation to the Latin poetry of the time and to the world of ideas that Latin made accessible. Volume II presents the texts of a large number of medieval Latin love poems with prose translations. (Second edition 1968) | ||||
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The Beneventan Script | |||
| A History of the South Italian Minuscule | Sandpiper Editions | |||
| EA Loew | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1998 424 pages | ||||
| Hardback Illustrated 0199240159 | ||||
| Published Price £18.99 | Our Price £14.99 | |||
| A classic study in regional palaeography, Loew's essay traces the development and decline of the South Italian Miniscule script that originated in the Benedictine scriptorium of Monte Cassino in the 5th century. Working almost entirely from original sources, Loew studies the script, the milieu of its development, the books written in it, and the prominent centres and individuals engaged in the copying of manuscripts over a period of 500 years. An appendix lists over 600 Benevantan manuscripts. (1914) | ||||
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Four Martyrdoms from the Pierpoint Morgan Coptic Codices | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| AEA Reymond; JWB Barns | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1998 290 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198154488 | ||||
| Published Price £14.99 | Our Price £11.99 | |||
| These four works, presented in Coptic with English translations, purport to record the acta of martyrs in the great persecutions of the 4th century. Three are 'epic' Egyptian martyrologies in which the hero defies a villainous persecuting judge, is subjected to incredible tortures and miraculously recovers several times before final execution. The text on St Coluthus, however, records his trial by Arianus without any embellishment and offers an insight into the process by which the words and deeds of historical people were elaborated into more or less stupendous stories. (1973) | ||||
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The Letters of Osbert of Clare | |||
| Sandpiper Editions | ||||
| EW Williamson (Edited by) | ||||
| Oxford University Press 1998 232 pages | ||||
| Hardback 0198206186 | ||||
| Published Price £12.99 | Our Price £13.99 | |||
| Osbert of Clare (fl.1136) was a monk of Westminster, elected Prior in 1136, and best known for his lives of saints Edmund, Ethelbert, Edburga and Edward. Osbert was an active ecclesiastical politician who was twice banished from the monastery and also went to Rome as an advocate for the canonization of Edward the Confessor. His letters reflect the active, though not always successful, part he played in 12th century ecclesiastical life. This volume presents the Latin texts of Osbert's letters, with critical introduction and notes and an essay on Osbert's career by Joseph Armitage Robinson. (1929) | ||||
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