BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Medieval History Author Brigham Young University Subjects european history, medieval history,renaissance history DeweyClass 940.21 ResourceType document index Location http://bubl.ac.uk/link/m/medievalhistory.htm
Extractions: BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About A-Z Index Titles Descriptions About.com: Medieval History Angelcynn: Anglo-Saxon Living History 400 - 900 AD Anglo-Saxon Studies: A Select Bibliography Argos: Limited Area Search of the Ancient and Medieval Internet ... Windows on Italy: Theatre Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk About.com: Medieval History Offers original articles and features about medieval history, plus annotated links to selected relevant Internet resources, compiled by a subject specialist, a subject-specific bulletin board, and details of related news and events. Topics include archaeology, architecture, armour and weaponry, Byzantine studies, the Crusades, Knightly Orders and the Knights Templar, Leonardo da Vinci, maps, Medieval Britain and Russia, online libraries and text collections, medieval history organisations, medieval religion, Renaissance studies, science and technology in the medieval period, timelines and chronologies, Vikings and women in the medieval period.
Grover Furr's Medieval History And Literature Page Check it out. Guide to medieval and renaissance history, by Melissa Snell,at the Mining Co. site (one of many interesting 'rings' of sites). http://www.chss.montclair.edu/english/furr/medieval.html
Extractions: Norwich Cathedral This photo is a "clickable map." If your browser supports them, you can click on different parts of the photo to go directly to the major sections of the Table of Contents. If it does not, use the regular TOC below. Medieval Literature and History Page How To Search the CHAUCER mailing list archives. My 1979 Ph.D. dissertation, The Quarrel of the Roman de la Rose and Fourteenth Century Humanism , is now on the web. (7.13.02) Welcome to my page of Medieval links on the WorldWide Web! The first group of sites provide links to just about everything available. I've put the other links here so that you (and I) won't have to hunt through several levels of screens on one of the first group of sites in order to find what we are looking for. If there is something you want that's not here, search the links in the first group. A note about the illustration: it's a commonplace for works on the Middle Ages to reproduce medieval MS illustrations or other artwork of the period. These almost without exception give the perspective of (a) a medieval person's view of the Middle Ages; a nd (b) an elitist interpretation of whatever is illustrated. I take our challenge to be to give a contemporary, more scientific, more objective interpretation of the Middle Ages and its culture. Accordingly, the illustration is a contemporary photograph of a Medieval cathedral: an interpretation using modern te chnology to make the Middle Ages understandable in terms meaningful to us today.
LSU Reveille Online - Renaissance, Medieval Studies Minor Discussed history professor, host the MARIS orientation Friday afternoon. The proposed programwould allow students the opportunity to minor in medieval and renaissance http://www.lsureveille.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2003/02/04/3e3f5bbb60aa5
Extractions: HISTORY BUFFS: Dr. Maribel Dietz [left], a history professor, and Dr. Kirstin Noreen [right], a medieval art history professor, host the MARIS orientation Friday afternoon. The proposed program would allow students the opportunity to minor in medieval and renaissance studies. Students may have a new option in declaring an undergraduate minor with the start of the Medieval and Renaissance Interdisciplinary Studies project. The project, also known as MARIS, will work to bring a medieval and renaissance minor to the University, creating a core introductory class for students to take as a prerequisite. Maribel Dietz, a history professor, and Kirstin Noreen, a medieval art history professor, led an orientation Friday afternoon outlining the goals and purpose of the project.
Lectures On Ancient And Early Medieval History - Main Lecture 13 A Brief Social history of the Roman Empire. Lecture 19 Early MedievalMonasticism. Lecture 20 Charlemagne and the Carolingian renaissance. http://www.historyguide.org/ancient/ancient.html
Extractions: Welcome to The History Guide's Lectures on Ancient and Medieval European History. These lectures were written over the past ten years and served as the basis for my western civilization and upper level European history courses at Florida Atlantic University (Davie, FL), Broward Community College (Coconut Creek, FL), Vance-Granville Community College (Henderson, NC) and Meredith College (Raleigh, NC). The lectures presented here are between five and ten pages in length and are meant to be downloaded and printed. Of course, you can read them online if you wish. Please keep in mind that these lectures are intended for your education and edification and not for publication by anyone but myself. If you would like to link any of these pages to your own or use them in a classroom exercise or as a citation in one of your essays, please be courteous enough to let me know about it by sending me email . You should also read my Conditions of Use statement for particulars. If you are looking for my credentials, please consult my curriculum vitae The general theme which informs the bulk of these lectures is the creation of distinct "world views." Simply put, a world view is the mental construct which the individual utilizes to fashion their world. When we look at our experience, how is it that we give meaning to the tangle of ideas and phenomena with which we are confronted? From the mythopoeic world view of ancient Sumer to the humanism characteristic of the Renaissance, western man has come to know and understand his world in different ways. These lectures attempt to show just how the world view and the western tradition came to be and changed over the course of nearly 6000 years of historical development.
Extractions: "how much better we feel if we actually think once in a while, instead of running around like chickens with their heads cut off" Greetings and salutations. My name is Michelle Roberts. This web page is my attempt to share the delight and enjoyment I derive from the study of medieval culture and society.
Medieval And Renaissance Women's History medieval and renaissance Women's history. Women Writers medieval and renaissancehistory More women writers of the medieval and renaissance eras. http://womenshistory.about.com/cs/medieval/
Fashion History - Ancient - Medieval - Renaissance medieval Clothing and Fabrics Links from Melissa Snell, About's Guide to medievaland renaissance history, for more on medieval fashions for women and men. http://womenshistory.about.com/cs/fashionancmed/
MEL: Medieval History Comitatus A Journal of medieval and renaissance Studies; Dark Age Web Basic HeraldricResources; Horus Links to Western history by Period medieval history Guide; http://mel.lib.mi.us/humanities/history/HIST-medieval.html
BrockU - Department Of History - Medieval Resources Alcoholic Drinks Alcoholic Drinks of the Middle Ages recipes, history, theoryof distillation. medieval/renaissance Brewing - recipes, articles, and other http://www.brocku.ca/history/medieval.html
Dans Medieval World Bede. Ecclesiastic history of the English People. The Northumbrian renaissance. LesTres Riches Heures The medieval Seasons (Jean, Duke of Berry). http://users.aol.com/muaddib721/medieval.htm
Extractions: Towards the end of the seventh and the beginning of the eighth centuries there was a cultural renaissance in Northumbria (what is now Northumberland in northern England). My thesis is on what caused that renaissance and how it affected women, particularly Hild who was abbess at and founder of Whitby abbey (did women have a renaissance?). My criteria for a renaissance (regarding women) are: 1) how did the general populaces view and regulation of female sexuality compare to male sexuality, 2) the economic and political roles of women (property and power), and 3) the power of women to shape societys outlook and their access to education (cultural roles). A major goal of my paper is to deconstruct Bede and redefine the period in a more unbiased context. Hild and Whitby Hild founded a double monastery (both male and female) at Whitby in 657 with a royal gift of land from King Oswiu of Northumbria. Oswiu had just won an important battle over his Mercian adversary Penda; before the battle Oswiu had promised 10 estates to the church if he won his upcoming battle (bribing God), one of which was the gift of ten hides (one hide equals roughly 3.75 square miles) of land to Hild. Hild was born in 614 in northern England. She was of noble birth, like many high ranking church officials, being the grand-niece of King Edwin of Northumbria. The first 33 years of her life were spent in the secular world (it is strongly suspected that she was married during this time). The last 33 years of her life (she died at age 66 in 680 of some sort of wasting sickness) she spent in the church, baptized by Aidan of Lindisfarne she spent a year in East Anglia and Chelles, France (where she had a sister), then was made abbess of Hartlepool abbey. After some years there she left to found the double monastery at Whitby.
Medieval And Renaissance Book Production - Printed Books EP Goldschmidt, Gothic and renaissance Bookbindings (London NR Ker, Fragments ofMedieval Manuscripts Used in 1954); Dorothy Miner, The history of Bookbinding http://orb.rhodes.edu/encyclop/culture/books/medbook2.html
Extractions: As the fifteenth century progressed, so too increased the pressure on the book trade to produce ever larger quantities of books. The traditional scriptoria and ateliers were hard pressed to meet the demand. Indeed many monastic scriptoria, long dormant, found renewed life in meeting the growing demand for books. This renewal was stimulated, in part, by the ardent conviction of the importance of books and reading, and thus copying, by the Brethren of the Common Life, the Sisters of the Common Life, the Windesheim Congregation, and others.[ ] Spurred on by recent reforms, many ancient Benedictine houses reestablished or greatly expanded their scriptoria. Yet even so, demand still exceeded production. The time could not have been more propitious for the introduction of a mechanical means of mass producing books. There can be little doubt that Johann Gutenberg was the inventor, not so much of the printing press, but of the manufacture of movable type.[
Ken's WebSampler: Middle Ages & Renaissance photos, links); medieval renaissance Studies at W L; medievalFrance (huge site!); medieval history (by Melissa Snell); medieval http://www.telerama.com/~kholt/WebSampler/ma-ren.html
Extractions: Serious Study The Age of King Charles V (Manuscript illuminations) Amiens Cathedral Ancient World Web (meta-index) Anglo-Saxon directory Antiquity Online Argos (Ancient/Medieval studies search engine) The Art of Renaissance Science The Atrium The Battle of Agincourt Beinecke Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts ... Byzantium (Byzantine studies) Castle Studies Group Chartres Cathedral: Floor Plans and drawings Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy The Complete Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Poetry ... The Decameron (Medieval accounts of the Plague) The Ecole Initiative (encyclopedia of early church history) Electric Renaissance (European History, 1300-1500) Feudal Dictionary Gargoyles Gothic Cathedrals of Europe Gothic Dreams (Explore multiple aspects of Gothic cathedrals) Heraldry Hill Monastic Manuscript Library Homepage Historic Traction Trebuchet Illustrations Historic Weight-Powered Trebuchet Illustrations ... Hwaet! (Old English and Anglo-Saxon England) Internet Medieval Sourcebook The Knights Templar Preceptory Labyrinth (Medieval studies resources) Lancaster Priory (UK) Later Medieval Britain (Discussions, castle photos, links)
Medieval And Renaissance Fact And Fiction site provides links to transcriptions, translations and facsimiles of documents fromall periods of European history, including medieval renaissance Europe. http://www.angelfire.com/mi/spanogle/medieval.html
Extractions: This page is meant to be a guide to resources available on the Web for people who are interested in the history, culture, literature and re-creation of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. There are hundreds of sites on the Middle Ages on the Web. I know I have only a small percentage of what is out there, but I have tried to organize this site so that you will have an easier time finding what you want. Please e-mail me to let me know about good sites that I haven't included yet. Welcome to my site. Feel free to explore, and please come back again, because I'm always adding new resources to the list.
Error 404: Page Not Found medieval Links An Internet Book on the medieval/renaissance/Reformation WorldThe Internet for medievalists Internet Resources on the history of medieval http://libraries.cua.edu/irmedbyz.html
Extractions: President CUA Athletics Mullen Library Public Affairs Summer Sessions CUA Magazine CUA Today Alumni Center Campus Programs Directions to CUA CUA Home The document that you requested, http://libraries.cua.edu/irmedbyz.html , cannot be found...if you reached this page from a link in the CUA websites, please inform the CUA webmaster as shown below. If you reached this page from another website, please inform that site's webmaster about the bad link. You may wish to go back to the page that brought you here. What page did you come from to get this error?
NM's Creative Impulse..Medieval Who's Who in medieval history and renaissance intended to help you find informationabout significant individuals from the Middle Ages and renaissance, when http://history.evansville.net/medieval.html
Extractions: NM's Creative Impulse The Development of Western Civilization World History Medieval World Search or Look it up in the Encyclopedia Britannica Contact Information Medieval Europe was a constant battleground, from petty border disputes to internal power struggles and National rivalries. The Church was as much a competitor as it was a peace keeper. Feudalism, the Roman Catholic Church and the Code of Chivalry provided the framework for the social, political and economic environments of Europe during the Middle Ages. Emphasis was on manor life in the Early Middle ages but shifted to the cities and commercial activities during the later period. Monasteries gave way to Universities as centers of learning. Medieval art was primarily art of the Church. After the period of migration (AD500 - 800) in which the art was small and personal, the Germanic tribes settled into the old Roman Empire. Intricate and organic designs dominated this period. Later, beautiful illuminated manuscripts as well as relief sculpture were used to instruct an illiterate faithful. Massive Romanesque and then richly ornate Gothic cathedrals with ethereal stain glass windows soared to unbelievable heights. The journey from pessimism and superstition to intellectual and creative revival was reflected in the changing styles of art. Back to Top Alcuin one page biography of the monk of minuscule manuscript fame.
Boke Of Gode Links: Medieval & Renaissance History & Research renaissance Games; medieval and renaissance Wedding Information Page; medievalAstrology; medieval Coats of Arms; medieval English urban history; medieval history http://www.godecookery.com/gdlinks/mhlink10.htm
Medieval History A WVC Library Research By Subject Page Wenatchee Valley College JOHN A BROWN LIBRARY. Research by Subject medieval renaissance history. Navigation Menu. medieval renaissance history. http://134.39.150.204/wvclib/Research/History/RBHistoryMedieval.html
Medieval And Renaissance Wedding Page General medieval renaissance history Sites Living history Groups PREVIOUS SITE,This medieval renaissance Wedding Ring site is owned by Kirsti Thomas. http://www.drizzle.com/~celyn/mrwp/mrwp.html
Extractions: Compiled and annotated by Jaelle of Armida , mundanely known as Judy Gerjuoy Historical Figures compiled by Beth Barter and Kate Carmichael You might also want to use these subject headings while searching for books at your local library Organized and compiled by BJ Kuehl for the alt.wedding and soc.couples.wedding newsgroups. Sections of the FAQ are duplicated on other parts of this page. Please email BJ directly with additions or corrections to the FAQ. Gunnora Hallakarva has written a paper on Courtship, Love and Marriage in Viking Scandinavia. Should you wish to use this information for anything other than your own personal research (such as a publishing it in a local SCA newsletter), please contact her for permission. Part I: Forward and Introduction Part II: The Function of Marriage in Viking Scandinavia Part III: Love, Courtship and Poetry