30 matching results for "GregoryBlount":
From Mundane Medieval Academia » Academic Journals & Organizations » British Studies » Anglo-Saxon Studies
For those interested in English history, archaeology, literature, language, religion, society, and numismatics between the years c. 450 and 1100 AD.
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From Mundane Medieval Academia » Academic Journals & Organizations » British Studies » Celtic Studies
The Celtic Studies Associatio n of North America (CSANA) embraces all aspects of Celtic Studies and provides the kind of forum that is unavailabl e in any discipline - or area-based organizati on. Our members are interested in the languages, literature , history, folklore, music, art and archaeolog y of ancient, medieval and modern Celtic cultures. We have members interested in Wales, Ireland, Scotland, Brittany, Cornwall and the continenta l Celts.
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Open to contributions in all fields studying the Middle Ages, a period ranging from 500 to 1500. Its primary emphasis is on Western Europe, but Arabic, Byzantine, Hebrew, and Slavic studies are also included.
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From Mundane Medieval Academia » Academic Journals & Organizations » British Studies » Irish Studies
In the case of Ireland, Peritia sees the vernacular and Latin traditions , usually separated by disciplina ry boundaries , as expression s of a single cultural entity. It publishes on all medieval periods but it has tended to concentrat e on the earlier middle ages and has devoted very considerab le space to law, hagiograph y, palaeograp hy, computisti cs, institutio nal history, literary history, and art and archaeolog y.
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Homebase of the International Medieval Congress on Medieval Studies.
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Founded in 1925, the MAA is the largest organizati on in the world devoted to medieval studies.
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German Institute for the Study of the Middle Ages.
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Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts collection.
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Recognizin g the irreducibl e pluralism of the contempora ry critical map and regretting the frequent tendency to premature closure in favor of some familiar terminolog y, we would like to provide a forum where different methods, different terminolog ies, different approaches can communicat e without sacrificin g any of their distinctiv eness. Such communicat ion, we believe, will excite critical activity and conserve critical energy but do neither at the expense of the multiple, often random, voices of modern medievalis ts and Renaissanc e scholars. "Diver se folk diversely they seyde" is the watchword, we think, of a vital and productive community.
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A review journal of medieval literature .
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Formerly the Bryn Mawr Medieval Review, TMR operates as an electronic moderated distributi on list, providing a wealth of material of great value to scholars, students, and educators worldwide.
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The Online Medieval and Classical Library (OMACL) is a collection of some of the most important literary works of Classical and Medieval civilization.
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The Trust is well known for its investigations of the deeply stratified and well-preserved urban archaeological deposits of historic York.
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Includes online versions of several of their better-known medieval manuscripts.
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The Museum of London Group represents a quarter of a million years of history, and contains over a million items. Many of these can be discovered on their website.
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