Medieval Slavic Lives of Saints and Princes
Author: Marvin Kantor
Publisher: University of Michigan Department of Slavic Lang Ures
Published: 1983
Total Pages: 322
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Marvin Kantor
Publisher: University of Michigan Department of Slavic Lang Ures
Published: 1983
Total Pages: 322
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Marvin Kantor
Publisher:
Published: 1983
Total Pages: 304
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Gareth Williams
Publisher: BRILL
Published: 2004-05-01
Total Pages: 166
ISBN-13: 9047405188
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis volume contains seven papers relating to Norse history and literature. Two cover issues of saga genre, two explore the relationship between sagas and medieval hagiography, and three consider aspects of the Norse settlement in Scotland from an interdisciplinary perspective. With contributions by Svanhildur Óskarsdóttir, Phil Cardew, Haki Antonsson, Gareth Williams, Barbara Crawford and Simon Taylor.
Author: Martyn Rady
Publisher: Basic Books
Published: 2023-05-02
Total Pages: 610
ISBN-13: 1541619773
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn essential new history of Central Europe, the contested lands so often at the heart of world history Central Europe has long been infamous as a region beset by war, a place where empires clashed and world wars began. In The Middle Kingdoms, Martyn Rady offers the definitive history of the region, demonstrating that Central Europe has always been more than merely the fault line between West and East. Even as Central European powers warred with their neighbors, the region developed its own cohesive identity and produced tremendous accomplishments in politics, society, and culture. Central Europeans launched the Reformation and Romanticism, developed the philosophy of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, and advanced some of the twentieth century’s most important artistic movements. Drawing on a lifetime of research and scholarship, The Middle Kingdoms tells as never before the captivating story of two thousand years of Central Europe’s history and its enduring significance in world affairs.
Author: Marcia A. Morris
Publisher: SUNY Press
Published: 1993-02-04
Total Pages: 276
ISBN-13: 9780791413005
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAn examination of literary works spanning more than seven centuries, this volume studies the ascetic hero and asceticism, exploring the elusive interplay between religion, politics, and belles lettres in Russia. The first part places works including the thirteenth-century Kievan Crypt Patericon and Life of Avraamii Smolenskii, Epifaniis Life of Sergii Radonezhskii, and other lives written in the north of Russia, in the context of crucial religious doctrines such as apocalypticism and deification. The author shows how Old Russian literature plays a major cultural role in the continuing development of these doctrines on Russian soil. The second part traces a revival of the Russian fascination with themes of apocalypse and perfectibility to the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Morris also documents the development of a divergence in ideological approach between Russian writers who continued to view apocalypticism and deification as religious phenomena and those who used them as tools of social and political struggle. Works by Gogol, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chernyshevsky, and Gorky, as well as classic novels of the socialist realist tradition are analyzed as evidence of the underlying unity of the literary manifestations of this ostensibly bifurcated intellectual tradition.
Author: Nicholas Rzhevsky
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2019-09-16
Total Pages: 566
ISBN-13: 1317476867
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRussia has a rich, huge, unwieldy cultural tradition. How to grasp it? This classroom reader is designed to respond to that problem. The literary works selected for inclusion in this anthology introduce the core cultural and historic themes of Russia's civilisation. Each text has resonance throughout the arts - in Rublev's icons, Meyerhold's theatre, Mousorgsky's operas, Prokofiev's symphonies, Fokine's choreography and Kandinsky's paintings. This material is supported by introductions, helpful annotations and bibliographies of resources in all media. The reader is intended for use in courses in Russian literature, culture and civilisation, as well as comparative literature.
Author: Hunt, Robert A
Publisher: Orbis Books
Published: 2014-04-10
Total Pages: 725
ISBN-13: 1608333906
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Gospel Among the Nations brings together in a single volume the most important primary documents illustrating how Christians have dealt with the most fundamental issue of the churchs mission: how to translate the gospel in new cultural settings. The texts range from Pope Gregorys famous instructions to Augustine of Canterbury on his mission to England, to W. E. Hockings fateful ""Attitudes toward People of Other Faiths.""
Beginning with a masterful introduction to the theme, Robert Hunt assembles scores of texts that reveal the way that missionaries, church leaders, and local Christians have contributed to the extension of Christianity over two millennia, and thus made it truly a world religion. The Gospel Among the Nations is an essential resource for students, researchers and practitioners in world Christian history and mission studies.
Author: Peter Heather
Publisher: Knopf
Published: 2023-04-04
Total Pages: 599
ISBN-13: 0451494318
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA major reinterpretation of the religious superstate that came to define both Europe and Christianity itself, by one of our foremost medieval historians. In the fourth century AD, a new faith grew out of Palestine, overwhelming the paganism of Rome and resoundingly defeating a host of other rival belief systems. Almost a thousand years later, all of Europe was controlled by Christian rulers, and the religion, ingrained within culture and society, exercised a monolithic hold over its population. But how did a small sect of isolated and intensely committed congregations become a mass movement centrally directed from Rome? As Peter Heather shows in this illuminating new history, there was nothing inevitable about Christendom's rise and eventual dominance. From Constantine the Great's pivotal conversion to Christianity to the crisis that followed the collapse of the Roman empire—which left the religion teetering on the edge of extinction—to the astonishing revolution of the eleventh century and beyond, out of which the Papacy emerged as the head of a vast international corporation, Heather traces Christendom's chameleonlike capacity for self-reinvention, as it not only defined a fledgling religion but transformed it into an institution that wielded effective authority across virtually all of the disparate peoples of medieval Europe. Authoritative, vivid, and filled with new insights, this is an unparalleled history of early Christianity.
Author: Nora Berend
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2013-12-19
Total Pages: 549
ISBN-13: 0521781566
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA groundbreaking comparative history of the formation of Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, from their origins in the eleventh century.
Author: Gábor Klaniczay
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2002-03-14
Total Pages: 518
ISBN-13: 9780521420181
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA study of medieval Hungarian and central European royal saints.