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The Internet History Sourcebooks Project is located at the Fordham University History Department and Center for Medieval Studies. It is a web site with modern, medieval and ancient primary source documents, maps, secondary sources, bibliographies, images and music. Paul Halsall is the editor, with Jerome S. Arkenberg as the contributing editor ...
Contemporary histories include the three-volume A History of the Crusades (1951–1954) by Steven Runciman; the Wisconsin collaborative study A History of the Crusades (1969–1989) edited by Kenneth M. Setton, particularly the Select Bibliography [13] by Hans E. Mayer; Fordham University's Internet Medieval Sourcebook; [14] and The Crusades ...
Byzantine Sources in Translation, Internet History Sourcebooks Project, Fordham University, New York (2019). Lists of available translations of Byzantine sources in Western European languages. [28] Geschichte des ersten Kreuzzuges (History and Literature of the Crusades), 1 volume, Düsseldorf, new edition Leipzig (1841, 1881).
Brian Paul Levack (born 1943) is an American historian of early modern Britain and Europe.. He received his B.A. (summa cum laude) from Fordham University in 1965, and then both his M.A. (1967) and Ph.D. (1970) from Yale.
Grants university status to the Augustinian society of higher learning in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland which became the University of St Andrews 1415 (May 11) Etsi doctoribus gentium: Against Talmud or any other Jewish book attacking Christianity 1417 Bull against Talmud 1418 Quod Antidota: Martin V: Exempt jurisdiction of Ecclesiastical courts
The Fordham University Press is a publishing house, a division of Fordham University, that publishes primarily in the humanities and the social sciences. Fordham University Press was established in 1907 [ 4 ] and is headquartered at the university's Lincoln Center campus.
enerations of primary school children have attempted to simulate nature in their classrooms in the run up to Christmas. They carefully cut out circles of white paper, fold them into halves, quarters and even eighths. They eagerly snip away at the edges with safety conscious round-ended scis - sors.
Opening page of the Libellus in the British Library's Cotton MS Cleopatra B. I. The Libellus de expugnatione Terrae Sanctae per Saladinum (Latin for "Little Book about the Conquest of the Holy Land by Saladin"), also called the Chronicon Terrae Sanctae ("Chronicle of the Holy Land"), is a short anonymous Latin account of the conquests of Saladin (Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn) in the Holy Land between ...