Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 [6] by Hans E. Mayer; Fordham University's Internet Medieval Sourcebook; [7] and The Crusades: An ...
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 ...
This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources . Find sources: "Fordham School of Professional and Continuing Studies" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( April 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this message )
Street side. The William D. Walsh Family Library is a library located at Fordham University's Rose Hill Campus in the Bronx, New York City.In its 2004 edition of The Best 351 Colleges, the Princeton Review ranked Fordham's William D. Walsh Family Library fifth in the country, ahead of Yale, Harvard, and Columbia.
This category contains articles related to Fordham University, an officially independent university in the Jesuit tradition, located in and around New York City Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fordham University .
Duane Library is a former library located at Fordham University's Rose Hill campus, originally constructed in 1926. After the construction of the William D. Walsh Family Library in 1997, Duane Library officially closed. Renovated in 2004, it now houses the university's admissions office and theology department.
The Peterborough Chronicle, a continuation of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, contains an account of the murder of William of Norwich: [2]. In his time the Jews of Norwich bought a Christian child before Easter, and tortured him with all the same tortures with which our Lord was tortured, and on Long-Friday hanged him on a cross for love of our Lord, and afterwards buried him—imagined that it ...