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Visigothic script was a type of medieval script that originated in the Visigothic Kingdom in Hispania (the Iberian Peninsula).Its more limiting alternative designations littera toletana and littera mozarabica associate it with scriptoria specifically in Toledo and with Mozarabic culture more generally, respectively.
Medieval Latin was the form of Literary Latin used in Roman Catholic Western Europe during the Middle Ages.It was also the administrative language in the former Roman Provinces of Mauretania, Numidia and Africa Proconsularis under the Vandals, the Byzantines and the Romano-Berber Kingdoms, until it declined after the Arab Conquest.
Corpus Corporum (Lat. "the collection of collections") or in full, Corpus Córporum: repositorium operum latinorum apud universitatem Turicensem, is a digital Medieval Latin library developed by the University of Zurich, Institute for Greek and Latin Philology.
This includes the original author, translator(s) and the translated document. Translations are from Old and Middle English, Old French, Old Norse, Latin, Arabic, Greek, Persian, Syriac, Ethiopic, Coptic, Armenian, and Hebrew, and most works cited are generally available in the University of Michigan's HathiTrust digital library [ 1 ] and OCLC's ...
Alhacen's Theory of Visual Perception: A Critical Edition with English Translation and Commentary of the First Three Books of Alhacen's De Aspectibus, the Medieval Latin Version of Ibn al-Haytam's Kitab al-Manazir. Volume One: Introduction and Latin Text. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 91, 4. Vol. 91.
4 languages. العربية ... Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Translators of the medieval Islamic world (4 C, 2 P) This page was ...
Folio 2r of the Chronicle of 754. The text is in the Visigothic script.. The Chronicle of 754 (also called the Mozarabic Chronicle or Continuatio Hispana) is a Latin-language history in 95 sections, [1] written by an anonymous Mozarab (Christian) chronicler in Al-Andalus. [2]
Medieval chronicles of England, in Middle English, Latin or Anglo-Norman, exemplified by the Brut chronicle, [437] [438] Gregory's chronicle, [439] and the Chronicon Angliae Petriburgense, [440] continued with chronicles of London. [441] It also includes the Chronicle of Melrose, the oldest independent account of the sealing of Magna Carta.