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Medieval Studies
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Cambridge has developed an unrivalled list in medieval studies, which extends from monographic work of the highest originality and quality - in long-established series such as 'Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought' and 'Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature' - to more introductory volumes, many published as paperbacks, which touch upon virtually every aspect of the medieval world, in history, philosophy, religion, literature, art, architecture, and music. The Cambridge list also includes many major works of reference, best exemplified in recent years by the gradual publication since 1995 of 'The New Cambridge Medieval History'. |
Featured Titles
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German Histories in the Age of Reformations, 1400–1650
Thomas A. Brady Jr.
This book studies the connections between the political reform of the Holy Roman Empire and the German lands around 1500 and the sixteenth-century religious reformations, both Protestant and Catholic. It argues that the character of the political changes (dispersed sovereignty, local autonomy) prevented both a general reformation of the Church before 1520 and a national reformation thereafter.
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$27.99 (Z) |
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A History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire, Volume 1
From Beginnings to 1807
A. R. Disney
The Kingdom of Portugal was created as a by-product of the Christian Reconquest of Hispania. With no geographical raison d’etre and no obvious political roots in its Roman, Germanic, or Islamic pasts, it for long remained a small, struggling realm on Europe’s outer fringe. Then, in the early fifteenth century, this unlikely springboard for Western expansion suddenly began to accumulate an empire of its own, eventually extending more than halfway around the globe.
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$24.99 (Z) |
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A History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire, Volume 2
From Beginnings to 1807
A. R. Disney
The Kingdom of Portugal was created as a by-product of the Christian Reconquest of Hispania. With no geographical raison d’etre and no obvious political roots in its Roman, Germanic, or Islamic pasts, it for long remained a small, struggling realm on Europe’s outer fringe. Then, in the early fifteenth century, this unlikely springboard for Western expansion suddenly began to accumulate an empire of its own, eventually extending more than halfway around the globe.
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$24.99 (Z) |
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Strange Parallels
Southeast Asia in Global Context, c. 800–1830
Victor Lieberman
Blending fine-grained case studies with overarching theory, this book seeks both to integrate Southeast Asia into world history and to rethink much of Eurasia’s premodern past. It argues that Southeast Asia, Europe, Japan, China, and South Asia all embodied idiosyncratic versions of a Eurasian-wide pattern whereby local isolates cohered to form ever larger, more stable, more complex political and cultural systems.
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$39.99 (Z) |
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The Liturgy in Medieval England
A History
Richard W. Pfaff
This is the first comprehensive historical treatment of the Latin liturgy in medieval England. Richard Pfaff constructs a history of the worship carried out in churches - cathedral, monastic, or parish - primarily through the surviving manuscripts of service books, and sets this within the context of the wider political, ecclesiastical, and cultural history of the period.
Hardback | Learn More
$120.00 (C) |
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