Alongside annals, chronicles were the main genre of historical writing in the Middle Ages. Their significance as sources for the study of medieval history and culture is today widely recognised not only by historians, but also by students of medieval literature and linguistics and by art historians. The series The Medieval Chronicle aims to provide a representative survey of the on-going research in the field of chronicle studies, illustrated by examples from specific chronicles from a wide variety of countries, periods and cultural backgrounds.
págs. 1-32
Restricted Access Autorité spirituelle et pouvoir royal chez Wace: pour une relecture du Roman de Rou
págs. 33-58
págs. 59-80
Restricted Access ‘Du commencement du monde depuis que Dieu ot fait ciel et terre’: Une chronique universelle en français composée à Valenciennes sous le règne de Philippe le Bel
págs. 81-105
Restricted Access Paroemiae to SS Boris and Gleb: Complementarity of Chronicles and Liturgical Canon in the Creation of the Image of the First Russian Saints
págs. 106-130
págs. 131-148
Restricted Access Between Authorship and Anonymity: The Case of the Venetian Chronicles
págs. 149-181
Restricted Access Rethinking the Chronicle: Modern Genre Theory Applied to Medieval Historiography
págs. 182-200
Richard II’s Rejection of Counsel in the Westminster Chronicle and Thomas Walsingham’s: Chronica Maiora
págs. 201-222
Constructing Political Time: Temporal Structures of Meaning in the Old Swedish Chronicles. Prosaiska krönikan and Lilla rimkrönikan
págs. 223-246
págs. 247-265
2000 Cows and 4000 Pigs at One Sitting: Was the Gesta Francorum Written to Be Performed in Latin?
págs. 266-288
Restricted Access Bloodless Turks and Sanguine Crusaders: William of Malmesbury’s Use of Vegetius in His Account of Urban II’s Sermon at Clermont
págs. 289-308
págs. 309-311
págs. 312-314
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