Prolegomena to a critical edition of the Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa, with a discussion of computer-aided methods used to edit the text
The Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa is the primary Armenian-language historical source for the eleventh and early twelfth centuries. Matthew was a monk who lived in the ethnically mixed city of Edessa; within his Chronicle, he describes the apogee of independent Armenia, its fall to piecemeal Byzant...
Main Author: | Andrews, T |
---|---|
Other Authors: | van Lint, T |
Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2009
|
Subjects: |
Similar Items
-
Defining the castle through twelfth-century chronicle perceptions in the Anglo-Norman regnum
by: Cowan, KR
Published: (2014) -
Kinship and the distribution of power in Kommenian Byzantium
by: Frankopan, P
Published: (2007) -
Usurpation and the construction of legitimacy in imperial panegyric, 289-389
by: Omissi, A
Published: (2013) -
From Romans to Goths and Franks: ethnic identities in sixth- and seventh-century Spain and Gaul
by: Buchberger, E
Published: (2012) -
Beyond schools and monasteries: literate education in late Roman Syria (350-450 AD)
by: Rigolio, A
Published: (2013)