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         Barbarians Medieval History:     more books (62)
  1. Blood-brothers: a ritual of friendship and the construction of the imagined barbarian in the middle ages [An article from: Journal of Medieval History] by K. Oschema, 2006-09-01
  2. Barbarians, Maps, and Historiography (Variorum Collected Studies Series) by Walter Goffart, 2009-03-28
  3. On Barbarian Identity: Critical Approaches to Ethnicity (SEM 4) (Studies in the Early Middle Ages)
  4. Kingdoms of the Empire: The Integration of Barbarians in Late Antiquity (Transformation of the Roman World)
  5. Barbarians: Secrets of the Dark Ages by Richard Rudgley, 2002-06-21
  6. Barbarian West 400 - 1000 by J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, 1996-12-16
  7. The Barbarians: Warriors and Wars of the Dark Ages by Tim Newark, 1988-09
  8. Education and Culture in the Barbarian West: From the Sixth through the Eighth Century by Pierre Riche, 2008-08-01
  9. Landscape with Two Saints: How Genovefa of Paris and Brigit of Kildare Built Christianity in Barbarian Europe by Lisa M. Bitel, 2009-05-19
  10. Minorities and Barbarians in Medieval Life (Sewanee Mediaeval Studies, No 7)
  11. Barbarian and noble, (Medieval builders of the modern world) by Marion Florence Lansing, 1911
  12. Women Warlords: An Illustrated Military History of Female Warriors (Barbarians) by Tim Newark, 1991-01
  13. THE BRITISH BARBARIANS by Grant Allen, 2010-01-25
  14. The Barbarian Conversion: From Paganism to Christianity by Richard Fletcher, 1999-11-01

21. Fall 1999 Medieval Studies FWS Descriptions
Using the resources of anthropology, archaeology, and history, we will reassessmedieval and modern depictions of barbarians, in an effort to understand the
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/medieval/FWSFall99.html
Home Degree Courses Faculty ... Events
Medieval Studies FWS Descriptions
Fall 1999
Medieval Studies Freshman Writing Seminars fall into the following categories:
Aspects of Medieval Culture Section one: Chaucer's Clerk and Prioress: Medieval hate speech? We'll explore two of Chaucer's strangest and most intriguing Canterbury Tales. The Clerk tells the story of a man who cruelly "tests" his wife by making her believe he's killed their children; the Prioress tells about a young boy murdered by Jews and thrown into a privy. Should the questionable subject-matter and messages of these tales keep us from enjoying them as literature? Why are these tales still popular today, despite their unflattering presentation of minority groups? In this class, we'll discuss medieval history, art, and music and try different ways of reading to get a handle on these complicated texts. We'll extend the discussion into our own time and finish by seeing the 1995 film The Last Supper. Six papers will be assigned. >>Wetherbee, W. TR 10:10-11:25 Russell, R.

22. Syllabus - Medieval World (Nirenberg)
Geary Tacitus, Germania; Hollister, medieval Europe, Chapters 3 and 4. Fri. Sep.27 barbarians at the helm Reading Geary Gregory of Tours, history of the
http://www.jhu.edu/~history/html/Nirenberg_100.102_Syllabus.html
Syllabus - The History of Occidental Civilization - The Medieval World Professor David Nirenberg
History 102: The History of Occidental Civilization: The MedievalWorld
Lectures: Thu-Fri, 12-12:50, Rem 101 Professor David Nirenberg
316 Gilman Hall
phone: 6-7582
e-mail: nirenberg@jhu.edu
office hours: Fri. 1-3 The readings for this course have been arranged in weekly units. Students are expected to complete all of each week's reading by the date of the lecture under which they appear. Readings will be discussed in section the week following the lecture. All books will be available from the Reserve Room at the Eisenhower Library as well as for purchase at the Hopkins Bookstore. Since most of the readings are published in paperback, students are urged to buy books for their own use in class. A list of the most important readings to buy will be found at the end of the assignments. From time to time, the section instructor may suggest other reference works, which can be consulted on aspects of the course. There will be one mid-semester exam, a short paper (1-2 pp.) and a longer paper (7-10 pp.), and a final examination.

23. UW Press - : Romans And Barbarians
and barbarians can and should be recommended to students of the late Roman Empire,of early Germanic history and society, and of the early medieval history of
http://www.wisc.edu/wisconsinpress/books/1878.htm
European History / Classics / German Studies
Romans and Barbarians
The Decline of the Western Empire
E. A. Thompson
WITH A NEW FOREWORD BY F. M. CLOVER AND J. H. W. G. LIEBESCHUETZ
Wisconsin Studies in Classics
Available for the first time in paperback, this classic work by renowned historian E.A. Thompson examines the fall of the Roman Empire in the West from the barbarian perspective and experience. Standard interpretations of the decline of the Roman Empire in the West view the barbarian invaders as destroyers. Thompson, however, argues that the relationship between the invaders and the invaded was far more complex than the common interpretation would suggest. This edition includes a new foreword by F.M. Clover and J. H. W. G. Liebeschuetz " Romans and Barbarians can and should be recommended to students of the late Roman Empire, of early Germanic history and society, and of the early medieval history of the Mediterranean area and of western and central Europe. . . . Thompson himself points out that very rarely if ever can we penetrate into the minds and attitudes of the barbarians whom we are trying to understand. In this and other writings Thompson has come as close to achieving this ideal as anyone is likely to."—Welden A. Ernest, German Studies Review "E. A. Thompson is one of the pioneers of the revival in the study of Late Antiquity. . . . [Here he] shows, once again, what can be done with a critical reading of the exiguous sources and relentless pursuit of their implications. Thompson's characteristic terse elegance, wit, and lucidity make the book as delightful to read as it is constantly illuminating."—R. A. Markus

24. Hist6402 - Romans And Barbarians 400-700: The Transformation Of The Roman World
13. New Cambridge Ancient history vol.14. NB New Cambridge medieval historyvol. 2. Jf Matthews T. Cornell, Atlas of the Roman World. Ed.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/history/courses/6402/gen.htm
GENERAL RESOURCES Introductory Surveys The Evolution of the late Antique World P.R.L. Brown, The World of Late Antiquity Idem. The Rise of Western Christendom Averil Cameron, The late Roman Empire Id. The Mediterranean in late Antiquity R. Collins, Early Medieval Europe Reference Works (now v. impt. resource) New Cambridge Ancient History vol. 13 New Cambridge Ancient History vol.14 N.B. New Cambridge Medieval History vol. 2 Atlas of the Roman World Atlas of Medieval Europe

25. Hist6402 - Romans And Barbarians 400-700: The Transformation Of The Roman World
Antiquity. J. Corbett, The Saint as Patron in the work of Gregoryof Tours, Journal of medieval history 7 (1981) 117. R. Van
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/history/courses/6402/gregory.htm
2. GREGORY OF TOURS Gregory of Tours, HISTORY OF THE FRANKS plus religious writings translated in the Liverpool Translated Texts for Historians series: LIFE OF THE FATHERS GLORY OF THE CONFESSORS GLORY OF THE MARTYRS for comparison: Venantius Fortunatus trans. J. George Fredegar Chronicle book 4 trans. J.M. Wallace-Hadrill Secondary i) Gregory as Writer W. Goffart, Narrators of Barbarian History (long) chapter on Gregory of Tours; n.b. my review in Journal of Roman Studies Use Bibliography G. de Nie, Views from a Many-Windowed Tower I.N. Wood, 'The Secret Histories of Gregory of Tours', in Revue Belge de philologie et histoire (last issue or 2) I.N. Wood, "Gregory of Tours and Clovis", Revue Belge de Philologie et d'histoire J.M. Wallace-Hadrill, "The work of Gregory of Tours in the light of Modern Research," T.R.H.S. 5.1 (1951) also in The Long-Haired Kings ii) Gregory as Bishop P.R.L Brown, "Relics and Social Status in the Age of Gregory of Tours,"

26. Medieval History
D104 .C55 1998 Chronicles of the barbarians firsthand accounts of pillage and conquest,from the D113 .D7 1967 David, C. (ed.) Sources of medieval history.
http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/departments/INFO/library/subjects/HIST/medieval.html
MEDIEVAL HISTORY
400-1500 A.D.
Primary Sources in English
in the University of Calgary Library
compiled by NORA ROBINS, HISTORY LIBRARIAN Library Research Services
University of Calgary
INTRODUCTION "A primary source is distinguished from a secondary by the fact that the former gives the words of the witness, or first recorder of an event. The historian, using a number of such primary sources, produces a secondary source". (Barzun, The Modern Historian , p. 94). A primary source is a work written at a time that is contemporary or nearly contemporary with the subject or period under study. Primary sources provide the raw data and information for the historian. A secondary source is a work that contains the explanation of, and judgements on, this primary material. A historical work is considered scholarly and reliable according to the extent to which it is based on "primary" sources, (i.e. the basic, raw, imperfect evidence). The book the historian writes is a "secondary" source. This bibliography is a selective list of primary sources in English, available in the University of Calgary Library. It is selective because these books represent a small portion of those available in the collection. The arrangement is by call number within each subject grouping To be used in conjunction with "Medieval Western Monasticism: Primary Sources in English in the University of Calgary Library."

27. BA In Ancient And Medieval History ~ Programme Requirements
HTST 321 High and Late medieval Europe, 1076 one full-course equivalent from AncientHistory ANCH 405 Mediterranean ANCH 407 - Romans and barbarians ANCH 409
http://www.ucalgary.ca/HIST/ANME/ba.html
BA in Ancient and Medieval History Program Requirements A joint major in Ancient and Medieval History is offered by the Department of History and the Department of Greek, Latin, and Ancient History. Students may register for this Major program in either the Faculty of Social Sciences or the Faculty of Humanities. For the Major, the required courses are below. Please note that several courses have prerequisites or require departmental consent for enrolment. It is the responsibility of students to consult the University calendar or to contact the Department to ensure that they have the necessary prerequisite or equivalent for courses in their program.
The requirements for the Major are:
  • All of:

  • Ancient History
    ANCH 345 - The Early Roman Empire
    ANCH 347 - Late Roman Antiquity
    ANCH 349 - The Byzantine Empire Historical Studies
    HTST 319 - Early Medieval Europe, 410-1076 (formerly HIST 345)
    HTST 321 - High and Late Medieval Europe, 1076-1418 (formerly HIST 347)
    HTST 323 - Renaissance Europe, 1350-1550 (formerly HIST 307) This requirement constitutes the core program.

    28. HI 365 Spring 2003
    of this course students will be expected to identify major themes, ideas, persons,and events in medieval history. 16 Movement of the barbarians, 500 BCAD 500
    http://phoenix.marymount.edu/~csnyder/HI365(spr03).htm
    MARYMOUNT UNIVERSITY COURSE SYLLABUS Course Number HI 365 Course Title History of Medieval Europe Fall Semester Spring Semes­ter Spring Summer Semes­ter Year Name of Instructor Dr. Christopher A. Snyder Meeting Day, Time, and Room Number T Th 2:00 – 3:15 PM Rowley 61 Office Info and Office Hours ROWL 62D T Th 10 – 12 Phone: 703-284-3857 Internet E-mail address: csnyder@marymount.edu Course web page: http://phoenix.marymount.edu/~csnyder/HI365(spr03).htm BROAD PURPOSE OF COURSE This course examines the history of medieval Europe from the fall of the Roman Empire to the European discovery of the New World. COURSE OBJECTIVES Upon successful completion of this course students will be expected to identify major themes, ideas, persons, and events in medieval history. Students will also be expected to communicate their understanding of these both orally and through written essays. TEACHING METHOD The textbook provides a good historical narrative that is essential for understanding the periods covered by the exams. You will be lost in class if you do not do your textbook reading assignments. Lectures will seldom cover the same material as the text, but rather offer a more detailed perspective on certain significant figures and themes.

    29. Recent Courses
    HI 365 medieval history (Spring 1999). HI 380 history of Early Modern Europe(Spring 2000). HI 395/HU595 Europe and the barbarians (Summer 2000).
    http://phoenix.marymount.edu/~csnyder/recent.html
    Dr. Christopher A. Snyder
    Marymount University RECENT COURSES
    HI203: Western Civilization I (Spring 1998)
    HI 360:Ancient History (Fall 1998) HU 502:Medieval World View (Fall 1998) HI 203: Western Civilization I (Spring 1999) ... HI/POL250: Research and Writing (Fall 1999) HI 375: Renaissance and Reformation Europe (Fall 1999) HU 501:Classical Worldview (Fall 1999) HI 204: Western Civilization II (Spring 2000) HI/POL 250: Research and Writing (Spring 2000) HI 380: History of Early Modern Europe (Spring 2000) ... HI375: Renaissance and Reformation Europe (Fall 2001) HI 203 European History I (Summer 2002) HU 202: The Western Tradition II HI/POL 250: Research and Writing HU 501: The Classical Worldview SEM 101 P Freshman Seminar ... HI 304 History of the British Isles I

    30. The Suevi (Swabian) Barbarians - Die Schwaben
    A quick history of Suevia (Swabia). Swabia (German Schwaben, Latin Suevia), withits capital at Augsburg, was a medieval duchy in the lands now forming
    http://art1.candor.com/barbarian/suevi.htm
    A quick history of Suevia (Swabia) Introduction The Suevi AD 500 - 1000 AD 1000 - 1500 The Donauscwaben Back to mainpage Introduction Swabia (German Schwaben, Latin Suevia), with its capital at Augsburg, was a medieval duchy in the lands now forming southwestern Germany. Its territories covered the area now occupied by Baden-Württemberg (the Black Forest) and parts of western Bavaria (to the Iller River) and northern Switzerland. It owes its importance to its strategic position between the upper reaches of two of Europe's most important rivers, the Danube and the Rhine. The region was first known to the Romans as Alamannia because at the time its settlers were the Germanic tribe of Alamans. When the Romans began to conquer the area, it was incorporated as part of the Agri Decumates. It later received its present name from later German migrants, the Suevi, who became amalgamated with the Alamanni in the 5th century AD. The Suevi Back to top These Suevi are probably actually best thought of as a collective group of a number of German tribes (including the Marcomanni and Lombards), which are mentioned in the 1st century BC by Gaius Julius Caesar as dwelling east of the Rhine River. The Roman historian Cornelius Tacitus (1st century AD) described them as inhabiting all of central Germany. One group of Suevi, allied with the Vandals and the Alans, swept down on the Iberian Peninsula in AD 407, conquered it from the Hispano-Romans living there, and apportioned out the territory. As a result, by 411 the Suevi were established in present-day northern Portugal and Galicia, and by 452, in Castile. They adopted Catholic Christianity and ruled until 469 when they were subjugated by the Visigoths, who had been co-opted by the rulers at Rome. The Suevi, and Alamanni, who remained in

    31. HIST 331, Medieval Mediterranean
    The combined libraries of CSB/SJU and the Hill Monastic Manuscript Library haveexcellent resources in medieval history. B. Romanization of barbarians.
    http://www.hmml.org/centers/malta/mediterranean/mediterranean.htm
    HIST 331, Medieval Mediterranean
    Spring Semester 2001
    Meets: Days 1-3-5, 11:20-12:30, Quad 343 Instructor: Dr. Theresa Vann
    Office: Hill Monastic Manuscript Library
    Office hours : I am available between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 in the Hill Monastic Manuscript Library (Bush Center, next door to Alcuin Library). Please call to make sure I am there before you stop by.
    Phone: e-mail: tvann@csbsju.edu Course description: This course will explore the Mediterranean world from the age of Constantine to the fall of Constantinople (4 th century - 1453). Books: (Available in the bookstore) David Abulafia Steven Runciman The Fall of Constantinople Warren Treadgold A History of the Byzantine State and Society On-line resources: The Internet Medieval Sourcebook . Primary source readings in the public domain. Accessible from almost every computer. ORB: The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies. Primary source readings and refereed articles published online. Iter Gateway to the Middle Ages. Medieval history bibliography. Available by subscription only through CSB/SJU networked computers. The Labyrinth.

    32. Medieval Worlds -- Barbarians, Heretics, And Artists In The Middle Ages -- Arno
    barbarians, Heretics, and Artists in the Middle an imaginatively narrated tour ofmedieval society and in his sophisticated philosophical approach to history.
    http://www.semcoop.com/detail/0226066576
    Search for Author/Title Keyword Title Author Publisher ISBN Featured Books in All Scholarly Subjects African American Studies African Studies American Studies Anthologies Anthropology Architecture Asian Studies Books on Books Chicago Cinema studies Media Studies Classical studies Critical Theory/Marxism Cultural Studies Geography Performance Studies Science studies Drama Economics Education Environmental studies Feminist theory/Women's study Fiction Folktales French Stuff General Interest Highlights History African African American American East Asia Eastern European European Latin American Medieval Middle East Russian South asian Southeast Asian Historiography Misc. History Humor International relations Journals Just for Fun Latin American/Caribbean St. Law Linguistics Literary Studies Literary Criticism Referenc Literary MOSTLY Theory Literary NOT Theory Mathematics Medicine/Health/AIDS Native American Studies Philosophy Photography Poetry Political Science/Sociology (Post)colonial studies Psychology Reference Foreign language reference General Reference Religious studies Black Theology Buddhist studies Islamic studies Biblical studies - New Test Biblical studies Old Test.

    33. Medieval History
    medieval Reader, p. 3241 Roman View of the barbarians. BEDE THE VENERABLE, HistoriaEcclesiastica Gentis Anglorum The history of the Primitive Church of England
    http://faculty.ed.umuc.edu/~wmood/medieval/assign.htm
    Assignments (under construction) 20 August Semester Begin: No Class. You should purchase your books and read the first chapter of Hollister. 22 August
    Hollister, Ch 1 Rome Becomes Christian, p. 9-27.
    WWW
    27 August
    Hollister, Ch 2 The Waning of the Western Empire, p. 28-41.
    WWW
    29 August Medieval Reader, p. 32-41.
    WWW
    Roman View of the Barbarians
    Angles and Saxons

    34. Darkage
    Internet history Sourcebooks Project; medieval Sourcebook The Roman Church; TheEuropean Middle Ages; The Heroic Age Homepage; Web Resources for barbarians and
    http://museums.ncl.ac.uk/Socantiqs/darkage.htm
    THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES
    OF NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE Links: Barbarian and Medieval Europe
    General

    35. Early Medieval Europe
    barbarians and Romans The Birth Struggle of Europe, AD 400700 The Secret history. EmergingMedieval Europe AD 400-1000 (which is available only on reserve at
    http://urban.hunter.cuny.edu/~thead/h311syl.htm
    History 311: Europe in the Early Middle Ages Professor Tom Head Spring 2000 Monday and Wednesday, 5:25-6:40
    Office: Hunter West 1507. Office hours: Mondays 1:30-3:00; Wednesdays, 2:30-4:00; or by appointment. Office phone: 772-5484. E-mail: thead@shiva.hunter.cuny.edu Professor’s personal website: http://urban.hunter.cuny.edu/~thead Course electronic reserve website (Eres): http://maxweber.hunter.cuny.edu/eres Password: clovis
    Required Books for History 311
  • Brown, Peter. The Rise of Western Christendom: Triumph and Diversity, 200-800 . (On reserve in library under call number Head.50.) Randers-Pehrson, Justine Davis. Barbarians and Romans: The Birth Struggle of Europe, A.D. 400-700 . (On reserve in library under call number DG319 .R36 1983.) Brentano, Robert (ed.). Early Middle Ages 500-1000 . (On reserve in library under call number Head.39.) Procopius. The Secret History . Trans. G. A. Williamson. (Other, older translations are available on electronic reserve, as well as in the library under the call number PA3612 .P85 D4, volume 6.) Beowulf and The Fight at Finnsburh . Ed and trans. Kevin Crossley-Holland. (On reserve in library under call number PR1583.D6 1975; another translation is also available under call number Head.11.)
  • 36. HallWorldHistory.com Early Medieval Europe 300-1000 (History
    Invasion of Europe by the barbarians at $11.16. The Barbarian West 4001000TheBarbarian West 400-1000 at $28.95. Readings in medieval HistoryReadings in
    http://hallworldhistory.com/index.php/Mode/product/AsinSearch/0312218869/name/Ea

    37. Chronicles Of The Barbarians : Firsthand Accounts Of Pillage And Conquest, From
    But if you have a hankering for ancient and earlymedieval history, Chroniclesof the barbarians will take you straight to the source.
    http://hallworldhistory.com/world/135.shtml
    Chronicles of the Barbarians : Firsthand Accounts of Pillage and Conquest, from the Ancient World to the Fall of Constantinople
    Home History Books World
    by David W. McCullough (Editor)
    See More Details

    Hardcover - 400 pages (November 1998)
    Times Books; ISBN: 0812930827 ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.25 x 10.30 x 7.50
    Reviews
    Amazon.com
    "When a Scythian overthrows his first enemy," Herodotus tells us, "he drinks his blood; and presents the king with the heads of the enemies he has killed in battle; for if he brings a head, he shares the booty that they take, but not if he does not bring one. He skins it in the following manner...." Well, OK, perhaps we don't need to revisit that part of the classics just now. But if you have a hankering for ancient and early-medieval history, Chronicles of the Barbarians will take you straight to the source. Among the other Greek and Roman authors cited in this anthology are Livy, Polybius, Tacitus, and Julius Caesar; later sections provide eyewitness glimpses of Genghis Khan ("in the subjugation of his foes his rigour and severity had the taste of poison") and Tamerlane (who "loved bold and brave soldiers, by whose aid opened the locks of terror and tore in pieces men like lions and through them and their battles overturned the heights of mountains"). One caveat: Edward Gibbon's passages on the death of Alaric and the Vandal attack on Rome are very eloquent, but they are, properly speaking, out of place in a collection of firsthand reports. Ron Hogan Synopsis

    38. Geary, P.J.: The Myth Of Nations: The Medieval Origins Of Europe.
    be traced to distinct ancient or early medieval peoples. relevance of such debatesto the history of modern in Antiquity 41 Chapter Three barbarians and Other
    http://pup.princeton.edu/titles/7124.html
    PRINCETON
    University Press SEARCH:
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    E-MAIL NOTICES
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    The Myth of Nations:
    The Medieval Origins of Europe
    Patrick J. Geary
    Shopping Cart Reviews Table of Contents
    Introduction [HTML] or [PDF format] Modern-day Europeans by the millions proudly trace back their national identities to the Celts, Franks, Gauls, Goths, Huns, or Serbsor some combination of the various peoples who inhabited, traversed, or pillaged their continent more than a thousand years ago. According to Patrick Geary, this is historical nonsense. The idea that national character is fixed for all time in a simpler, distant past is groundless, he argues in this unflinching reconsideration of European nationhood. Few of the peoples that many Europeans honor as sharing their sense of ''nation'' had comparably homogeneous identities; even the Huns, he points out, were firmly united only under Attila's ten-year reign. Geary dismantles the nationalist myths about how the nations of Europe were born. Through rigorous analysis set in lucid prose, he contrasts the myths with the actual history of Europe's transformation between the fourth and ninth centuriesthe period of grand migrations that nationalists hold dear. The nationalist sentiments today increasingly taken for granted in Europe emerged, he argues, only in the nineteenth century. Ironically, this phenomenon was kept alive not just by responsive populationsbut by complicit scholars. Ultimately, Geary concludes, the actual formation of European peoples must be seen as an extended process that began in antiquity and continues in the present. The resulting image is a challenge to those who anchor contemporary antagonisms in ancient mythsto those who claim that immigration and tolerance toward minorities despoil ''nationhood.'' As Geary shows, such ideologueswhether Le Pens who champion ''the French people born with the baptism of Clovis in 496'' or Milosevics who cite early Serbian history to claim rebellious regionsknow their myths but not their history.

    39. Concise CV -- Steve Muhlberger
    Paper history vs. Chronology medieval Chronicles and Modern Preconceptions. . centuryWest, and The Church, the Empire, and the barbarians Fifthcentury
    http://www.nipissingu.ca/department/history/muhlberger/cvmuhl.htm
    CURRICULUM VITAE
    Steven Muhlberger
    Associate Professor
    Department of History
    Nipissing University
    North Bay, Ontario P1B 8L7
    Phone: 705-474-3461 ext 4458
    Fax: 705-474-1947
    E-mail (preferred): stevem@faculty.unipissing.ca
    Academic Qualifications
    1981 Ph.D. University of Toronto (Early Medieval History)
    1974 M.A. University of Toronto (Medieval History)
    1972 B.A. Michigan State University (History)
    Academic Appointments
    1993- Associate Professor, Nipissing University
    1989-1993 Assistant Professor, Nipissing University
    1988-1989 Assistant Professor, Trent University (Peterborough, Ont.) and Brock University (St. Catharines, Ont.) 1985-1988 Assistant Professor, University of Toronto 1982-1984 Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
    Scholarly Publications
    Books
    Jousts and Tournaments: Charny and the rules for chivalric sport in fourteenth-century France. Union City, California: The Chivalry Bookshelf. The Fifth-Century Chroniclers: Prosper, Hydatius and the Chronicler of 452 . Leeds: Francis Cairns Publications, Ltd.
    On-line essays
    "Fighting for Fun? What Was At Stake in Formal Deeds of Arms of the 14th Century?"

    40. Medieval And Late Ancient Publications -- Steve Muhlberger
    Review of Peter S. Wells, The barbarians Speak How of Richard W. Kaeuper, Chivalryand Violence in medieval Europe. In International history Review, 22 8846
    http://www.nipissingu.ca/department/history/muhlberger/mapub.htm
    Steve Muhlberger's
    Publications on the Middle Ages and Late Antiquity
    Books
    Jousts and Tournaments: Charny and the rules for chivalric sport in fourteenth-century France. Union City, California: The Chivalry Bookshelf. The Fifth-Century Chroniclers: Prosper, Hydatius and the Gallic Chronicler of 452 . Leeds: Francis Cairns Publications, Ltd.
    On-line essays
    "Fighting for Fun? What Was At Stake in Formal Deeds of Arms of the 14th Century?" at
    http://www.unipissing.ca/department/history/muhlberger/froissart/fp.htm
    Overview of Late Antiquity . In ORB: On-line Reference Book for Medieval Studies (http://orb.rhodes.edu/) at http://www.unipissing.ca/department/history/orb/ovindex.htm
    On-line reference works
    1997 Editor, Tales from Froissart , at http://www.unipissing.ca/department/history/froissart/tales.htm 1997 Editor, "A Visual Tour through Late Antiquity" (using materials originally compiled by Haines Brown for his "Images from History" site), at http://www.unipissing.ca/department/history/4505/show.htm 1996 Editor, Late Antiquity in the Mediterranean . In ORB: On-line Reference Book for Medieval Studies (http://orb.rhodes.edu/) at http://www.unipissing.ca/department/history/orb/lt-atest.htm)

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