GUIDE TO THE STUDY OF MEDIEVAL HISTORY FOR STUDENTS, TEACHERS, AND LIBRARIES BY LOUIS JOHN PAETOW, PH.D. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MEDIEVAL HISTORY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA^WlES BERKELEY 1917 l UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SYLLABUS SERIES No. 90 Copyrighted, 1917, by L. J. PAETOW PREFACE Ever since the fall of 1914 the stream of historical writing on the middle ages has become thinner and thinner, so that today it is comparatively easy to keep abreast with the literature on the subject due to the phenomenal decrease of new contributions by European scholars. This sudden lull, preceded by a period of almost feverish activity in book-making, is a peculiarly propitious time for the making of inventories of the wealth of historical literature which has been produced in the century since the close of the Napoleonic wars. Such a task for medieval history is attempted in this Guide. The book has grown out of mimeographed syllabi prepared for two courses offered in the University of California, a general course in medieval history designed especially for juniors, and an advanced course in medieval culture for seniors and graduate students. These two syllabi have furnished the bases for parts n and in of this Guide. Part I, containing the most important general books useful in a study of medieval history, has been added in order to make the. manual as complete and comprehensive as is possible within its limits. These general books are referred to constantly in parts n and in by cross references to the black-faced numbers by which they are designated. The table of contents furnishes an analysis of the general books in part I. Part II is divided into thirty-five sections and part ill into twenty-eight sections. The titles and Eoman numbers of these sec- tions are indicated by means of analytical page headings. A section comprises a well-defined subject which represents approxi- mately one week's work in the courses mentioned above. Each section is divided into three parts: A, Outline; B, Special Recom- mendations for Reading; and C, Bibliography. "A," the Outline, aims to present the subject matter of the section in an orderly fashion, including the principal names and dates which readers will encounter in the books which are listed, and thus dispenses with the need of a text book. Under 'B, " Special Recommendations for Reading, are indicated such books and articles as are likely to appeal to undergraduates in college who have only a limited amount of time to give to the subject. The references are made as specific as possible and are graded and classified to suit various library conditions, individual tastes, and special requirements. Care has been taken to indicate, wherever possible, the original sources which are easily accessible and translated into English. "C," the Hi PREFACE Bibliography, presents a classified list of the most important special books and articles which will guide students in making reports and in preparing papers, but which is particularly designed for mature readers and for investigators who desire a survey of the most important literature in the fields in which they are interested. Ordinarily the literature on a given subject is thus divided under "B, " Special Recommendations for Reading, • and "C, " Bibli- ography, and should be sought for under both headings. At the end of each section are listed the special bibliographies which must be consulted by those who wish to pursue the subject to its ultimate limits. While the mimeographed syllabi mentioned above were designed for only certain grades of college students, this printed Guide has been modified and augmented so as to appeal to all classes of students and readers who have advanced beyond the textbook stage and who have access to good libraries. It is hoped that teachers will find it useful and that librarians will give it a place among their books of reference. The task of selection, which is always difficult, has been rendered peculiarly delicate by the plan to make the book appeal to so wide a circle of readers. The present resources and the future needs of the University of California Library have been made the basis of selection. In this Guide there are listed all books, valuable for a study of medieval history, which now are in this library, and in addition, all others on this subject, which, in the opinion of the author, should be acquired by the library in the near future. It is hoped that this basis of selection will be considered as practical and as representative as any which might have been adopted to suit conditions in America. The difficulty of choosing from the mass of literature in the various modern European languages has been met by selecting all the best material in English, French, and German, and by maki»g a more limited selection from books in Italian and Spanish. Except in rare instances, all the other modern European languages have been neglected. English history is not treated fully because in America the subject is usually taught in separate courses and because we have such admirable bibliographical guidance for the medieval period in the second edition of C. Gross, The sources and literature of English history. In a book of this kind there is not much space for commentary and criticism of individual wor'-s. Confrorted by the great diffi- culty of evaluating such a huge amount of literature, one is sorely tempted to give way to fear and to modesty by grouping books iv PREFACE alphabetically in long unclassified lists. But this way out of the difficulty has been avoided because the average reader dislikes to choose altogether for himself, or at least he is curious to know another's choice before he makes his own. Critical notes have been inserted here and there, but the main task of criticism is revealed in the selection itself and in the order in which the books and articles are listed. Throughout the work classification has been made as minute as possible and with rare exceptions, as in the case of text books on pages 41-44, under each heading the books which are considered the most important are listed first. On the whole, books written in English are probably judged a little more leniently than those in foreign languages, because in all doubtful cases the English books were given the benefit of the doubt. The occasional advantage of the alphabetical arrangement of books is not entirely lost by this system of grouping because it is in large measure supplied by the index. The index contains in one alphabet authors, editors, translators of medieval books, titles of large collections, and subjects on which there is special literature. All articles and papers, as well as books, are included. The blackfaced figures refer to numbers in part i; the light-faced figures to pages in parts n and in. Reference is made to the place where the title of a work is given in full. If the reader wants complete information concerning the title of a work which he finds mentioned in abbreviated form he should turn to the index which indicates the place where he will find the desired details. Librarians will find that the information given about books is sufficient to locate them readily in the trade catalogues. Again and again the author has been tempted to submit the manuscript to his friends who are specialists in this field of history, knowing full well how much the book would be benefitted by their criticism; but sore experience in bibliographical work has convinced him that it would not be fair to impose even portions of this task upon his friends. Thus he decided to be content with what- ever others had prepared for him in the form of printed books and syllabi and to do alone as much as his time, strength, patienco, and the facilities at his command permitted. Perhaps this will induce those whom he spared and others to be all the more willing to point out mistakes and omissions and to offer suggestions for improvement. L. J. PAETOW. "Berkeley, California, October 17, 1917. _ PART I GENERAL BOOKS CHAPTER I BIBLIOGBAPHICAL WORKS PAGE §1. Bibliographies of Bibliographies 1 §2. General Bibliographies: Catalogues of Large Libraries and Archives 1 §3. Bibliographies of Periodical Literature 3 §4. General Historical Bibliographies 3 §5. General Bibliographies of the Middle Ages 4 §6. Bibliographies of Various Countries 5 (a) France 5 (fc) Germany and Austria 6 (c) England 7 (d} Italy 7 (e) Spain 7 (f) Switzerland 8 (g) Belgium and Netherlands 8 (ft) Eussia 8 (t) Poland and Bohemia 8 (j) Scandinavia 8 §7. Bibliographies of Various Subjects 8 (a) Church 8 (&) Philosophy 9 s (c) Education '..... „.. 9 (d!) Law and Politics 10 (e) War 10 (f) Jews 10 CHAPTER II BOOKS OF REFERENCE Miscellaneous Books of Reference 11 (a) Guide to Reference Books 11 (ft) Historical Method 11 vii CONTENTS PAGE (c) Chronological and Tabular Aids 11 (d) Guides to Historical Fiction 12 (e) Words and Expressions Famous in History 12 (f) Guides to the Learned World 13 (g) Dictionary of Names — 13 (ft) Book Eeviews 13 §2. Biographical Dictionaries 13 §3. Encyclopaedias 14 (a) General Encyclopaedias 14 (ft) History of the Church and Keligion 16 Political Economy 17 Education 17 Jews .'. 17 Islam 18 §4. Atlases and Other Geographical Aids 18 (a) General Historical Atlases 18 (ft) Atlases for Church History 18 (c) Atlas for the History of Medieval France 19 (d) Dictionaries of Geographical Names 19 (e) Historical Geographies 19 §5. Historical Periodicals 20 (a) General Historical Periodicals 20 (ft) Periodicals Devoted Especially to Medieval History 22 (c) History of Culture and Literature 22 (d) Byzantine Empire 23 (e) Church History 23 (f) History of Philosophy 23 - (#) History of Education 23 (ft) History of Law 23 (i) Periodicals for Teachers of History 24 §6. Pictorial Works 24 §7. Guides to Learned Societies 26 CHAPTER III SOME AUXILIARIES TO THE STUDY OF MEDIEVAL HISTORY §. Latin Palaeography 27 (a) Handbooks .•; 27 (6) Abbreviations 28 (c) Facsimiles 29 §2. Diplomatics and Sphragistics 29 CONTENTS §3. Chronology 31 §4. Genealogy 32 §5. Heraldry 33 §6. Numismatics 34 §7. Archaeology 34 §8. Philology 35 CHAPTER IV GENERAL MODERN HISTORICAL WORKS §1. Universal Histories 36 §2. Medieval and Modern History 37 §3. Medieval History 39 (a) Standard General Surveys -. 39 (6) Large Sections of the Middle Ages 39 (c) Impressionistic Surveys of the Middle Ages 40 (d) Recent Foreign Text Books 40 (e) Selections from Modern Historians 41 (f) The Mediterranean 1 41 §4. Text Books of Medieval History in English 41 §5. Source Books: Short Selections from the Sources for Schools. 43 §6. Histories of the Church 44 (a) General Histories of the Church 44 (1) History of Religions 44 (2) Voluminous Standard Accounts 44 (3) Shorter Accounts and Text Books 45 (4) Miscellaneous 46 (ft) The Ecclesiastical Hierarchy... 47 (c) The Latin Church in the Middle Ages 47 (1) Extensive Standard Accounts 47 (2) Text Books 47 (3) Miscellaneous ,. ...'....:.„ "48 The Medieval Papacy.......:.. ...".:..:...:..::... 48 Church and State in the Middle Ages 49 The Church in France in the Middle Ages 50 (»~~~. geschichte. 3 vols. 5th edition, by J. P. KIRSCH. Freiburg, 1911ff. (Theologische Bibliothek). There is a French translation by BELET. Roman catholic. 398. MOURRET, F. Histoire generale de 1'eglise. 8 vols. Paris, 1909ff. 399. NEANDER, J. A. \V. Allgemeine Geschichte der christlichen Religion und Kirche [to 1430]. 6 vols. Hamburg, 1826-52. Trans- lated by J. TORREY, General history of the Christian religion and church. 9 vols. London, 1847-55. Protestant. CH,AP- IV CHURCH HISTORIES 45 400. GIESELER, J. C. L. Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte. 3 vols. Bonn, 1824ff. In 6 vols. in 5, 1828-57. Translated by S. DAVIDSON, A text-book of church history. 5 vols. Edinburgh, 1854; American edition, New York, 1876-80. Protestant. 401. ALZOG, J. Universalgeschichte der Kirche. Mainz, 1841. 10th edition, by F. X. KKAUS, 1882. Translated from the 9th Ger- man edition by F. J. PABISCH and T. S. BYRNE, Manual of universal church history. 4 vols. Dublin, 1889-1902. 402. SHELDON, H. C. History of the Christian church. 5 vols. New York, 1894. 403. BAUR, F. C. Geschichte der christlichen Kirche. 5 vols. 3rd edition of vol. I; 2nd edition of vols. II, III, IV. Tubingen, 1863-1877. 404. MOHLER, J. A. Kirchengeschichte, edited by P. B. GAMS. 3 vols. Regensburg, 1867-1870. (3) Shorter Accounts and Text Books 405. FISHER, G. P. History of the Christian church. New York, 1888. Protestant. A guide to the study of the Christian religion, edited by G. B. SMITH, Chicago [1918]. W. HOBHOUSE,' The church and the world in idea and in history, London, 1910, 2nd edition, revised, 1911 (Bampton lectures, 1909). A. BAUDRIL- I.ART, L'eglise catholique, la renaissance, le protestantisme, Paris, 1904, translated by Mrs. P. GIBBS, The catholic church, the renaissance and protestantism, London, 1908, is a series of lectures. A. MATER, L'er/lise catholique: ,«o constitution, son administration, Paris, 1906, is historical in its treatment. 406. MULLER, K. Kirchengeschichte. 2 vols. [to 1555]. Tubin- gen, 1892-1902. In Grundriss der theologischen Wissenschaften, 4, 2. See the author's short sketch entitled, "Christentum und Kirche Westeuropas im Mittelalter, " in Kultur der Gegen- wart, no. 729 below, part I, IV, 2nd edition, Berlin and Leip- zig, 1909. 407. KURTZ, J. H. Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte. Mitau, 1894. 14th edition, by N. BONWETSCH and T. TSCHACKERT. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1906. Translated from the 9th German edition by J. MAC PHERSON, Church history. 3 vols. London, 1888-93. Protestant. 408. KNOPFLER, A. Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte auf Grund der akademischen Vorlesungen von K. J. v. HEFELE. 5th edition, Freiburg, 1910. Roman catholic. 46 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 409. PUNK, F. X. Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte. 5th edition. Paderborn, 1907 (Wissenschaftliche Handbibliothek). Eoman catholic. 410. KRAUS, F. X. Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte. 6th edition. Trier, 1909. Roman catholic. 411. SCHUBERT, H. v. Grundziige der Kirchengeschichte. 4th edition. Tubingen, 1909. 412. SOHM, R. Grundriss der Kirehengeschichte. Leipzig, 1887. 16th edition, 1909. Translated by MAY SINCLAIR, from the 8th German edition, Outlines of church history. London, 1901. 413. LOOFS, F. Grundlinien der Kirchengeschichte. Halle, 1901. 2nd edition, 1909. 414. HEUSSI, K. Kompendium der Kirchengeschichte. Tubin- gen, 1909. 415. HURST, J. F. A history of the Christian church. 2 vols. New York, 1897-1900 (Library of biblical and theological litera- ture, vols. VII and VIII). 416. WEINGARTEN, H. Zeittafeln und tfberblicke zur Kirchen- geschichte. 6th edition, by C. F. ARNOLD. Leipzig, 1905. 417. Unsere religiosen Erzieher: eine Geschichte des Christen - tums in Lebensbildern. Edited by B. BESS. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1908. (4) Miscellaneous 418. Epochs of church history. Edited by M. CREIGHTON. Lon- don, Longmans, Green and Co. A. PLUMMER, The church of the early fathers; A. CARR, The church and the Eoman empire ; H. M. GWATKIN, The Arian con- troversy ; H. F. TOZER, The church and the eastern empire; W. R. STEPHENS, Hildebrand and his times; U. BALZANI, The popes and the Hohenstaufens. 419. RENAN, E. Etudes d'histoire religieuse. 7th edition. Paris, 1864. Nouvelles etudes d 'histoire religieuse. Paris, 1884. 420. VACANDARD, E. Etudes de critique et d'histoire religieuse. 2 vols. Vol. I, 4th edition; vol. II, 2nd edition, Paris, 1909-1910. 421. Kirchengeschichtliche Festgabe ANTON DE WAAL zum gold- enen Priester-Jubilaum (11 October 1912) dargebracht. Edited by F. X. SEPPELT. Freiburg, 1913. (In Rb'mische Quartalsehrift, Sup- plementheft XX.) Analyzed in Eevue historique, CXXII (1916), 322. CHAP, iv CHURCH HISTORIES 47 (ft) THE ECCLESIASTICAL HIERARCHY 422. EUBEL, C. Hierarchia catholica medii aevi. 3 vols. Mun- ster, 1898-1910. Vol. I, 2nd edition, Miinster, 1913. Extends from 1198 to 1600 A.D. 423. GAMS, P. B. Series episcoporum ecclesiae catholicae. Ratis- bon, 1873. Supplement, 1886. (c) THE LATIN CHURCH IN THE MIDDLE AGES (1) Extensive Standard Accounts 424. MILMAN, H. H. History of Latin Christianity. 6 vols. London, 1854-5. Latest edition, 9 vols., London, 1883. Extends to the middle of the fifteenth century. Protestant. See also J. C. ROBERTSON, History of the Christian church to the reformation, 6th edition, 8 vols., London, 1874—1875. 425. BARONIUS, C. (died 1607). Annales ecclesiastici a Christo nato ad annum 1198. 12 vols. Rome, 1588-93. Edited by J. D. MANSI. 35 vols. Lucca, 1738-59. Apparatus, 1 vol., 1740. Index, 4 vols., -1757-9. New edition, with all continuations, 37 vols. Bar- le-Duc and Paris, 1864-83. This edition was to comprise about 50 vols., but was not completed. Fragmentary translations of this work have been made into French, Italian, German, Polish, and Arabic. BARONIUS printed many extensive selections from the sources. 426. DUFOURCQ, A. L'avenir du christianisme. 8 vols. Paris, 1908ff. 427. LANGEN, J. Geschichte der romischen Kirche. 4 vols. (to Innocent III). Bonn, 1881-1893. (2) Text Books 428. FLICK, A. C. The rise of the mediaeval church. New York, 1909. 429. FICKER, G., and HERMELINK, H. Handbuch der Kirchen- geschichte fur Studierende: das Mittelalter. Tubingen, 1912. 430. SELL, K. Christentum und Weltgeschichte bis zur Refor- mation. Leipzig, 1910 (Aus Natur und Geisteswelt, 297). 431. LAGARDE, A. The Latin church in the middle ages. Trans- lated by A. ALEXANDER. New York, 1915 (International Theological Library). ' 432. HARDWICK, C. A history of the Christian church: middle age. 4th edition, revised, and edited by W. STUBBS. London, 1874. 48 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI (3) Miscellaneous 434. LEA, H. C. A history of auricular confession and indulg- ences in the Latin church. 3 vols. Philadelphia, 1896. 435. LEA, H. C. An historical sketch of sacerdotal celibacy in the Christian church. 2 vols. Philadelphia, 1867. 3rd edition, 2 vols., London, 1907. 436. LEA, H. C. Studies in church history: the rise of the tem- poral power; benefit of clergy; excommunication; the early church and slavery, etc. Philadelphia, 1883. 437. MORIN, G. Etudes, textes, dScouvertes: contributions a 1 'histoire des douze premiers siecles. Vol. I. Paris, 1913. 438. TRENCH, R. C. Lectures on medieval church history. New York, 1878. (d) THE MEDIEVAL PAPACY 439. MANN, H. K. The lives of the popes in the early middle ages. London, 1902ff. Vol. VIII (to 1130), appeared in 1910. For the history of the papacy in the later middle ages, see CREIGHTON, PASTOR, etc., under outline XXIX of part II below. 440. GREGOROVIUS, F. Geschichte der Stadt Rom im Mittelalter. 8 vols. Stuttgart, 1859-72. 5th edition, Stuttgart, 1903ff. Trans- lated from 4th German edition by ANNIE HAMILTON, History of the city of Rome in the middle ages. 8 vols. in 13. London, 1894—1902. 441. GRISAR, H. Geschichte Roms und der Papste im Mittel- alter. Freiburg, 1898ff. Translated by L. CAPPADELTA, History of Rome, and the popes in the middle ages. St. Louis, 1911ff. 442. REUMONT, A. v. Geschichte der Stadt Rom. 3 vols. Ber- lin, 1867-1870. Chiefly on the middle ages. 443. GREENWOOD, T. Cathedra Petri: a political history of the great Latin patriarchate. 14 books in 6 vols. London, 1856-72. Extends to the reformation. 444. BARRY, W. The papal monarchy from St. Gregory the Great to Boniface VIII (590-1303). London, 1902 (The story of the nations series). 445. DOLLINGER, J. J. I. VON. Die Papstfabeln des Mittelalters. Munich, 1863. 2nd edition by J. FRIEDRICH. Stuttgart, 1890. Translated by H. B. SMITH, Fables respecting the popes in the middle ages. New York, 1872. 446. DOLLINGER, J. J. I. VON [Psuedonym, JANUS]. Der Papst und das Konzil. Leipzig, 1869. 2nd edition, by J. FRIEDRICH, under CHAP, iv CHURCH AND STATE 49 the title, Das Papsttum, Munich, 1892. Translated into English, The pope and the council. Boston, 1870. See J. HERGENROTHER, Anti- Janus, Freiburg, 1870. Al- though these books reflect the ecclesiastical politics in Ger- many of the time when they were written, they are full of interest to the student of medieval history. 447. NORDEN, W. Das Papsttum und Byzanz: die Trennung der beiden Machte und das Problem ihrer Wiedervereinigung bis 1453. Berlin, 1903. 448. SEPPELT, F. X. Das Papsttum und Byzanz. Breslau, 1904 (Kirchengeschichtliche Abhandlungen, ed. by M. SDRALEK, 2). 449. McKiLLiAM, A. E. A chronicle of the popes from St. Peter to Pius X. London, 1912. See also the old but detailed ARTAUD DE MONTOR, Histoire des souverains pontifes romains, 8 vols., Paris, 1847. 450. McCABE, J. Crises in the history of the papacy. New York, 1916. 451. ROCQUAIN, F. La papaute au moyen age: Nicolas I., Gregoire VII., Innocent in., Boniface VIII. Paris, 1881. 452. KRUGER, G. Das Papsttum: seine Idee und ihre Trager. Tubingen, 1907 (Religionsgeschichtliche Volksbiicher). Translated by F. M. S. BATCHELOR and C. A. MILES, The papacy: the idea and its exponents. New York, 1909. 453. WURM, H. Die Papstwahl: ihre Geschichte und Gebrauche. Cologne, 1-902. See also L. LECTOR, Le conclave: oriaines, histoire, organisa- tion, legislative ancienne et moderne, Paris, 1902. 454. BEET, W. E. The medieval papacy, and other essays, Lon- don, 1914. (e) CHURCH AND STATE IN THE MIDDLE AGES See also nos. 499-5Q4, 670, 725 above. 455. EICHMANN, E. Kirche und Staat. Vols. I-II [750-1350 A.D.] Paderborn, 1912-1914. 456. SCADUTO, L. Stato e chiesa negli scritti politici dalla fine della lotta per le investiture sino alle morte di Ludovico il Bavaro (1122-1347). Florence, 1882. 457. NIEHUES, B. Geschichte des Verhaltnisses zwischen Kaiser- thuin und Papstthum im Mittelalter. 2 vols. 2nd edition, Miinster, 1877-87. To the time of Otto the Great. 50 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 458. FEIEDBERG, E. Die mittelalterlichen Lehren iiber das Ver- haltnis von Staat und Kirche. Part I. Leipzig, 1874. See also his Die Grenzen zwischen Staat und Kirche, Tubin- gen, 1872. 459. GREENWOOD, ALICE D. The empire and the papacy in the middle ages. 3rd edition, London, 1901. Too broad in scope. It practically is a short general his- tory of the middle ages. (/) THE CHURCH IN FRANCE IN THE MIDDLE AGES 460. Gallia Christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa. Begun by the Benedictines of St. Maur and continued by the Academic des inscriptions et belles-lettres. 16 vols. Paris, 1715- 65. Gallia Christiana novissima. 3 vols. 1895-1900. Contents analyzed by A. FRANKLIN, Les sources de I'his- toire de France, no. 23 above, 465-85. See also P. DESLANDRES, Histoire de I'eglise catholique en France, Paris, 1913; and H. FISQUET, La France pontificale, 2 vols., Paris [1864—1866]. (g) THE CHURCH IN GERMANY IN THE MIDDLE AGES 461. HAUCK, A. Kirchengeschichte Deutschlands. Vols. I-V, part I. Leipzig, 1887-1911. Vol. I in 3rd to 4th edition, 1904; vol. II in 3rd to 4th edition, 1911; vol. Ill in 3rd to 4th edition, 1906. See also A. NAEGLE, Kirchengeschichte Bohmens: quellen- massig und Tcritisch dargestellt, vol. I (on the introduction of Christianity), Vienna, 1915; and W. MOLL, Kerkgeschiedenis van Nederland voor de hervorming, 2 vols., Arnhem and Utrecht, 1869, index 1871; German edition by P. ZUPPKE, Die vorreformatorische Kirchengeschichte der Niederlande, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1895. 462. HINSCHIUS, P. Das Kirchenrecht der Katholiken und Pro- testanten in Deutschland. Part I. Das katholische Kirchenrecht. 6 vols. in 7. Berlin, 1869-97. Incomplete. Although a book on church law, this vast work is placed here because it is a mine of trustworthy details on all phases of the church. 463. WERMINGHOFF, A. Geschichte der Kirchenverfassung Deutschlands im Mittelalter. Vol. I. Leipzig, 1905. His Verfassungsgeschichte der deutschen Kirche im Mittel- alter, Leipzig, 1907, in Grundriss, no. 331 above, vol. II, 6, is essentially an abridgment of his Geschichte. (h) THE CHURCH IN ITALY IN THE MIDDLE AGES 464. SAVIO, F. (S. J.). Gli antichi vescovi d 'Italia dalle origin! al 1300 descritti per regioni: la Lombardia, parte I., Milano. Flor- ence, 1913. The beginning of a very important Italia sacra, which will supersede F. UGHELLI. Italia sacra, 9 vols., Rome, 1644— 62; 2nd edition, 10 vols., Venice, 1717-22. CHAP, iv CHURCH COUNCILS 51 465. DRESDNER, A. Kultur- und Sittengeschichte cler italienischen Geistlichkeit. Breslau, 1890. 466. CAPPELLETTI. Le chiese d 'Italia dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni. 21 vols. Venice, 1844-70. (t) THE CHURCH IN SPAIN IN THE MIDDLE AGES 467. Espana sagrada. Edited by H. FLOREZ, etc. 51 vols. Madrid, 1754-1879. Contains many original sources. Index of the first 49 vols. in vol. XXII of Coleccion de documentos ineditos para la his- toria de Espana, no. 997 below. See also V. DE LA FUENTE, Historia ecclesiastica de Espana, 2nd edition, 6 vols., Madrid, 1873-75. 468. GAMS, P. B. Die Kirchengeschichte von Spanien. 3 vols. Kegensburg, 1862-1879. (j) HISTORY OF CHURCH COUNCILS 469. HEFELE, C. J. VON. Conciliengeschichte. 7 vols. Freiburg- i-B., 1855-74; 2nd edition, 6 vols., 1873-90. Continued by J. A. C. HERGENROTHER, vols. VIII-IX, 1887-90. Translated by W. R. CLARK, History of the councils of the church, vols. I-V [to 787], Edinburgh, 1871-96. Translated and augmented by H. LECLERQ, Histoire des conciles. Paris, 1907ff. Vols. I-V, part I, in 9 vols. [to 1152]. Paris, 1907-12. 470. LANDON, E. H. A manual of councils of the holy catholic church. 1845. New and revised edition by his son, P. LANDON. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1893. Arranged in dictionary form, thus constituting a handy work of reference. 471. DESLANDRES, P. Les grands concile des Latran. Paris, 1913. (In Questions historiques, science et religion, no. 682.) E. CECCHUCHI, Histoire des conciles oecumeniques, Lyons, 1901. (fc) HISTORY OF DOGMA 472. HARNACK, A. Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte. 3 vols. Freiburg-i-B., 1886ff. 4th edition, revised, in 3 vols. Tubingen, 1909-10. Translated from the 3rd edition, by N. BUCHANAN, His- tory of dogma, 7 vols., London, 1897-99. See also his Dogmengeschichte, 4th edition, Tubingen, 1905. 473. TIXERONT, J. Histoire des dogmes. 3 vols. 2nd to 4th editions. Paris, 1906-12. Translated by H. L. B., History of dogmas. St. Louis, 1910ff. Extends to 800 A.D. 52 GENERAL BOOKS PABTI 474. FISHER, G. P. History of Christian doctrine. New York, 1896 (The international theological library, IV). A history of doctrine as well as of dogmas. See also K. R. HAOENBACH, A history of Christian doctrines [English trans- lation], Edinburgh, 1883-1885. 475. LOOFS, F. Leitfaden zum Studium der Dogmengeschichte. Halle, 1889. 4th edition, 1906. Protestant. 476. SEEBERG, R. Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte. 2 vols. 2nd edition. Leipzig, 1908-10. See also his Grundriss der Dogmengeschichte, 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1910. 477. BONWETSCH, G. N. Grundriss der Dogmengeschichte. Munich, 1908. 478. BACH, J. Die Dogmengeschichte des Mittelalters vom christologischen Standpunkt. 2 vols. Vienna, 1873-75. (I) MONASTICISM 479. MONTALEMBERT, COMTE DE [C. F. R. DE TRYONJ. Histoire des moines d 'Occident depuis S. Benoit jusqu'a S. Bernard. 7 vols. Paris, 1860-1877. Authorized translation, The monks of the west, 7 vols., Edinburgh, 1861-79; another edition, with introduction by F. A. GASQUET, 6 vols., London, 1896. 480. WISHART, A. W. Short history of monks and monasteries. Trenton, 1902. 481. WORKMAN, H. B. The evolution of the monastic ideal: from the earliest times down to the coming of the friars. London, 1913. 482. ECKENSTEIN, LiNA. Women under monasticism: chapters on saint-lore and convent life between A.D. 500 and A.D. 1500. Cam- bridge, 1896. See also ETHEL R. WHEELER, Women of the cell and cloister, London [1913]; and AGNES B. C. DUNBAR, A dictionary of saintly women, '2 vols., London, 1904-1905. 483. HEIMBUCHER, M. Die Orden und Kongregationen der katho- lischen Kirche. 2 vols. Paderborn, 1896-97. 2nd edition, 3 vols., 1907-08. 484. ZOCKLER, O. Askese und Monchthum. 2 vols. 2nd edition. Frankfurt, 1897. These two books contain excellent bibliographies. 485. MORIN, G. L 'ideal monastique et la vie chretienne des premiers jours. 2nd edition, revised. Paris, 1914. CHAP, iv MEDIEVAL EMPIRE 53 486. WOODHOUSE, F. C. Monasticism, ancient and modern. Lon- don [1896]. 487. JAMESON, ANNA. Legends of the monastic orders. Cor- rected and revised edition. Boston [1884]. (m) COLLECTIONS ON CHURCH HISTORY 488. Freiburger historische Studien. Edited by A. BiiCHi, etc. Fribourg (Switzerland), 1905ff. 489. Forschungen zur christlichen Literatur- und Dogmengeschichte. Edited by A. EHRHARD and J. P. KIRSCH. Paderborn, 1900ff. 490. Kirchengeschichtliche Abhandlungen. Edited by SDRALEK. Breslau, 1902ff. 491. Kirchenrechtliche Abhandlungen. Edited by U. STUTZ. Stuttgart, 1902ff. 492. Kirchengeschichtliche Studien. Edited by A. KNOPFLER, etc. 6 vols. Minister, 1891ff. 493. Papers of the American society of church history. 2nd series. Edited by W. W. BOCKWELL. New York, 1908ff. 494. Studien und Mitteilungen aus dem kirchenhistorischen Seminar der theologischen Fakultat zu Wien. Vienna, 1908ff. 495. Studien zur Geschichte der Theologie und der Kirche. Edited by N. BONWETSCH und R. SEEBERG. Leipzig, 1897ff. Neue Studien, etc. Same editors. Berlin, 1907ff. 496. Veroffentlichungen aus dem kirchenhistorischen Seminar zu Miinchen. Edited by A. KNOPPLER. Munich, 1899ff. 497. FUNK, F. X. v. Kirchengeschichtliche Abhandlungen und Untersuchungen. Vols. I-III. Paderborn, 1897-1907. 498. HARNACK, A. Reden und Aufsatze. 2 vols. Giessen, 1904. 2nd edition, 1906. §7. The Medieval Empire in the West See also no. 538 below; and the general books on Germany and Italy, nos. 560-621 below. 499. BRYCE, J. The holy Roman empire. Oxford, 1864. 2nd edition, revised, 1866. A new edition, enlarged and revised, London and New York, 1904. This is the best book on the subject in any language. See E. A. FREEMAN 's enthusiastic review of the 1st edition, with some references to the 3rd edition, 1871, in his His- torical essays, first series, London, 1871, pp. 126-160 (first printed in the North British review, March, 1865). For GIBBON, Decline and fall, see no. 341 above. 54 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 500. FISHER, H. The medieval empire. 2 vols. London, 1898. From Otto I to the end of the Hohenstaufen. This is not a systematic narrative of events, but rather a series of essays, mostly constitutional. 501. GIESEBRECHT, W. v. Geschichte der deutschen Kaiserzeit. 5 vols. Brunswick and Leipzig, 1855-88. Vols. I— III, 5th edition, Leipzig, 1881-90; vol. IV, 2nd edition, Brunswick, 1877; vol. VI, edited and continued by B. v. SIMSON, Leipzig, 1895. 502. ZEUMER, K. Heiliges romisches Reich deutscher Nation: eine Studie iiber den Reichstitel. Weimar, 1910 (Quellen und Studien, by K. ZEUMER, IV, 2). 503. FICKER, J. Das deutsche Kaiserreich in seinen universalen und nationalen Beziehungen. Innsbruck, 1861. 2nd edition un- altered, 1862. 504. BIROT, J. Le saint empire du couronnement de Charlemagne au sacre de Napoleon. Paris, 1903. 505. STENGEL, E. E. Den Kaiser macht das Heer: Studien zur Geschichte eines politischen Gedankens. Weimar, 1910. 506. HAHN, L. Das Kaisertum. Leipzig, 1913 (Das Erbe der Alten, vol. VI). See ch. VIII, "Die Erben der romischen Kaiser." 507. GUGLIA, E. Die Geburts-, Sterbe- und Grabstatten der romisch-deutschen Kaiser und Konige. Vienna, 1914. See also M. KEMMERICH, "Die Portrats deutscher Kaiser und Konige bis auf Rudolf von Habsburg," in Neues Archiv, XXXIII (1907), 461-513. §8. France (a) GENERAL HISTORIES OF FRANCE 508. Histoire de France depuis les origines jusqu'a la revolu- tion. Edited by E. LAVISSE. 8 vols in 16. Paris, 1900-1912. A new illustrated edition has been planned, which will, we hope, be supplied with maps and. an index. This monu- mental co-operative work is now the standard history of France and has in large measure superseded the following older monumental histories of France, nos. 509—513 below. Good bibliographies are scattered in footnotes. A very handy condensed history of France for the general reader is being published under the title, Histoire de France racontee a tons, edited by L. BATIFFOL, to be completed in six volumes, of which four had appeared in 1916; translated by ELSIE F. BUCKLEY, The national history of France, New York, 1916ff. CHAP, iv FRENCH HISTORY 55 509. SISMONDI, J. C. L. S. DE. Histoire des franc.ais depuis 1'origine jusqu'en 1789. 31 vols. Paris, 1821-44. 510. MARTIN, H. Histoire de France depuis les temps les plus recules jusqu'en 1789. 19 vols. Paris, 1838-54. 4th edition in 17 vols., 1855-60. Popular, illustrated, edition, 7 vols., 1867-85. 511. DABESTE, M. C. Histoire de France depuis les origines jusqu'a nos jours. 3rd edition. 9 vols. Paris, 1884r85. 512. MICHELET, J. Histoire de France depuis les origines jusqu' en 1789. 17 vols. Paris, 1833-67. New edition, 19 vols., 1879. Abridged translations by G. H. SMITH, History of France, 2 vols., New York, 1845-47. 513. LAVALLEE, T. Histoire des franc.ais depuis les temps des gaulois jusqu'en 1873. 7 vols. Paris, 1864-1873. (2) Shorter Accounts 514. KITCHIN, G. W. A history of France (to 1793). 3 vols. Oxford, 1873-1877. Vol. I, 4th edition, revised, 1899. Vol. I extends to 1453. 515. MACDONALD, J. E. M. A history of France. 3 vols. New York, 1915. 516. CROWE, E. E. The history of France. 3 vols. London, 1830. 517. GUIZOT, F. P. G. A popular history of France from the earliest times. Translated by R. BLACK. 6 vols. Boston [187-f]. (3) One-volume Histories 518. ADAMS, G. B. The growth of the French nation. New York, 1896. 519. BELLOC, H. A history of the French people. Vol. 1. Lon- don, 1913. 520. HASSALL, A. The French people. London, 1902. 521. HEADLAM, C. France. London, 1913 (The making of the nations.) 522. DURUY, V. Histoire de France. New edition, 2 vols., Paris, 1884. Translated and abridged from the 17th French edition by Mrs. M. CAREY; with an introduction by J. F. JAMESON, A history of France. New York, 1889. 523. CAVAIGNAC, E. Esquisse d'une histoire de France. Paris, 1910. 56 GENERAL BOOKS PART1 524. JERVIS, W. H. The student's France: a history of France from the earliest times to the establishment of the second empire in 1852. New York [no date, ca. 1862]. 525. MACKINNON, J. The growth and decline of the French mon- archy. London and New York, 1902. The first four chapters, which are on the middle ages, are scarcely more than an introduction to the work, which is devoted mainly to the modern monarchy. (6) GENERAL HISTORIES OF MEDIEVAL FRANCE 526. MASSON, G. The story of mediaeval France: from Hugh Capet to the beginning of the 18th century. New York, 1888 (Story of the nations series). (c) FRENCH INSTITUTIONS See also no. 584 below. 528. GLASSON, E. Histoire du droit et des institutions de la France. 8 vols. Paris, 1887-1903. Extends ^o the end of the middle ages. 529. VIOLLET, P. Droit public: histoire des institutions poli- tiques et administratives de la France. 3 vols. Paris, 1890-03. Extends to the end of the middle ages. See also his Histoire du droit civil franc.ais, 3rd edition, Paris, 1905. 530. LUCHAIRE, A. Manuel des institutions franchises, periode de Capetiens directs. Paris, 1892. 531. BRISSAUD, J. Manuel d 'histoire du droit frangais. Issued in 5 parts. Paris, 1898-1904. Translated in part by J. W. GARNER, History of French public law. Boston, 1915. Sums up the researches of VIOLLET, FLACH, LUCHAIRE, ESMEIN, FUSTEL DE COULANGES, etc. 532. ESMEIN, A. Cours elementaire d 'histoire du droit franchise. Paris, 1892. 8th edition, 1907. 533. HOLTZMANN, R. Franzosische Verfassungsgeschichte von der Mitte des neunten Jahrhunderts bis zur Revolution. Munich and Berlin, 1910. Part of no. 330 above. 534. CAM, HELEN M. Local government in Francia and England. London, 1912. 535. FUNCK-BRENTANO, F. L'ancienne France: le roi. 3rd edi- tion. Paris, 1913. See also H. SCHREUER, Die rechtlichen Grundlagen der franzosischen Konigskronung, Weimar, 1911. CHAP, iv FRENCH HISTORY 57 536. MAYER-HOMBERG, E. Die frankischen Volksrechte im Mit- telalter: eine rechtgeschichtliche Untersuchung. Vol. I, Die frank- ischen Volksrechte und das Reichsrecht. Weimar, 1912. (d) FOREIGN RELATIONS OF TRANCE 537. CORBIN, P. Histoire de la politique exterieure de la France. Vol. I. Les origines et la periode anglaise (jusqu'en 1483). Paris, 1912. 538. LEROUX, A. Les conflicts entre la France et 1 'empire pen- dant le moyen age. Paris, 1902. Contains a very important bibliography. See also, H. OTTO, "Das Streben der Konige von Frankreich naeh der romischen Kaiserkrone, " in Kgl. Gymnasium zu Hadamar, Bericht uber das Schuljahr 1898-99, Beigabe. 539. LANGLOIS, C. V. "The comparative history of England and France in the middle ages." English historical review, V (1890), 259-263. (e) GREAT REGIONS OP FRANCE 540. DEVIC, DOM C. and VAISSETTE, DOM J. Histoire generate de Lanquedoc. New edition in 15 vols. Toulouse, 1872-1904. 541. MOYNE DE LA BORDERIE, A. LE. Histoire de Bretagne [to 1715]. Vols. I-V. Paris, 1896-1913. 542. FEBVRE, L. Histoire de Franche-Comte. Paris, 1912 (Vieil- les provinces de France). (f) MISCELLANEOUS 543. LANGLOIS, C. V. The historic role of France among the nations. An address delivered at the University of Chicago, October 18, 1904. Chicago, 1905. 544. STEPHEN, SIR J. Lectures on the history of France. 2 vols. London, 1851. 545. Collection des meilleurs dissertations, etc., relatifs a 1'his- toire de France: composee en grande partie de pieces rares, etc. Edited by C. LEBER. 20 vols. Paris, 1838. For an analysis of its contents, see FRANKLIN, no. 23 above, 343ff. 546. LA RONCIERE, C. Histoire de la marine franchise. 4 vols. Paris, 1889-1910. 547. CHEVALIER, E. Histoire de la marine franchise depuis les debuts de la monarchic jusqu'au traite de paix de 1763. Paris, 1902. 548. MOLINIER, A. Les obituaires franchises au moyen age. Paris, 1890. 58 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI §9. Belgium and the Netherlands 549. PIBENNE, H. Histoire de Belgique. 4 vols. Brussels, 1900- 11. Vols. I-III [to 1567], 2nd edition, 1901-12. 3rd edition of vol. I, 1909. Translated into German by F. AENHEIM, 4 vols., Gotha, 1899-1913, which is part of no. 332 above. 550. PIRENNE, H. Les anciennes democraties des Pays-Bas. Paris, 1910. Translated by J. V. SAUNDERS, Belgian democracy: its early history. London and New York, 1915. (In Publications of the University of Manchester, Historical series, XXVII.) A very convenient manual for those who cannot master PIRENNE 's larger works. 551. VAN DER LINDEN, H. Manuel d 'histoire de Belgique. With a preface by H. PIRENNE. 2 vols. Brussels, 1910. 552. VANDERKINDERE, L. La formation territoriale des princi- pautes beiges au moyen age. 2 vols. 1st and 2nd editions. Brus- sels, 1902. 553. MILLARD, E. Les Beiges et leurs generations historiques. Brussels, 1902. 554. BOULGER, D. C. The history of Belgium. 2 vols. London, 1902-09. See also his Belgium, Detroit, 1913. 555. VAN DER ESSEN, L. A short history of Belgium. Chicago [1916]. 556. ENSOR, R. C. K. Belgium. New York, 1915. (In Home university library, 95.) 557. BLOK, P. J. Geschiedenis van het Nederlandsche Volk. 8 vols. Groningen, 1892-1908. Translated by O. A. BIERSTADT and RUTH PUTNAM, History of the people of the Netherlands. 5 vols. New York, 1898-1912. Vol. I, to the beginning of the fifteenth century. Vols. I-IV (to 1648) translated into German by A. G. HOUTROUW, Gotha, 1901-09, which is part of no. 332 above. 558. ROGERS, J. E. T. Holland. New York, 1900 (Story of the nations series). 559. WENZELBURGER, K. T. Geschichte der Niederlande. 2 vols. [to 1648]. Gotha, 1878-86. Part of no. 332 above. CHAP, iv GERMAN HISTORY 59 §10. Germany (a) GENERAL HISTORIES OF GERMANY (1) Monumental Worlcs See also nos. 499-507 above. 560. Bibliothek deutscher Geschichte. Edited by H. v. ZWIEDE- NECK-SiJDENHORST. Stuttgart, 1876ff. A general work something like the Histoire de France, no. 508 above, but published in separate volumes which will be mentioned in their proper places. A complete list of them is given by LOEWE, BucherTcunde, no. 32 above, Anhang. 561. LAMPRECHT, K. Deutsche Geschichte. 12 vols. in 16 parts. Berlin, 1891-1909. Partly in 2nd to 4th editions, 3 supplements, 1902-04. For literature on this and other works of LAMPRECHT, see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, no. 28 above, no. 1451. (2) Shorter Accounts and Text Books 562. Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte. Edited by B. GEB- HARDT. 2 vols. Stuttgart, 1891. 4th edition by F. HIRSCH. Berlin and Leipzig, 1909-10. This co-operative history is the best short general work on Germany. 563. HENDERSON, E. F. A short history of Germany. 2 vols. in 1. New York, 1902. New edition in 2 vols., 1916. 564. HOLLAND, A. W. Germany. London, 1914 (The making of the nations). 565. LEWIS, C. T. A history of Germany from the earliest times. Founded on D. MULLER, History of the German people. New York, 1886. 566. HEYCK, E. Deutsche Geschichte: Volk, Staat, Kultur- und Geistesleben. 3 vols. Bielefeld, 1905-06. 567. JAGER, O. Deutsche Geschichte. 2 vols. Munich, 1909. 568. KAMMEL, O. Deutsche Geschichte. 2 vols. 2nd edition. Dresden, 1905. 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1910. See also his Der Werdegang des deutschen Volkes, 2 vols., 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1911-12. 569. SCHAFER, D. VON. Deutsche Geschichte. 2 vols. Jena, 1910. (b) GERMANY IN THE MIDDLE AGES 570. Jahrbiicher der deutschen Geschichte [to 1250]. Under the auspices of the Munich Academy. Berlin and Leipzig, 1862ff. 27 vols. in 1909. 60 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 571. KICHTEE, G., and KOHL, H. Annalen der deutschen Ge- schichte im Mittelalter von der Griindung des frankischen Reichs bis zum Untergang der Hohenstaufen. Mit fortlaufenden Quellen- ausziigen und Literaturangaben [to 1137]. 4 vols. Halle, 1873-98. 572. ZELLER, J. Histoire d'Allemagne. 7 vols. [to Luther]. Paris, 1872-92. Vol. Ill, L 'empire germanique et 1'eglise au moyen age, in 2nd edition, 1884. 573. NITZSCH, K. W. Geschichte des deutschen Volkes bis zum Augsburger Religionsfrieden. Nach dessen hinterlassenen Papieren und Vorlesungen. 3 vols. Leipzig, 1883-1885. 2nd edition by G. MATTHAI, Leipzig, 1892. 574. GERDES, H. Geschichte des deutschen Volkes und seiner Kultur im Mittelalter. 3 vols [to 1250]. Leipzig, 1891-1908. 575. HENDERSON, E. F. A history of Germany in the middle ages. London, 1894. 576. STUBBS, W. Germany in the early middle ages (476-1250). London and New York, 1908. 577. STUBBS, W. Germany in the later middle ages (1200-1500). Edited by A. HASSALL. London and New York, 1908. (c) GERMAN INSTITUTIONS 578. WAITZ, G. Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte. 8 vols. [to the 12th century]. Kiel and Berlin, 1844-1878. 6 vols., 2nd and 3rd editions, Berlin, 1880-1896. W. ALTMANN and E. BERNHEIM, Ausgewdhlte Urlcunden zur . . . Verfassungsgeschichte DeutscMands im Mittelalter, 4th edition, Berlin, 1909, serves the same purpose for German as W. STUBBS, Select charters, does for English constitutional history. See also W. STUBBS, Constitutional history of Eng- land, in GROSS, no. 36 above, no. 643. 579. BRUNNER, H. Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1887-1892. Vol. I, 2nd edition, 1906. A very good text is his Grundziige der deutschen Bechts- geschichte, Leipzig, 1901, 4th edition, 1910. See also his Forschungen zur Geschichte des deutschen und fransosischen Bechtes, Stuttgart, 1894. 580. GIERKE, O. Das deutsche Genossenschaftsrecht. 4 vols. Berlin, 1868-1914. Part of vol. Ill translated by F. W. MAITLAND, Political theories in the middle ages. London, 1900. 581. BELOW, G. VON. Der deutsche Staat des Mittelalters: ein Grundriss der deutschen Verfassungsgeschichte. Leipzig, 1914. See also A. HEUSLER, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte, Leip- zig, 1905. AUSTRIAN HISTORY 61 582. MEISTER, A. Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte, von den Anfangen bis ins 15 Jahrhundert. Leipzig, 1907. Part of no. 331 above. 583. SCHRODER, E. Lehrbuch der deutschen Eechtsgeschichte. 5th edition. Leipzig, 1907. 584. MAYER, E. Mittelalterliche Verfassungsgeschichte: deutsche und franzosische Verfassungsgeschichte vom 9 bis zum 14 Jahr- hundert. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1899. 585. DUNGERN, O. D. War Deutschland ein Wahlreich? Leipzig, 1913. 586. PFLEIDERER, O. Das deutsche Nationalbewusstsein in Ver- gangenheit und Gegenwart. Berlin, 1896. 587. HOOPS, J. Reallexicon der germanischen Altertumskunde. Vol. I, A-E. Strassburg, 1911-13. Extends to about the 12th century. (d) AUSTRIA 588. KRONES, F. v. Handbuch der Geschichte Osterreichs von der altesten bis zur neuesten Zeit. 6 vols. Berlin, 1879-81. See also his Grundriss der osterreichischen Geschichte, Vienna, 1882; and his Osterreichische Geschichte, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1899-1900 (Sammlung Goschen). A recent Italian work is A. DUDAN, La monarchia degli Absburgo, 800-1915, 2 vols., Rome, 1915. 589. HUBER, A. Geschichte Osterreichs. Vols. I-V [to 1648]. Gotha, 1885-95. Part of no. 332 above. 590. LEGER, L. Histoire de 1'Austriche-Hongrie depuis ses orig- ines jusqu'a 1'annee 1894. 5th edition. Paris, 1907. Translated by B. HILL, History of Austro-Hungary. London, 1889. Also trans- lated by W. E. LINGELBACH in no. 314 above. 591. KRALIK, R. Osterreichische Geschichte. Vienna, 1914. 592. MAYER, F. M. Geschichte Osterreichs mit besonderer Riick- sicht auf das Kulturleben. 2 vols. 3rd edition. Vienna and Leip- zig, 1909-10. 593. ITuBER, A. Osterreichische Reichsgeschichte. Leipzig, 1895. 2nd edition by A. DOPSCH, 1901. 594. LUSCHIN VON EBENGREUTH, A. Osterreichische Reichsge- schichte. 2 vols. Bamberg, 1895-96. See also his Grundriss der osterreichischen Beichsgeschichte. Bamberg, 1899. 62 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI (e) PRUSSIA 595. EANKE, L. v. Zwolf Bitcher preussiseher Geschichte. 5 vols. Leipzig, 1874. 2nd edition, Leipzig,. 1878-79. (Vols. XXV- XXVII of his complete works.) 596. PRUTZ, H. Preussische Geschichte. 4 vols. Stuttgart, 1899-1902. H. TUTTLE, History of Prussia, 4 vols., Boston, 1884-1896 (vol. I, A.D. 1134-1740, in second edition), touches but slightly on the middle ages. (f) ALSACE-LORRAINE 597. DERICHSWEILER, H. Geschichte Lothringens: der tausend- jahrige Kampf urn die Westmark. 2 vols. Wiesbaden, 1901. Condensed in his Geschichte LotJiringens, Leipzig, 1905 (Sammlung Goschen). 598. PUTNAM, EUTH. Alsace and Loraine from Caesar to Kaiser. New York, 1915. §11. Italy (a) GENERAL HISTORIES OF ITALY (1) Political History Many of the general works on Germany just listed above must be consulted for the history of Italy in the time when German emperors were constantly crossing the Alps. 599. Storia politica d 'Italia scritta de una societa di professori. Edited by P. VILLARI. Milan, 1881ff. 600. CANTU, C. Storia degli Italian!. 6 vols. Turin, 1854. 4th edition, 1892. Translated into French by A. LACOMBE under the supervision of the author and from the 2nd edition, Histoire des Italiens. 12 vols. Paris, 1859-62. 601. CAPPELLETTI, L. Storia d 'Italia (476-1900). Genoa, 1902. See also E. BESTA, La Sardegna medioevale, 2 vols., Palermo, 1908-1909. 602. SEDGWICK, H. D. A short history of Italy (476-1900). Bos- ton, 1905. 603. BELVIGLIERI, C. Tavole sinerone e genealogiche di storia italiana dal 306 al 1870. Florence, 1885. 604. FEDELE, P. "La coscienza della nazionalita in Italia nel medio evo. " Nuova Antologia (1915). CHAP, iv ITALIAN HISTORY 63 (2) Constitutional History 605. FERTILE, A. Storia del diritto italiano. 6 vols. and index. Padua, 1873-87. 2nd edition by P. DEL GIUDICE, Turin, 1891-1903. 606. BESTA, E. Storia del diritto italiano. Pisa, vol. II, 1914. Vol. II relates to the Lombard period. 607. FICKER, J. Forschungen zur Belch s- und Bechtsgeschichte Italiens. 4 vols. Innsbruck, 1868-74. See also WAITZ, no. 578 above. 608. MAYER, E. Italienische Verfassungsgeschichte von der Gothenzeit zur Zunftherrschaft. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1909. 609. SCHUPFER, F. Manual! di storia del diritto italiano. 4th edition. Citta di Castello, 1908. (3) Maritime History 610. MANFRONI, C. Storia della marina italiana dalle invasion! barbariche al trattato di Ninfeo (1261). Leghorn, 1899. Continued by his Storia della marina italiana (1261-1453). 2 vols. Leghorn, 1902. A third work continues the story in modern times. (ft) MEDIEVAL HISTORY OF ITALY (1) Monumental WorTcs See also no. 345 above. 611. HARTMANN, L. M. Geschichte Italiens im Mittelalter. Leipzig, 1897ff. Vol. IIP appeared in 1911. Now the most reliable and scholarly work on medieval Italy. Part of no. 332 above. 612. MURATORI, L. A. Annali d 'Italia. 12 vols. Borne, 1744- 1749. Often reprinted. Translated into German by BANDIS. 9 vols. Leipzig, 1745-50. From the beginning of the Christian era to 1749. See C. TROYA, Studi intorno agli "Annali d' Italia" del Muratori, 2 vols., Naples, 1877. 613. SISMONDI, J. C. L. S. DE. Histoire des r^publiques italiennes du moyen age. 16 vols. Paris, 1809-1818. 5th edition, 8 vols. Brus- sels, 1838-39. Translated, condensed, and revised by W. BOULTING, History of the Italian republics in the middle ages. London [ca. 1905]. This is practically a general history of medieval Italy. In large measure it supersedes MURATORI, no. 612 above. 64 GENERAL BOOKS PART ' 614. TROYA, C. Storia d 'Italia del medio evo. 17 vols. Naples, 1839-59. Extends from the fall of the Roman empire in the west to the end of the Lombard kingdom. The author had planned to carry it to 1321. It is still of importance and is not en- tirely superseded by HODGKIN, Italy and her invaders, no. 345 above, and perhaps not wholly even by HARTMANN, no. 611 above. (2) Shorter Works and Text Books 615. VILLARI, P. Le invasion! barbariche in Italia. Milan, 1901. Translated by LINDA VILLARI, The barbarian invasions of Italy. 2 vols. London, 1902. 616. VILLARI, P. L 'Italia da Carlo Magno alia morte di Arrigo VII. Milan, 1910. Translated by his daughter, Mrs. C. HULTON, Mediaeval Italy from Charlemagne to Henry VII. London, 1910. These two works form the best general history of medieval Italy available in English. 617. COTTERILL, H. B. Mediaeval Italy during a thousand years (305-1313). London, 1915 (Great nations series). 618. BROWNING, O. Guelfs and Ghibellines: a short history of mediaeval Italy from 1250-1409. London, 1893. The age of the condottieri: a short history of mediaeval Italy from 1409-1530, London, 1895. 619. GABOTTO, F. Storia dell' Italia occidentale nel medio evo, 395-1313. Vols. I and II [to 568 A.D.], 1912. 620. LANZANI, F. I comuni, da Carlomagno ad Henrico VII. Milan, 1880. Part of no. 599 above. 621. KLEIN, V. Italiens historic i middelalderen med saerlight blik paa kulturudviklingen. Copenhagen, 1907. §12. Spain and Portugal (a) GENERAL HISTORY OF SPAIN (1) Monumental Works 622. Historia general de la Espana. By members of the Real Academia de la Historia. 18 vols. Madrid, 1890-98. No more pub- lished. 623. LAFUENTE, M. Historia general de Espana. 30 vols. Madrid, 1850-67. 2nd edition continued by J. VALERA. 24 vols. Barcelona, 1888-90. CHAP, iv SPANISH HISTORY 65 624. KOSSEEUW, SAINT HILAIRE. Histoire d'Espagne. 2nd edi- tion. 14 vols. Paris, 1844-79. See also M. ROMEY, Histoire d'Espagne, 9 vols., Paris, 1839-1849. 625. MARIANA, J. DE. Tlistoria general de Espafia. Toledo, 1601; Madrid, 1623. New editions, 8 vols., Madrid, 1819; 10 vols., Barce- lona, 1839. The original work was published in Latin, Historiae de rebus Hispaniae libri XX, Toledo, 1592, with ten additional books in 1616, and was translated into Spanish by the author himself. 626. LEMBKE, F. W. Geschichte von Spanien. Vol. I, Hamburg, 1834; vols. II and III by H. SCHAFER, Hamburg, 1844, and Gotha, 1861; vols. IV-VII (to 1516), by F. W. SCHIRRMACHER, Gotha, 1881- 1902. Part of no. 332 above. Eather antiquated. 627. DUNHAM, S. A. Spain and Portugal. 5 vols. London, 1832-33. (2) Shorter Works and Text Books 628. ALTAMIRA, R. Historia de Espafia y de la civilizacion espanola. 4 vols. Barcelona, 1900-1911. 3rd edition, 1913-14. 629. BURKE, U. R. A history of Spain from the earliest time to the death of Ferdinand the Catholic. 2 vols. London, 1895. 2nd edition, with additional notes, and an introduction by M. A. S. HUME. 2 vols. London, 1900. 630. DIERCKS, G. Geschichte Spaniens von den friihesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart. 2 vols. Berlin, 1895-96. See also his Spanische Geschichte, Leipzig, 1905 (Sammlung Goschen, 266). 631. HUME, M. A. S. The Spanish people, their origin, growth and influence. London, 1901. In The great peoples series. See the Bibliography. 632. PERKINS, CLARA C. Builders of Spain. New York, 1909. (3) Constitutional History of Spain 633. COLMEIRO, M. De la constitucion y del gobierno de los reinos de Leon y Castilla. 2 vols. Madrid, 1855. 2nd edition, 1873-75. See also his Derecho administrativo espanol, 3 vols., 4th edition, Madrid, 1876-80; J. M. ANTEQUERA, Historia de la legislacion espanola, Madrid, 1849, 4th edition, 1895; F. MAR- TfNEZ MARINA, Ensayo hist6rico-critico sobre la antiqua legis- 66 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI lacion . . . de Leon y Castillo, Madrid, 1808, 2 vols., 1834; and A. MARICHALAR and C. MANRIQUE, Historia de la legislation y recitaciones del derecho civil de Espana, 9 vols., Madrid, 1861- 1876. 634. DANVILA Y COLLADO, M. El poder civil en Espana. 6 vols. Madrid, 1885-87. The introduction to vol. I is a long and very important general survey of the middle ages. 635. CARDENAS, F. DE. Ensayo sobre la historia de la propriedad territorial en Espana. 2 vols. Madrid, 1873-75. (6) PORTUGAL 636. HERCULANO, A. Historia de Portugal desde 6 comenc.o da monarchia ate 6 fin do reinado de Alfonso III (to 1279). 4 vols. Lisbon, 1846-53. 4th edition, 1868ff. See also the more popular book by J. P. OLIVEIRA MARTINS, Historia de Portugal, 2 vols., 6th edition, Lisbon, 1901. 637. EIBEIRO, J. P. Dissertac,oes chronologicas e criticas sobre a historia e iurisprudencia ecclesiastica e civil de Portugal. 5 vols. in 7. Lisbon, 1810-36. 638. STEPHENS, H. M. Portugal. London, 1891 (Story of the nations). 639. SCHAFER, H. Geschichte von Portugal. 5 vols. Hamburg and Gotha, 1836-54. Part of no. 332 above. 640. MAcMuRDO, E. The history of Portugal from the com- mencement of the monarchy to the reign of D. Joao V. 3 vols. London, 1888-89. 641. GAMA BARROS, H. DA. Historia da administrate publica em Portugal nos seculos 12 a 15. 2 vols. Lisbon, 1885-1897. 642. MICHEL, F. Les Portugais en France et les Franc.ais en Portugal. Paris, 1882. §13. The Byzantine Empire (a) General Accounts See also no. 418 above [TOZER]. 643. BURY, J. B. A history of the later Roman empire 395-800 A.D. 2 vols. New York, 1889. CHAP, iv BYZANTINE EMPIRE 67 644. BURY, J. B. A history of the eastern Eoman empire from the fall of Irene to the accession of Basil I (A.D. 802-867). London and New York, 1912. These two works form the standard history of the period which they cover. 645. FINLAY, G. ' ' History of the Byzantine empire, from DCCXVI to MLVII." New York, 1906 (Everyman's library). This is a reprint of vol. II of his History of Greece, no. 656 below. 646. OMAN, C. Story of the Byzantine empire. New York, 1892 (Story of the nations series). 647. FOORD, E. A. The Byzantine empire: the rearguard of European civilization. London, 1911. Very inadequate. 648. BUSSELL, F. W. The Roman empire: essays on the constitu- tional history, 81-1081 A.D. 2 vols. London, 1910. Very disappointing. 649. GELZER, H. Byzantinische Kulturgeschichte. Tubingen, 1909. See also his Ausgewahlte Heine Schriften, Leipzig, 1907; and his "Abriss der byzantinischen Kaisergeschichte, " Ap- pendix to no. 800 below. 650. HESSELING, D. C. Byzantium: Studien over onze Besehaving ria de Stichting van Konstantinopel. Haarlem, 1902. French trans- lation, Essai sur la civilization byzantine, with a preface by G. SCHLUMBERGER. Paris, 1907. 651. GRENIER, P. L 'empire byzantin, son Evolution sociale et politique. 2 vols. Paris, 1904. 652. HERTZBERG, G. F. Geschichte der Byzantiner und des osman- ischen Reiches bis gegen Ende des sechszehnten Jahrhunderts. Berlin, 1883. Part of no. 313 above. 653. ROTH, K. Geschichte des byzantinischen Reiches. Leipzig, 1904 (Sammlung Gb'schen). 654. KRAUSE, J. H. Die Byzantiner des Mittelalters in ihrem Staats- Hof- und Privatleben, insbesondere vom Ende des lOten bis gegen Ende des 14ten Jahrhunderts nach den byzantinischen Quel- len. Halle, 1869. 655. LE BEAU, C. Histoire du Bas-Empire. 28 vols. Paris, 1757- 1817. 68 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI (b) GREECE IN THE MIDDLE AGES 656. FINLAY, G. History of Greece from its conquest by the Komans to the present time. Begun 1843. Edited by H. F. TOZER. 7 vols. Oxford, 1877. 657. MILLER, W. The Latins in the Levant, a history of Frank- ish Greece (1204-1566). London, 1908. 658. HERTZBERG, G. F. Geschichte Griechenlands seit dam Ab- sterben des antiken Lebens bis zur Gegenwart. 4 vols. Gotha, 1876-79. Part of no. 332 above. 659. HOPF, K. Geschichte Griechenlands vom Beginn des Mittel- alters bis auf unsere Zeit (395-1821). 2 vols. Leipzig, 1867-68. Vols. 85-86 in no. 100 above. See also D. BIKELAS, La Grece byzantine et moderne, Paris, 1893. 660. GREGOROVIUS, F. Geschichte der Stadt Athen im Mittel- alter. 2 vols. 2nd edition, Stuttgart, 1889. (c) CONSTANTINOPLE 661. HUTTON, W. H. Constantinople: the story of the old capital of the empire. London, 1900. 3rd edition, 1907 (Mediaeval towns series). See also J. EBERSOLT, Le grand palais de Constantinople et le livre des ceremonies, Paris, 1910; and J. B. BURY, "The great palace," in Byzantinische Zeitschrift, XX (1911). 662. GROSVENOR, E. A. Constantinople. 2 vols. Boston, 1895. 663. VAN MILLIGEN, A. Byzantine Constantinople: the walls of the city and adjoining historical sites. London, 1899. See also A. D. MORDTMANN, Esquisse topographique de Con- stantinople, Lille, 1892; and W. J. BROADRIBB and W. BESANT, Constantinople: a sketch of its history from its foundation to its conquest by the TurTcs in 1453, London, 1879. 664. BAKER, B. G. The walls of Constantinople. London, 1910. 665. DWIGHT, H. G. Constantinople old and new. Illustrated. New York, 1915. 666. CLEMENT, CLARA E. Constantinople: the city of the Sultans. Boston, 1895. 667. EARTH, H. Constantinople. Paris, 1906 (Les villes d'art celebres). 668. GURLITT, C. Konstantinopel. Berlin [1908] (Die Kultur). 669. SCHULTZE, V. Konstantinopel. Berlin, 1913. See also E. OBERHUMMER, Constantinopolis : Abriss der Topographic und Geschichte, Stuttgart, 1899. CHAP, iv EASTERN EUROPE 69 (d) .MISCELLANEOUS 670. SESAN, V. Krrche und Staat im romisch-byzantinis'-hen Reiche seit Konstantin dem Grossen bis zum Falle Konstantinopels. Czernowitz, 1911ff. Vol. I extends to 380 A.D. 671. COBHAM, C. D. Patriarchs of Constantinople. Cambridge University Press, 1911. 672. ZACHARIAE VON LINGENTHAL, K. E. Geschichte des griech- isch-romischen Eechts. 3rd edition, Berlin, 1892. 673. DIEHL, C. Figures byzantines. 2 vols. Vol. I in .4th edi- tion; vol. II in 3rd edition. Paris, 1909. 674. DIEHL, C. Etudes byzantines. Paris, 1905. 675. KRUMBACHER, K. Populare Aufsatze. Leipzig, 1909. 676. RAMBAUD, A. Etudes sur 1'histoire byzantine. Paris, 1912. 677. GFRORER, A. F. Byzantinische Geschichten. 3 vols. Graz, 1872-77. 678. McCABE, J. The empresses of Constantinople. London, 1913. 679. DIETERICH, K. Byzantinische Charakterkopfe. Leipzig, 1909 (Aus Natur und Geisteswelt, 244). §14. Eastern Europe (a) GENERAL ACCOUNTS 680. MARQUART, I. Osteuropaische und ostasiatisehe Streifziige: ethnologische und historisch-topographische Studien zur Geschichte des 9. und 10. Jahrhunderts (ca. 840-940). Leipzig, 1903. See also A. WIRTH, Geschichte Asiens und Osteuropas, vol. I, Von den Anfdngen bis 1790, Halle, 1904. (&) RUSSIA 681. KLUCHEVSKY, V. O. A history of Russia. Translated from the Russian by C. J: HOGARTH. 3 vols. London and New York, 1911-13. A very poor translation of the best book we have on the history of Russia. M. BARING, The Russian people, London, 1911, is based largely on Kluchevsky's lectures, which form the basis of his book. Another reflection of Kluchevsky is the first volume of J. MAVOR, An economic history of Russia, 2 vols., London and New York, 1914. 70 GENERAL BOOKS 682. EAMBAUD, A. Histoire de la. Eussie depuis les origines jusqu'a nos jours. 6th edition, revised by E. HAUMANT. Paris, 1914. Translated by LEONORA B. LANG, A popular history of Eussia, in 3 vols., Boston, 1882. New edition, 1886. The best general history of medieval and modern Eussia by a western scholar. See pp. 933-953 in the latest French edition for an extensive bibliography. Now see also F. P. GIORDANI, Storia della Eussia secondo gli studi piu recenti, 2 vols., Milan, 1916. 683. MORFILL, W. E. Eussia. London, 1890 (Story of the nations series). 684. BRUCKNER, A. Geschichte Busslands, bis zum Ende des 18 Jahrhunderts. 2 vols. Gotha, 1896-1913. Part of no. 332 above. 685. SCHIEMANN, T. Bussland, Polen und Livland bis ins 17 Jahrhundert. 2 vols. Berlin, 1886-87. Part of no. 313 above. 686. PANTENIUS, T. H. Geschichte Busslands von der Entstehung des russischen Eeichs bis zur Gegenwart. Leipzig, 1908. 687. BESTUSCHEW, K. Geschichte Eusslands. A German transla- tion from the Eussion by T. SCHIEMANN. Mitau, 1874. 688. LEROY-BEAULIEU, A. L 'empire des tsars et les Eusses. Paris, 1881-82. Translated from the 3rd French edition by Z. A. EAGOZIN, The empire of the tsars and the Eussians. 3 vols. New York, 1894-1902. This book on modern Eussia constantly reaches back to the middle ages to find explanations for present conditions. 689. EEEB, W. Bussische Geschichte. Leipzig, 1903 (Sammlung Goschen). 690. FIERI ING, P. La Eussie et le Saint-Siege. 4 vols. Paris, 1896-1907. Vol. I in 2nd edition, 1906. (c) FINLAND AND THE BALTIC PROVINCES: LIVONIA, ESTHONIA, AND COURLAND See also no. 717 below. 691. SERAPHIM, E. Geschichte Liv-, Esth- und Kurlands von der " Aufsegelung" des Landes bis zur Einverleibung in das russische Eeich. 2 vols. 2nd edition. Eeval, 1897-1903. See also his Geschichte von Livland, vol. I, Gotha, 1905, part of no. 332 above; his Baltische Geschichte im Grundriss, Beval, 1908; and L. ARBUSOW, Grundriss der Geschichte von Liv-, Esth- und Kurland, 3rd edition, Biga, 1908. For Livonia see also no. 685 above. CHAP, iv POLAND AND BOHEMIA 71 692. SCHYBERGSON, M. G. Finlands historica. 2 vols. Helsing- fors, 1887-89. German edition by F. ARNHEIM. Gotha, 1896. Part of no. 332 above. (d) POLAND See also no. 685 below. 693. ORVIS, JULIA S. A brief history of Poland. New York, 1916. 694. MORFILL, W. R. Poland. London, 1893 (Story of the nations series). S. A. DUNHAM, The history of Poland, London, 1834. L. LEPSZY, Cracow, the royal city of ancient Poland: its history and antiquities, translated by R. DYBOI.SKI, London, 1912. 695. PHILLIPS, W. A. Poland. Home university library, 1915. 696. ROEPELL, R. Geschichte Polens. Vol. I. Continued by J. CARO, vols. II-V (to 1506). Hamburg and Gotha, 1840-86. Part of no. 332 above. 697. CARO, J. Geschichte Polens. Gotha, 1863. 698. BRANDENBURGER, C. Polnische Geschichte. Leipzig, 1907 (Sammlung Goschen). (e) BOHEMIA AND MORAVIA 699. MAURICE, C. E. The story of Bohemia from the earliest i times to the fall of national independence in 1620. New York, 1896 (Story of the nations series). 700. BRETHOLZ, B. Geschichte Bohmens und Mahrens bis zum Aussterben der Premysliden (1306). Munich and Leipzig, 1912. The old standard work on Bohemia was F. PALACKY, Ge- schichte von Bohmen, vols. I-V [to 1526], Prague, 1836-67, vols I-III in 3rd, but unchanged edition, 1864—1896. See also A. ZYCHA, Ueber den Ursprung der Stadte in Bohmen und die Stadtepolitik der Premysliden, Prague, 1914. 701. BACHMAN, A. Geschichte Bohmens. Vols. I and II. Gotha, 1899-1905. Part of no. 332 above. Vol. I extends to 1400 A.D. 702. LUTZOW, F. H. H. V. Bohemia, an historical sketch. Lon- don [1909] (Everyman's library). First published in 1896. See also his Lectures on the historians of Bohemia, London, 1905 (Ilchester lectures for 1904), and his The story of Prague, London, 1907. 703. MONROE, W. S. Bohemia and the Cechs: the history, people, institutions, and the geography of the kingdom, together with ac- counts of Moravia and Silesia. Boston, 1910. 72 GENERAL BOOKS PAKTI (f) HUNGARY 704. VAMBERY, A. The story of Hungary. New York and Lon- don, 1886 (Story of the nations series). 705. SAYOUS, E. Histoire generale des Hongrois. 2 vols. Paris, 1876. (g) BALKAN STATES (1) General 706. MILLER, W. The Balkans: Eoumania, Bulgaria, Servia, Montenegro. New York, 1896 (Story of the nations series). N. FORBES, A. J. TOYNBEE, D. MITRANY, and D. G. HOGARTH, The Balkans: a history of Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece, Rumania, Turkey, Oxford, 1915. W. HOWARD-FLANDERS, Balkania: a short history of the Balkan states, London, 1909. L. LEGER, Serbes, Croates et Bulgares, Paris, 1913. 707. JIRECEK, K. J. Die Eomanen in die Stadten Dalmatiens wahrend des Mittelalters. 3 vols. Vienna, 1901, 1903, 1905 (Denk- sehriften of the Vienna academy). (2) Rumania 708. JORGA, N. Geschichte des rumanischen Volkes. Vols. I-III (to 1640). Gotha, 1905-10. Part of no. 332 above. 709. XENOPOL, A. D. Histoire des Eoumains. 2 vols. Paris, 1896. Vol. I, 513-1633 A.D. See. also his Les Eoumains: histoire, etat material et intellectuel, Paris, 1909. (3) Bulgaria 710. SONGEON, R. P. G. Histoire de la Bulgarie depuis les orig- ines jusqu'a nos jours (485-1913). Paris, 1913. 711. SAMUELSON, J. Bulgaria past and present: historical, politi- cal and descriptive. London, 1888. 712. BOUSQUET, G. Histoire du peuple bulgare depuis les orig- ines jusqu'a nos jours. Paris, 1909. 713. JIRECEK, K. J. Geschichte der Bulgaren. Prague, 1876. (4) Serbia and Bosnia 714. JIRECEK, K. J. Geschichte der Serben. Vol. 1 [to 1371]. Gotha, 1911. See the review of this book by W. MILLER, "The me- diaeval Serbian empire," in Quarterly review, CCXXVI (1916), 488-507. 715. KANITZ, F. Das Konigreieh Serbien und das Serbenvolk von der Romerzeit bis zur Gegenwart. Vol. I. Leipzig, 1904. CHAP, iv SCANDINAVIAN COUNTRIES 73 716. THALi.6czY, L. Studien zur Geschichte Bosniens und Ser- biens im Mittelalter. Translated by F. ECKHART. Munich, 1914. V. KLAIC, Geschichte Bosniens, Leipzig, 1885. S. NOVA- KOVIC, "Les problemes Serbes," in Archiv fur slavische Phil- ologie, XXXITI-XXXIV (1912). §15. Scandinavian Countries (a) GENERAL 717. STEPANSSON, J. Denmark and Sweden with Iceland and Finland. New York, 1916 (Story of the nations series). E. C. OTTE, Scandinavian history, London, 1874. 718. SINDING, P. C. The Scandinavian races: the northmen; the sea-kings and vikings; their manners and customs . . . up to the present time. New York, 1866. New edition, 1875. The first edition bears the title, History of Scandinavia from the early times of the northmen and vikings to the present day. 719. MAURER, K. v. Vorlesungen iiber altnordische Rechts- geschichte. Vols. I-IV. Leipzig, 1906-1909. A posthumous work. (&) DENMARK 720. Danmarks riges historic. By J. STEENSTRUP and others. Vols. I-VI. Copenhagen, 1896-1907. 721. ALLEN, C. F. Histoire de Danemark depuis les temps les plus recules jusqu 'a nos jours. French translation, by E. BEAU- vois, from the 7th Danish edition. 2 vols., Copenhagen, 1878. The French translation adds important bibliographies. 722. DAHLMANN, F. S. Geschichte von Danemark. Vols. I-III. Vols. IV-V (to 1648) by D. SCHAFER. Hamburg and Gotha, 1840- 1902. Part of no. 332 above. (c) NORWAY 723. GJERSET, K. History of the Norwegian people from the earliest times to the present day. 2 vols. New York, 1915. 724. BOYESEN, H. H. The story of Norway. London, 1886 (Story of the nations series). 725. WILLSON, T. B. History of the church and state in Norway from the tenth to the sixteenth century. Westminster, 1903. 74 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI (d) SWEDEN 726. GEIJER, E. G. Geschichte Schwedens. Vols. I-III. Vols. IV-VI by F. F. CARLSON. Vol. VII (to 1772) by L. STAVENOW. Hamburg and Gotha, 1832-1908. Part of no. 332 above. 727. MONTELIUS, O. Sveriges historia fran aldsta tid till vara dagar. 6 vols. Stockholm, 1877-1881. (e) ICELAND 728. HERRMANN, P. Island in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart: Reise-erinnerungen. 3 vols. Leipzig, 1907-1910. Vol. I, ch. Ill, "Geschichte Islands." See references to other works cited in the footnotes and especially J. BRYCE, "Primitive Iceland," in I, 236-300, of his Studies in history and jurisprudence, 2 vols., Oxford, 1901. §16. History of Culture and Civilization (a) GENERAL HISTORIES OF CIVILIZATION See also nos. 187-207 above. 729. Die Kultur der Gegenwart: ihre Entwickelung und ihre Ziele. Edited by P. HINNEBERG. Berlin and Leipzig, 1905ff. About 22 vols. had appeared in 1914. Most of the sep- arate works in parts I and II have some bearing upon the middle ages. The most important of them will be mentioned in appropriate places. 730. Kulturgeschichtliche Bibliothek. Edited by F. FOY. 3 sec- tions. Heidelberg, 1911ff. 731. Quellen und Forschungen zur Sprach- und Culturgeschichte der germanischen Volker. Edited originally by B. TEN BRINK and W. SCHERER. Strassburg, 1874ff. 732. BREYSIG, K. Kulturgeschichte der Neuzeit. Vols. I and II. Berlin, 1900-01. Vol. II, part 2, is on the middle ages. 733. HELLWALD, F. v. Kulturgeschichte in ihrer natiirlichen Entwicklung bis zur Gegenwart. Augsburg, 1874. 4th edition, re- vised and enlarged by eighteen German scholars. 4 vols. Leipzig, 1896-1898. Vol. Ill is on the middle ages. See also E. DRIAULT, Vue generale de I'histoire de la civilisation, 2 vols., Paris, 1909 (Bibliotheque de I'histoire contemporain). 734. HENNE-AM-RHYN, O. Allgemeine Kulturgeschichte von der Urzeit bis auf die Gegenwart. 9 vols. Leipzig, 1877-1908. CHAP, iv FREEDOM OP THOUGHT 75 735. Social England: a record of the progress of the people in religion, laws, learning, arts, industry, commerce, science, literature, and manners. Edited by H. D. TRAILL and written by various specialists. 6 vols. London, 1894-97. Illustrated and revised edi- tion, 6 vols., 1901-04. 736. GUIZOT, F. Histoire de la civilisation en Europe depuis la chute de 1 'empire romain. Paris, 1828. Translated by C. S. HENRY, History of civilization from the fall of the Eoman empire to the French revolution, as vol. I of History of civilization. 4 vols. New York, 1846. See no. 763 below. 737. MILYOUKOV, P. Skizzen russischer Kulturgeschichte. Ger- man edition by E. DAVIDSON. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1898-1901. 738. BAUDRILLART, H. Histoire du luxe privS et public, depuis 1'antiquite jusqu'a nos jours. 2nd edition. 4 vols. Paris, 1880- 1881. Vol. Ill, Le moyen age et la renaissance. (6) HISTORY OP FREEDOM OP THOUGHT See also no. 817 below. 739. WHITE, A. D. A history of the warfare of science with theology in Christendom. 2 vols. New York, 1896. 740. BURY, J. B. A history of freedom of thought. New York [1913] (Home university library). 741. LECKY, W. E. H. History of the rise and influence of the spirit of rationalism in Europe. 2 vols. 1865. Kevised edition, London, 1870. 742. ROBERTSON, J. M. A short history of free-thought, ancient and modern. 2 vols. 2nd, revised edition, London, 1906. 743. SANTA YANA, G. The life of reason: or, The phases of human progress. 5 vols. New York, 1905-06. See especially vol. Ill, Reason in religion. 744. RUFFINI, F. Religious liberty. Translated from the Italian by J. P. HEYES, with a preface by J. B. BURY. London, 1912. 745. WHETHAM, W. C. D., and WHETHAM, CATHERINE D., his wife. Science and the human mind: a critical and historical account of the development of natural knowledge. London, 1912. 746. DRAPER, J. W. History of the intellectual development of Europe. 2 vols. Revised edition, New York, 1876. 747. HOLLAND, F. M. The rise of intellectual liberty from Thales to Copernicus. New York, ]885. 76 GENERAL BOOKS 748. ZOCKLER, O. Geschichte der Beziehungen zwischen Theologie und Naturwissenschaften mit besonderer Riicksicht auf die Schof- ungsgeschichte. 2 vols. Giitersloh, 1877-79. (c) MEDIEVAL CIVILIZATION IN GENERAL 749. Beitrage zur Kulturgeschichte des Mittelalters und der Renaissance. Edited by W. GOETZ. Leipzig and Teubner, 1908ff. 750. Vom Mittelalter zur Reformation: Forschungen zur Ge- schichte der deutschen Bildung. Edited by K. BURDACH. Berlin, 1912ff. Very broad in scope. By no means strictly confined to Germany, e.g., piiblication began in 1912 with parts 3 and 4 of vol II, Briefu-echsel des Cola di Eienzo, edited by K. BUR- DACH and P. PIUR. Original sources are edited along with special studies. 751. GRUPP, G. Kulturgeschichte des Mittelalters. 2 vols. Stutt- gart, 1894-95. 2nd edition, 4 vols, Paderborn, 1907-14. 752. KURTH, G. Les origines de la civilisation moderne. 2 vols. 5th edition, Brussels, 1903. Extends to the time of Charlemagne. 753. LECKY, W. E. H. History of European morals from Augus- tus to Charlemagne. 2 vols. London and New York, 1870. New, cheap impression, London, 1911. 754. WRIGHT, T. Essays on archaeological subjects, and on vari- ous questions connected with the history of art, science, and litera- ture in the middle ages. 2 vols. London, 1861. 755. MERRYWEATHER, F. S. Glimmerings in the dark: or lights and shadows of the olden time. London, 1850. (d) MEDIEVAL INTELLECTUAL LIFE IN GENERAL 756. TAYLOR, H. O. The mediaeval mind. 2 vols. New York, 1911. 2nd edition, revised and enlarged, 1914. 757. WORKMAN, H. B. Christian thought to the Reformation. New York, 1911. 758. NOVATI, F. L'influsso del pensiero latino sopra la civilta italiana del medio evo. 2nd edition, Milan, 1899. 759. HAUREAU, B. Singularites historiques et Htteraires. Paris, 1861. Ten studies, among which are the following: Ecoles d 'Ir- lande; Theodulfe, eveque d 'Orleans; Odon de Cluny; Anselme le Peripatetieien; Guillaume de Conches. .CHAP, iv INTELLECTUAL HISTORY 77 760. MAITLAND, S. E. The dark ages: a series of essays intended to illustrate the state of religion and literature in the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries. London, 1844. This is a curious old defence of the culture of the period. Probably its oldest prototype is J. MABILLON, Traite des etudes monastiques, Paris, 1691. 761. FIGUIEB, L. Vies des savants illustres avec 1 'appreciation sommaire de leurs travaux. 5 vols. Paris, 1866-1870. Vol. II, Moyen age; vol. Ill, Renaissance. (e) FRANCE See also no. 781 below. 762. RAMBAUD, A. Histoire de la civilisation franchise, 7th edi- tion, 2 vols., Paris, 1898. 763. GUIZOT, F. Histoire de la civilisation en France. Vols. I-V. Paris, 1829-1838. 2nd edition, vols. I-IV, Paris, 1840. 6th edition, 4 vols., Paris, 1857. Translated by W. HAZLITT as vols. II-IV of History of civilization. New York, 1846. Extends from the 5th to the 14th century. 764. ROSIERES, R. Histoire de la societe franchise au moyen age (987-1483). 2 vols. Paris, 1880. 3rd edition, 1884. 765. REYNAUD, L. Les origines de 1 'influence franchise en Alle- magne: etude sur 1'histoire comparee de la civilisation en France et en Allemagne pendant la periode preeourtoise (950-1150). Vol. I. Paris, 1913. 766. VOSSLER, K. Frankreichs Kultur im Spiegel seiner Sprach- entwicklung. Heidelberg, 1913. 767. CHALLAMEL, A. M£moires du peuple franc.ais. 8 vols. Paris, 1873. (f) GERMANY (1) Medieval and Modern Times 768. STEINHAUSEN, G. Geschichte der deutschen Kultur. Leip- zig, 1904. 2nd edition, revised, 2 vols., 1913. Popular, but reliable. The best general survey. 769. FREYTAG, G. Bilder aus der deutschen Vergangenheit. 4 vols in 5. Leipzig, 1859-62. 27th to 32nd editions, 1908-09. Vols. I-II, part 1, to 1500. * 770. HENNE-AM-RHYN, O. Kulturgeschichte des deutschen Volkes. 2 vols. Berlin, 1886. 3rd edition, 1898. 78 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 771. EICHARD, E. History of German civilization: a general sur- vey. New York, 1911. 2nd, revised, edition, 1913. 772. SCHEER, J. Deutsche Kultur- und Sittengesehichte. Leip- zig, 1852-53. 12th edition, 3 vols., 1909. 773. SCHEER, J. Germania: zwei Jahrtausende deutschen Lebens kulturgeschichtlich geschildert. 6th edition by H. PRUTZ. Stutt- gart, 1905. 774. BIEDERMANN, K. Deutsche Volks- und Kulturgeschiehte. 4th edition. 3 vols. Wiesbaden, 1901. 775. Monographien zur deutschen Kulturgeschichte. Edited by G. STEINHAUSEN. 12 vols. Leipzig, 1899-1905. Two supplementary vols., Deutsches Leben der Vergangenheit in Bildern. 1907-08. For a list of vols. see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, no. 28 above, no. 1733. (2) The Middle Ages 776. HERRE, P. Deutsche Kultur im Mittelalter in Bild und Wort. Leipzig, 1912. 777. STEINHAUSEN, G. Kulturgeschichte der Deutschen im Mit- telalter. Leipzig, 1910 (Wissenschaft und Bildung, 88). 778. LOHER, F. v. Kulturgeschichte der Deutschen im Mittel- alter. 3 vols. Munich, 1891-94. 779. MICHAEL, E. Culturzustande des deutschen Volkes wahrend des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts. 5 vols. Vols. I— V, Freiburg, 1897- 1911. 780. STEINHAUSEN, G. Geschichte des deutsehen Briefes. 2 parts. Berlin, 1889-91. See also the source-book, Deutsche Privatbriefe des Mittel- alters, edited by G. STEINHAUSEN, 2 vols., Berlin, 1899-1907. 781. CHELARD, E. La civilisation franchise dans le developpe- ment de 1'Allemagne (moyen age). Paris, 1900. (<7) HISTORIES OF LITERATURE (1) General Histories of Literature 782. BAUMGARTNER, A. Geschichte der Weltliteratur. 7 vols. St. Louis, 1897-1912. Vol. IV. Die lateinische und griechische Litera- tur der christlichen Volker. 1900. The author is a Jesuit. 783. SAINTSBURY, G. A history of criticism and literary taste in Europe from the earliest texts to the present day. 3 vols. Edin- burgh and London, 1900-04. Vol. I, Classical and mediaeval criticism. CHAP, iv HISTORIES OF LITERATURE 79 784. SISMONDI, J. C. L. S. DE. Historical view of the literature of the south of Europe. Translated from the Italian by T. ROSCOE. 4 vols. London, 1823. (2) Ancient Classical Literature and Learning 785. SANDYS, J. E. A history of classical scholarship. 3 vols. Cambridge, 1903-06. Vol. I, From the sixth century B.C. to the end of the middle ages, in a 2nd edition, 1906. There is an abridged edition in one volume, A short his- tory of classical scholarship from the sixth century B.C. to the present day, Cambridge, 1915. See also A. GUDEMAN, Grund- riss der Geschichte der klassischen Philologie, 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1909 ; and H. T. PECK, A history of classical philology, from the 7th century B.C. to the 20th, century A.D. London and New York, 1911. 786. NORDEN, E. Die antike Kunst-prosa vom 6ten Jahrhundert vor Christus bis in die Zeit der Renaissance. 2 vols. Leipzig, 1898. New edition, 1909. (3) Literary History of the Middle Ages See also no. 170 above. 787. MANITIUS, M. Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur des Mittelalters. Vol. I. Munich, 1911. This is now the standard handbook for the history of medieval Latin literature. The first volume extends to about 1050. Until the work is carried into later centuries, we must be content with G. GROBER, ' ' ttbersicht iiber die lateinische Literatur von der Mitte des 6. Jahrhunderts bis 1350" in Grundriss, no. 305 above, vol. TT, part T, 98-432; and with SANDYS, no. 785 above. 788. EBERT, A. Allgemeine Geschichte der Literatur des Mittel- alters im Abendlande. 3 vols. Leipzig, 1874-87. Vol. 1 in 2nd edition, 1889. Extends to the beginning of the llth century. There is a French translation by J. AYMERIC and J. CONDAMIN, 3 vols., Paris, 1883-1889. 790. UKRVIEUX, A. L. Les fabulistes latins depuis le siecle d'Au- guste jusqu'a la fin du moyen age. 5 vols. Paris, 1893-1899. 791. SPENCE, L. A dictionary of medieval romance and romance writers. London, 1913. 792. LUDLOW, J. M. Popular epics of the middle ages of the Norse-German and Carlovingian cycles. 2 vols. London, 1865. 793. KKR, W. P. Essays on medieval literature. London, 1905. On Dante, Boccaccio, Chaucer, Gower, Froissart, and an estimate of the late Gaston Paris. 80 GENERAL BOOKS PART1 794. LAWRENCE, W. W. Mediaeval story. New York, 1912. 795. MCLAUGHLIN, E. T. Studies in mediaeval life and litera- ture. New York, 1894. 796. BULFINCH, T. Mythology: the age of fable, the age of chivalry, and legends of Charlemagne. Complete in one volume, revised and enlarged. New York, 1913. 797. DELISLE, L. Litterature latine et histoire du moyen age. Paris, 1890. 798. FALKE, J. v. Geschichte des Geschmacks im Mittelalter und andere Studien auf dem Gebiete der Kunst und Literatur. 2nd edition. Berlin, 1892. 799. [MARTENE, E., and DURAND, TL] Voyage litteraire de deux religieux Benedictines de la Congregation de St. Maur. Paris, 1717. Second voyage litteraire de deux religieux Benedictines de la Con- gregation de St. Maur. Paris, 1724. (4) Byzantine Literature 800. KRUMBACHER, K. Geschichte der byzantinischen Literatur von Justinian bis zum Ende des ostromischen Keiches (527-1453 A.D.). Munich, 1890. 2nd edition, 1897. (In Handbuch der klas- sichen Altertumswissenschaft.) Of fundamental importance. See his condensed, but more recent (1907) treatment, "Die griechische Literatur des Mittelalters, " in Die Kultur der Gegenwart, no. 729 above, I, 8. 801. DIETERICH, K. Geschichte der byzantinischen und neu- griechischen Literatur. Leipzig, 1902 (Die Literaturen des Ostens, 4). 802. MONTEIATICI, G. Storia della letteratura Bizantina, 324- 1453. Milan, 1916. (5) France 803. Histoire litteraire de la France. Vols. I-XXXIV. Paris, 1733-1915. Begun by the Religieux Benedictins de la Congregation de Saint-Maur and continued by the Academic des inscriptions et belles-lettres. The first 26 vols. are analyzed in A. FRANKLIN, no. 23 above, pp. 585-97. For a detailed bibliography of medieval French literature, see outline XXIV in part III below. (6) Germany and Austria 804. SCHERER, W. Geschichte der deutschen Literatur. llth edition. Berlin, 1910. Translated from the 3rd German edition by Mrs. F. C. CONYBEARE, History of German literature. 2 vols. New York, 1901. CHAP, iv HISTORIES OF LITERATURE 81 805. NAGL, J. W., and ZEIDLER, J. Deutsch-osterreichische Liter- aturgeschichte. Vols. I-II. Vienna, 1899-1909. 806. VOGT, F., and KOCH, M. Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den altesten Zeiten bis zur Gegenwart. 2 vols. Leipzig and Vienna, 1897. 3rd edition, 1910. 807. KELLE, J. Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den altesten Zeiten bis zum 13 Jahrhundert. 2 vols. Berlin, 1892-96. (7) Italy 808. GASPARY, A. Gesehichte der italienischen Literatur. 2 vols. Strassburg, 1885-88. Translated by H. OELSNER, The history of Italian literature to the death of Dante. London, 1901. 809. GARNETT, R. A history of Italian literature. London, 1908. 810. D'ANCONA, A., and BACCI, O. Manuale della letteratura ital- iana. New, revised, edition, vols. I-VI, Florence, 1907-10. Vols. I and II cover the middle ages. 811. TIRABOSCHI, G. Storia della letteratura italiana [to 1700]. Modena, 1772ff. 16 vols. Milan, 1822-26. See especially vols. III-V [476-1400 A.D.] in 2nd edition, Modena, 1787-94. (8) England 812. Cambridge history of English literature. Edited by A. W. WARD and A. R. WALLER. Vols. I-XII. Cambridge, 1907-15. For additional references see GROSS, no. 36 above. (9) Spain and Portugal 813. FITZMAURICE-KELLY, J. A history of Spanish literature. London, 1898. Reprint, 1915. The second Spanish edition, Historia dc la literatura Espanola, Madrid, 1916, is especially valuable for its full bibliography. See also G. TICKNOR, History of Spanish litera- ature, 3rd edition, 3 vols., London, 1863; the Spanish transla- tion by P. DE GAYANOOS, 4 vols., Madrid, 1851-1861, contains additions and corrections. For Portugal, see A. LOISEAU, Histoire de la litterature portugaise, Paris, 1885. (10) 'Russia and Scandinavia 814. BRUCKNER, A. Geschichte der russischen Literatur. Leipzig, 1905 (Die Literaturen des Ostens, 2). See also K. WALISZEWSKI, Histoire de la literature russe, Paris, 1900; W. R. MORFILL, Slavonic literature, London, 1883; and G. KREK, Einlcitung in die alavische Literaturgeachichte, Graz, 1874, 2nd edition, 1887. For Scandinavia, See P. SCHWEITZER, Geschichte der ukandinavischcn Literatur, 3 vols., Leipzig, 1885-1889; and E. MOOK, "Nordische Literatur," in PAUL'S Grundriss, no. 307 above. 82 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI (h) HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY AND "WELTANSCHAUUNG" ( 1 ) Medieval ' ' Weltanschauung ' ' 815. POOLE, R. L. Illustrations of the history of mediaeval thought. London, 1884. Now see also C. C. J. WEBB, Studies in the history of natural theology, Oxford, 1915, on St. Anselm, Abelard, St. Thomas Aquinas, etc. 816. EICKEN, H. v. Geschichte und System der mittelalterlichen Weltanschauung. Stuttgart, 1887. In 1905 it was announced that C. BAEUMKER would prepare a volume on Die mittelalterliche Weltanschauung, for the Hand- ~buch of BELOW and MEINECKE, no. 330 above, but the work has not appeared. E. TROELTSCH, Die Soziallehren der christ- lichen Kirchen und Gruppen, vol. I of his Gesammelten Schrif- ten, Tubingen, 1912, 178-426. 817. BEUTER, H. Geschichte der religiosen Aufklarung im Mit- telalter. 2 vols. in 1. Berlin, 1875-77. The period covered is from the 8th to the 14th century. 818. Weltanschauung: Philosophie und Religion in Darstellungen. Edited by W. DILTHEY and about twenty others. Berlin, 1911. 819. EUCKEN, E. Die Lebensanschauungen der grossen Denker. 8th edition. Leipzig, 1909. Translated by W. S. HOUGH and W. E. BOYCE-GIBSON, The problem of human life as viewed by the great thinkers. London, 1909. 820. DILTHEY, W. Einleitung in die Geisteswissenschaften: Ver- such einer Grundlegung fur das Studium der Gesellschaft und der Geschichte. Vol. I. Leipzig, 1883. 821. TROEIS-LUND, T. F. Himmelsbild und Weltanschauung im Wandel der Zeiten. Authorized German translation by L. BLOCH. 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1908. (2) General Histories of Philosophy 822. UEBERWEG, F. Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie. 10th edition, 4 vols. Berlin, 1905-09. Translated from the 4th German edition by G. S. MORRIS, A history of philosophy from Thales to the present time. 2 vols. New York, 1872-1874, also 1892. See also W. TURNER, History of philosophy, Boston, 1903. 823. WINDELBAND, W. Lehrbuch der Geschichte der Philosophie. 5th edition. Tubingen, 1910. Translated by J. H. TUFTS, A history of philosophy. 2nd edition. New York, 1901. 824. FABRE, J. Histoire de la philosophic depuis 1'antiquite jusqu'a la revolution franchise. 5 vols. Paris, 1902ff. Vol. II, La pensee chretienne: des Evangiles a 1 'Imitation de Jesus-Christ. CHAP, iv MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY 83 825. WULF, M. DE. Histoire de la philosophic scholastique dans les Pays-Bas et la principaute de Liege jusqu 'a la revolution f ran- caise. Louvahi, 1895. 2nd edition, 1910. (3) Medieval Philosophy 826. Beitrage zur Geschichte der Philosophic des Mittelalters: Texte und Untersuchungen. Edited by C. BAEUMKER and G. v. HERTLING. Miinster, 1891ff. A collection as valuable for the original texts as for the scholarly expositions of the editors. 827. WULF, M. DE. Histoire de la philosophic m^dievale. Lou- vain, 1900. 2nd enlarged edition, 1905. 3rd edition, an English translation by P. COFFEY, History of medieval philosophy. London and New York, 1909. 4th edition in French, enlarged and revised, 1912. For Jewish philosophy in the middle ages see NEUMARK, no. 866 below. 828. PICAVET, F. Esquisse d 'une histoire generale et compared des philosophies me'dievales. Paris, 1905. 2nd edition, 1907. 829. HAUREAU, B. Histoire de philosophic scolastique. 2nd edi- tion, 3 vols., Paris, 1872-80. 830. GRABMANN, M. Die Geschichte der scholastischen Methode. Nach den gedruckten und ungedruckten Quellen dargestellt. Vols. I and II. Freiburg-i-B., 1909-11. 831. BAEUMKER, C. "Die europaische Philosophic des Mittel- alters." Berlin and Leipzig, 1909. In Kultur der Gegenwart, no. 729 above, I, 5. 832. ENDRES, J. A. Geschichte der mittelalterlichen Philosophic im Abendlande. Kempten, 1908. 833. PRANTL, K. VON. Geschichte der Logik im Abendlande. 4 vols. Leipzig, 1855-70. Vol. II in 2nd edition, 1885. Extends to the Renaissance. 834. STOCKL, A. Geschichte der Philosophic des Mittelalters. 3 vols. Mainz, 1864-66. 835. RICKABY, J. Scholasticism. London, 1908. A primer based largely on WULF, no. 827 above. (i) HISTORY OF EDUCATION (1) General Histories of Education 836. Geschichte der Erziehung vom Anfang bis auf unsere Zeit. Edited by K. A. SCHMID. Continued by G. SCHMID. 5 vols in 10 parts. Berlin, 1884-1902. 84 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 837. WILLMANN, O. Didaktik als Bildungslehre. 2 vols. Bruns- wick, 1882. 4th edition, in one vol., 1909. 838. BAUMEISTER, [K.] A. Handbuch der Erziehungs- und Un- terrichtslehre fiir hohere Schulen. 4 vols. Munich, 1895-98. 839. ZIECJLER, T. Geschichte der Padagogik mit besonderer Riiek- sicht auf das hohere Unterrichtswesen. 3rd edition. Munich, 1909. 840. SCHERER, H. Die Padagogik in ihrer Entwickelung im Zusammenhange mit dem Kultur- und Geistesleben. Vols. I and II, 1-2. Leipzig, 1897-1907. (2) History of Medieval Education 841. GRAVES, F. P. A history of education during the middle ages and the transition to modern times. New York, 1910. 842. ECKSTEIN, F. A. Lateinischer Unterricht. Leipzig, 1882. Extract from SCHMID'S Encyclopadie, no. 118 above, IV, 1, 204-405. 843. ECKSTEIN, F. A. Lateinischer und griechischer Unterricht im Mittelalter. Edited by H. HEYDEN (part I, Geschichte). Leip- zig, 1887. 844. MASIUS, H. "Die Erziehung im Mittelalter." Stuttgart, 1892. In Geschichte der Erziehung, no. 836 above, II, part I, 94- 333. 845. DRANE, AUGUSTA T. Christian schools and scholars. Lon- don, 1881. Reprint, New York, 1909. 846. SPECHT, F. A. Geschichte des Unterrichtswesens in Deutsch- land von den altesten Zeiten bis zur Mitte des 13 Jahrhunderts. Stuttgart, 1885. 847. PAULSEN, F. Das deutsche Bildungswesen in seiner ge- schichtlichen Entwickelung. Leipzig, 1906 (Aus Natur und Geistes- welt, 100). 848. LEACH, A. F. Some results of research in the history of education in England with suggestions for its continuance and extension. British Academy publications. Oxford University Press, 1915. 849. LEACH, A. F. Educational charters and documents, 598- 1909. Cambridge, 1911. §17. Jews For a general bibliography see no. 62 above. For Jews in England see GROSS, no. 36 above, 69d; in Germany, DAHLMANN- WAITZ, no. 28 above, pp. 150ff. CHAP, iv MEDIEVAL JEWS 85 (a) GENERAL HISTORY OF THE JEWS 850. GRATZ, H. Geschichte der Juden von den altesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart. 13 vols. Partly in 2nd-4th editions. Leip- zig, 1894-1908. Translated into English, History of the Jews from the earliest times to the present day. 6 vols. Philadelphia, 1891-98. Popular edition of the above, entitled Volkstumliche Ge- schichte der Juden, 2nd edition, 3 vols., 1908. S. M. DUBNOW, History of the Jews in Russia and Poland from the earliest times until the present day, translated from the Russian by I. FRIEDLANDER, vol. 1, Philadelphia, 1916. 851. HOSMER, J. K. The Jews, ancient, mediaeval, and modern. New York, 1891. Often reprinted (Story of the nations series). 852. ABBOTT, G. F. Israel in Europe. London, 1907. 853. HERRMANN, F. Geschichte des jiidischen Volkes seit der Zer- storung Jerusalems. Calw and Stuttgart, 1908. 854. HENNE-AM-RHYN, O. Kulturgeschichte des judischen Volkes, von den altesten Zeiten bis zur Gegenwart. 2nd edition. Jena, 1892f. 855. LIEBE, G. H. T. Das Judentum in der deutschen Vergan- genheit. Leipzig, 1903. Part of no. 775 above. 856. BEDARRIDE, I. Les juifs en France, en Italic, et en Espagne: recherches sur leur etat depuis leur dispersion jusqu'a nos jours sous le rapport de la legislation, de la litterature et du commerce. Paris, 1859. 3rd edition, revised, 1867. (b) JEWS IN THE MIDDLE AGES (1) Social and Economic History 857. ABRAHAMS, I. Jewish life in the middle ages. London and Philadelphia, 1896. See also D. S. SCHAPF, "The treatment of the Jews in the middle ages," Bibliotheca Sacra (1903), 547-69; J. H. BRIDGES, "The Jews of Europe in the middle ages," Living age, LV, 769-788; and J. v. DOLLINGER, "The Jews in Europe," in his Studies, no. 913 below. 858. CARO, G. Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte der Juden im Mittelalter und der Neuzeit. Vol. I, Das friihere und das hohe Mittelalter. Leipzig, 1908. 859. HAHN, B. Die wirtschaftliche Tiitigkeit der Juden im frankischen und deutschen Reich bis zum 2 Kreuzzug. Freiburg, 1911. 860. HOFFMANN, M. Der Geldhandel der deutschen Juden wahr- end des Mittelalters bis zum Jahre 1350. Leipzig, 1910. 86 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 861. SCHIPPER, I. Anfange des Kapitalismus bei den abend- landischen Juden im friiheren Mittelalter bis zum Ausgang des 12 Jahrhunderts. Vienna, 1907. 66 pp. (Reprint from Zeitschrift fur Volkswirtschaft, XV.) (2) Intellectual Life of Medieval Jews 862. SCHLEIDEN, M. J. Die Bedeutung der Juden fur Erhaltung und Wiederbelebung der Wissenschaften im Mittelalter. 4th edi- tion. Leipzig, 1879. 32 pp. Translated by M. KLEIMENHAGEN from the 4th, revised, German edition, The importance of the Jews for the preservation and revival of learning during the middle ages. London, 1911. 63 pp. 863. STEINSCHNEIDER, M. Die arabische Literatur der Juden. Frankfurt, 1902. See also D. NEUMARK, Geschichte der judischen Literatur des Mittelalters, 2 vols., Berlin, 1898. 864. STEINSCHNEIDER, M. Die hebraischen ubersetzungen des Mittelalters, und die Juden als Dolmetscher: ein Beitrag zur Liter a- turgeschichte des Mittelalters. 2 vols. Berlin, 1893. 865. STEINSCHNEIDER, M. Die Geschichtsliteratur der Juden in Druckwerken und Handschriften. Frankfurt, 1905. 866. NEUMARK, D. Gesehichte der jiidischen Philosophic des Mittelalters. 2 vols. Berlin, 1907-1910. Now see also I. HTJSIKT, A history of mediaeval Jewish philosophy, New York, 1916; and A. BONILLA Y SAN MART{N, Historia de la filosofia Espanola, 2 vols., Madrid, 1908-1911, the second volume of which is on Jewish philosophy to the twelfth century. 867. YELLIN, D., and ABRAHAMS, I. Maimonides. Philadelphia, 1903. 868. GUDEMANN, M. • Geschichte des Erziehungswesens und der Cultur der abendlandischen Juden wahrend des Mittelalters und der neueren Zeit. 3 vols. Vienna, 1880-1888. See also his Quellenschriften zur Geschichte des Unterrichts und der Erziehung bei den deutschen Juden von den dltesten Zeiten bis auf Mendelssohn, Berlin, 1891. (3) Medieval Jewries 869. PHILIPSON, D. Old European Jewries. Philadelphia, 1894. 870. RODOCANACHI, E. Le saint-siege et les juifs: le ghetto a Rome. Paris, 1891. 871. BERLINER, A. Geschichte der Juden in Rom von der altesten Zeit bis zur Gegenwart. 2 vols., in one. Frankfurt, 1893. CHAP, iv MEDIEVAL JEWS 87 872. EGBERT, U. Les signes d'infamie au moyen age: Juifs, Sarasins, heretiques, lepreux, cagots, et filles publiques. Paris, 1891. (4) General Accounts and Miscellanea 873. HARRIS, M. H. History of the mediaeval Jews: from the Moslem conquest of Spain to the discovery of America. New York, 1907. Second edition, revised and enlarged, 1916. 874. CHWOLSON, D. Beitrage zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Judentums von c. 400 v. Chr. bis c. 1000 n. Chr. Leipzig, 1910. 875. DEPPING, G. B. Les juifs dans le moyen age: essai his- torique sur leur etat civil, commercial et litteraire. Paris, 1845. 876. BAER, F. Studien zur Geschichte der Juden im Konigreich Aragonien wahrend des 13 und 14 Jahrhunderts. Berlin, 1913. 877. STRAUSS, B. Die Juden im Konigreich Sizilien unter Nor- mannen und Staufern. Heidelberg, 1910 (Heidelberger Abhandlun- gen). 878. BEGNE, J. Etude sur la condition des juifs de Narbonne du Ve au XIVe sieele. Narbonne, 1912. 879. STEINBERG, AUGUSTA. Studien zur Geschichte der Juden in der Schweiz wahrend des Mittelalters. Zurich, 1902. 880. STOBBE, O. Die Juden in Deutschland wahrend des Mittel- alters. Brunswick, 1866. Eeprint, Leipzig, 1902. 881. STERN, M. Urkundliche Beitrage iiber die Stellung der Papste zu den Juden. Kiel, 1893. 882. MAULDE LA CLAVIERE, A. E. DE. Les juifs dans les eiats francjais de saint-siege au moyen age: documents pour servir a 1'histoire des Israelites et de la papaute". Paris, 1886. 883. ADLER, E. N. Auto de f6 and Jew. London, 1908. 884. The itinerary of Benjamin of Tudela: critical text, trans- lation and commentary by E. N. ADLER. London, 1907. See also BEAZLEY, Dawn of modern geography, II. ch. IV, "Benjamin of Tudela and other Jewish travellers" to ea. 1250. §18. Collections See more extended lists for France in MONOD, no. 22 above, pp. 120-127; for Germany, DAHLMANN-WAITZ, no. 28 above, pp. 19ff. STEIN, no. 1 above, on pp. 642-649, gives a list of indexes of the publications of academies and miscellaneous learned societies, and on pp. 697-708 a similar list of indexes of serial publications of historical societies. Fortunately we have in English the following 88 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI interesting articles by foreign scholars in the Annual report of the American historical association, 1909, 229-277: "Historical societies in Great Britain, by G. W. PROTHERO; "The work of Dutch his- torical societies," by H. T. COLENBRANDER; "The historical societies of France, " by C. ENIART; "The work of historical societies in Spain," by R. ALTAMIRA. (a) IMPORTANT ACADEMIES AND LEARNED SOCIETIES (1) France and Belgium 885. Academic des inscriptions et belles-lettres [of Paris]. His- toire et memoires. 50 vols. Paris, 1717-1809. Me'moires, 1803ff. Memoires presentes a 1' Academic par divers savants etrangers; first series, Sujets divers, Paris, 1844ff.; second series, Antiquites de la France, 1843ff. Notices et extraits des manuscripts de la Biblio- theque nationale et autres bibliotheques, Paris, 1787ff. Monuments et memoires (Fondation EUGENE PIOT), Paris, 1894ff. See also nos 460, 803 above and 975 below, and the Eecueil des historiens des croisades, under outline XXI in part II below. 886. Societe de 1'histoire de France. Paris. Issues an Annuaire-Bulletin, 1837ff., in addition to the publications for which see no. 966 below. Also see 974 below. 887. Bibliotheque des ecoles franchises d'Athenes et de Rome. Paris, 1876ff. One hundred and ten volumes had appeared in 1913. For series II and III see no. 959 below. See also the -Melanges d'archeologie et d'histoire, edited by the Ecole franc.ais de Rome. 888. Bibliotheque de 1 'Ecole pratique des hautes etudes [of Paris]. Section des sciences philologiques et historiques. Paris, 1869ff. 889. Bibliotheque de la Faculte des lettres, Universite de Paris. Paris, 1896ff. 890. Ecole des chartes. Paris. See nos 164 and 231 above. 891. Academic des sciences morales et politiques. Comptes ren- dus. Paris, 1840ff. 892. Academic royale des sciences, des lettres et des beaux-arts de Belgique. Bulletins. Brussels, 1836ff. 893. Recueil de travaux publics par les membres de la conference il 'histoire, ... of the University of Louvain. Louvain, 1890ff. CHAP, iv LEARNED SOCIETIES 89 (2) Germany and Austria For collections edited by individuals see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, nos. 1364-1389. 894. Abhandlungen der koniglichen Akademie der Wissenshaften in Berlin, 1815ff. Philosophisch-historische Klasse, 1908ff. Sitz- ungsberichte, 1882ff. 895. Abhandlungen der koniglichen bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Munchen. Historische Klasse. Munich, 1833ff. Sitzungsberichte. Philosophisch-philologisch-historische Klasse. Munich, 1871ff. 896. Abhandlungen der koniglichen sachsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig. Philologisch-historische Klasse. Leip- zig, 1846ff. 897. Abhandlungen der koniglichen Gesellschaft der Wissen- schaften zu Gottingen, 1843ff. Historisch-philologische Klasse, 1893ff. Nachrichten, 1894ff. 898. Studien und Darstellungen aus dem Gebiete der Geschichte, im Auftrage der Gorres-Gesellschaft und in Verbindung mit der Eedaktion des historischen Jahrbuches herausgegeben von H. Grauert. Freiburg, 1900ff. See no. 152 above. 899. Bibliothek des kgl. preussischen historischen Instituts in Eom. Borne, 1905ff. See also no. 41 above and 993 below. 900. Publikation des osterreichischen historischen Instituts in Rom. Vienna and Leipzig, 1910ff. Both of these publications contain studies as well as texts. 901. Sitzungsberichte der kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissen- schaften zu Wien. Philosophish-historische Klasse. Vienna, 1848ff. See also no. 986 below. 902. Sitzungsberichte der koniglichen bohmischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Prag. Prague, 1859ff. Philosophisch-his- torisch-philologische Klasse, 1885ff. (3) England 903. Royal historical society. Transactions. London, 1872ff. 904. The British academy for the promotion of historical, philo- sophical and philological studies. London, 1903ff. (4) Italy 905. Istituto storico italiano. Bulletino, no. 162 above, and Fonti, no. 990 below. 90 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 906. Keale accademia del Lincei. Founded 1603. Since 1875 divided into two classes, one of which is de- voted to ' ' scienze morali, storiche e filologiche. ' ' (5) Spain 907. Eeal academia de la historia. Madrid, 1738ff. Boletin, 1877ff. For a list of its publications see Annual report of the American historical association, 1909, p. 271. (6) COLLECTIONS OF HISTORICAL ESSAYS For similar collections, mostly German, see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, nos. 1304-1338. 908. FUSTEL DE COULANGES, N. D. Becherches sur quelques prob- lemes d'histoire. Paris, 1894. 909. COULTON, G. G. Mediaeval studies. London, 1905ff. First series, 2nd revised edition, with three appendices. London, 1915. 910. CBEIGHTON, M. Historical lectures and addresses. London, 1903. 911. CREIGHTON, LOUISE (VON GLEHN) "Mrs. MANDELL CEEIGH- TON. ' ' Heroes of European history. London and New York, 1906. 912. CUTTS, E. L. Scenes and characters of the middle ages. London, 1872. Eeprinted 1902. 3rd edition, 1911. 913. DOLLINGER, J. v. Akademische Vortrage. 3 vols. Nord- lingen and Munich, 1888-1891. Translated by MARGARET WARRE, Studies in European history. London, 1890. 914. EDELSTAND DU MERIL, M. Etudes sur quelques points d'arch- eologie et d'histoire litteraire. Paris, 1862. Among the eight studies are the following: Les formes du marriage . . . pendant le moyen age; De 1 'usage non inter- rompu jusqu'a nos jours des tablettes en cire; De la tapis- serie de Bayeux et de son importance historique. 915. EDELSTAND DU MERIL, M. Melanges archSologiques et litter- aires. Paris, 1850. Especially pp. 243-89, "Des origines de la basse latinite et la necessite de glossaires speciaux. ' ' 916. FREEMAN, E. A. Historical essays. 4 series in 4 vols. London, 1871ff. 917. FROUDE, J. A. Short studies in great subjects. Vols. I and II. London, 1894. 918. GASQUET, F. A. The last abbot of Glastonbury and other essays. London, 1908. CHAP, iv HISTORICAL ESSAYS 91 919. GASQUET, F. A. Old English bible and other essays. Lon- don, 1897. 920. GRAEVENITZ, G. v. Deutsche in Rom: Studien und Skizzen aus elf Jahrhunderten. Leipzig, 1902. Ch. 1, Charlemagne; ch. 2, Otto III. 921. HARRISON, F. The meaning of history. New York, 1908. 922. JESSOPP, A. The coming of the friars and other historical essays. 5th edition. London, 1889. 923. JESSOPP, A. Studies by a recluse. London, 1893. 3rd edi- tion, 1895. 924. JOURDAIN, C. Excursions historiques et philosophiques a travers le moyen age. Paris, 1888. 925. LANGLOIS, C. V. Questions d 'histoire et d 'enseignement. Paris, 1902. 926. LUCHAIRE, A. Melanges d 'histoire du moyen age. Paris, 1908. 927. PATTISON, R. P. DUNN. Leading figures in European his- tory. New York, 1912. 928. SALZMANN, L. F. Mediaeval byways. Boston, 1913. 929. SHAHAN, T. J. The middle ages: sketches and fragments. New York, 1904. 930. STILLE, C. J. Studies in mediaeval history. Philadelphia, 1882. 2nd edition, 1883. 931. STUBBS, W. Lectures on European history. Edited by A. HASSALL. London, 1904. 932. STUBBS, W. Seventeen lectures on the study of mediaeval and modern history and kindred subjects. Oxford, 1886. 3rd edi- tion, 1900. 933. WRIGHT, T., and HALLIWELL, J. O. Reliquae antiquae. 2 vols. London, 1845. (c) COMMEMORATIVE ESSAYS For other similar essays, mostly German, see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, nos. 1339-1353. 934. Melanges d 'histoire offerts a M. CHARLES BEMONT, par ses Sieves a 1'occasion de la vingt-cinquieme annfie de son enseignement a I'e'cole pratique des hautes eludes. Paris, 1913. 935. Melanges offerts a M. EMILE CHATELAIN. Paris, 1909. 936. Melanges PAUL FABRE: £tude d 'histoire du moyen age. Paris, 1902. 92 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI 937. Melanges FITTING (Soixante-quinzieme anniversaire de M. le professeur HERMANN FITTING). 2 vols. Paris, 1908. 938. Recueil de travaux d 'erudition dedi&s a la memoire de JULIEN HAVET. Paris, 1895. 939. Melanges d 'etudes d 'histoire du moyen age dediSes & GABRIEL MONOD. Paris, 1896. (d) MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS 940. Cambridge historical series. Edited by G. W. PROTHERO. 941. Cambridge historical essays. 942. Cambridge manuals of science and literature. Cambridge University Press. 943. Continental legal history. Published under the auspices of the Association of American Law Schools. Boston, Little, Brown and Company. In 1915, vols. I, II, III, V, XI had appeared. 944. Everyman's library. London and New York. See also the Temple classics, and the King's classics. 945. Goschen Sammlung: geschichtliche Bibliothek aus der "Sammlung Goschen." Berlin and Leipzig. 946. Home university library. New York, 1911ff. 947. Aus Natur und Geisteswelt. Teubner, Leipzig. 948. Wissenschaft und Bildung. Quelle and Meyer, Leipzig. CHAPTER V LARGE COLLECTIONS OF ORIGINAL SOURCES §1. General Collections See also nos. 383-393 above. 949. Records of civilization: sources and studies. Edited by J. T. SHOTWELL. New York, Columbia University Press, 1915ff. A collection of translations from the sources, with intro- ductions and bibliographies. The volumes thus far published which pertain to the middle ages are: History of the Franks by Gregory, bishop of Tours, selections, translated with notes by E. BREHAUT, New York, 1916; and The book of the popes (Liber pontificalis) , I, to the pontificate of Gregory I, trans- lated, with an introduction by LOUISE R. LOOMIS, New York, 1916. See below, no. 959 note. A similar collection of translations into German, but on a humbler scale, is the Quellensammlung fur den geschichtUchen Unterricht an hoheren Schulen, Leipzig, also still in process of publication. 950. Bibliotheca gcriptorum medii aevi Teubneriana. Leipzig, ca. 14 vols. in 1911. Prints Latin texts. Although merely a publisher's ven- ture, the collection is valuable enough to be ranged with academic sets of texts. 951. Thesaurus novus anecdotorum seu collectio monumentorum, complectens regum ac principum aliorumque virorum illustrium epistolas et diplomata bene multa. 5 vols. Edited by E. MARTEXE and U. DURAND. Paris, 1717ff. 952. Veterum scriptorum et monumentorum amplissima collectio. Edited by E. MARTENE and U. DURAND. 2nd edition. 9 vols. Paris, 1724-1733. The above two are typical older collections of miscel- laneous material, most of which can now be found in critical newer editions. §2. Medieval Church (a) GENERAL COLLECTIONS OP ECCLESIASTICAL WRITINGS 953. Patrologiae cursus completus. Series latina, 221 vols. Paris, 1844-1864. Vols. 218-221 are index vols., Paris, 1862-1864. 94 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI Series graeca, 161 vols., in 166 [no index], Paris, 1857-1866. Edited by J. P. MIGNE. Although this vast collection is a mere publisher's ven- ture and consists largely of reprints of old and often very imperfect editions, it is now universally recognized by scholars as an indispensable tool for the study of the medieval church. The complete works of some authors are included. Some of the selections are profane works which have little or no connection with the church. The Latin series extends to the time of pope Innocent III (1198-1216); a table of authors in both series, arranged alphabetically, is printed in POTTHAST, Wegweiser, no. 18 above, I, pp. xciv ff. The Greek series extends to 863 A.D. It contains Latin translations of the Greek texts. These Latin translations have been pub- lished separately under the title, Patrologiae graecae latine tantum editae, 81 vols., in 85, Paris, 1856-1867. In 1914 the Kgl. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Got- tingen appointed a Eeligionsgeschichtliche Kommission to edit the most important sources of church history in German translations, under the title, Quellen der Eeligionsgeschichte, chief editor, OLDEXBERG. For programme write to Prof. TITIUS in Gottingen. A well-selected collection of source material for school use is Quellen zur Geschichte des Papst turns und des romischen Katholizismus, edited by C. MIRBT, Freiburg, 1895, 3rd edition, Tubingen, 1911. 954. Corpus scriptorum ecclesiasticorum latinorum. 62 vols in 1913. Vienna, 1866ff. This is to comprise all the writings of church fathers to the seventh century. An attempt is made to establish the very best texts from the most important manuscripts. The contents of vols. I-XXXI are given in POTTHAST, Wegweiser, no. 18 above, I, p. Iviii. The principal set of English translations of the writings of the church fathers since about 324 is A select library of Nicene and post-Nicene fathers of the Christian church, edited by P. SCHAFF and H. WACE, in two series: series I, 14 vols., New York, 1886-1890; series II, 14 vols., New York, 1890- 1900. 955. Collection de textes et documents pour 1 'etude historique du christianisme. Edited by H. HEMMER and P. LEJAY.' Paris. Ten volumes had appeared in 1910. Original texts, with translations into French. It promises to be a very valuable aid in the study of the original sources of church history. See also Sammlung ausgewdhlter Icirchen- und dogmengeschicht- licher Quellenschriften, edited by G. KRUGER, Freiburg. (ft) THE PAPACY 956. Eegesta pontificum Eomanorum ad annum 1198. Edited by P. JAFFE. 2 vols. Berlin, 1851, 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1885-1888. CHAP, v CHURCH HISTORY 95 957. Eegesta pontificura Eomanorum, inde ab anno post Christum natum 1198 ad annum 1304. Edited by A. POTTHAST. 2 vols. Berlin, 1874-1875. 958. Regesta pontificum Eomanorum (to 1198). Edited by P. F. KEHR under the auspices of the Academy of sciences in Gottin- gen. Berlin, 1906ff. Liber diurnus, ou Secueil des formules usitees par la chan- cellerie pontificate du Ve au XI« siccle, edited by E. DE EOZIERE, Paris, 1869. This edition is not superseded by that of T. v. Sickel which appeared in 1889. 959. Bibliotheque des ecoles franchises d'Athenes et de Eome. 2nd and 3rd series. Paris, 1884ff. Contains the registers of popes of the 13th century, most of which are still incomplete in 1916, and also the best com- plete edition of the Liber pontificalis, edited by L. DUCHESNE, 2 vols., Paris, 1886, 1892, now translated in part in no. 949 above. (A new edition of the Liber pontificalis in the Monu- menta Germaniae hi-atorica, Gesta pontificum, I, was begun by T. MOMMSEN in 1898, but it is still incomplete.) In the 3rd series the publication of letters of the popes of the 14th century has been begun. For the 1st series, see no. 887 above. See also BERNHEIM, Lehrbuch, no. 64 above, p. 561, and BRESSLAU, Handbuch, no. 240 above, I, 72-85, 104—124, for references to papal documents. 960. Acta pontificum Eomanorum inedita (97-1198). Edited by J. VON PFLUGK-HARTTUNG. 3 vols. Tubingen and Stuttgart, 1881- 1888. For documents concerning the papal states see the Codex diplomaticus dominii temporalis S. Sedis, edited by A. THEINER, 3 vols., Eome, 1861-1862; and the old collection, Monumenta dominationis pontificae, edited by CENNI, Rome, 1760-1761. 961. Epistolae pontificum Eomanorum ineditae. Edited by 8. LOEWENFELD. Leipzig, 1885. Pontificum Eomanomm qui fuerunt inde ab ex. saecula IX usque ad finem saeculi XIII vitae, edited by J. M. WATTERICH, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1862. (e) CHURCH COUNCILS 962. Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio. Edited by J. D. MANSI and others. 31 vols. Florence and Venice, 1759- 1798 fto 1590 A.D.]. New edition and continuation, vols. 0-47, Paris, 1900ff. There is a conspectus for vols. I-XLVI and an alpha- betical index in vol. XXXVIa. See HEFELE, Concilienge- schichte, no. 469 above. 96 GENERAL BOOKS PARTI (d) LIVES OF SAINTS 963. Acta sanctorum. Begun by J. BOLLANDUS. Still incom- plete. Vols. 1-66. Antwerp, 1643-1770; Brussels, 1845ff.; Paris and Rome, 1866 and 1887. Brussels, 1894ff. New edition, vols. 1-66, Paris, 1863ff. This vast collection of biographies of saints is arranged according to saints' days, and now extends well into November. The more recent volumes have been edited under the able supervision of the late C. DE SMEDT. See the description of the set in POTTHAST, Wegweiser, no. 18 above, I, p. xxxii. There is an index to the volumes for January to October in vol. 62. For guides to the various biographies contained in the collection, see also POTTHAST, Wegweiser, section "Vita"; and the Bibliotheca hagiographica, no. 53 above. The Analecta Bollandiana, no. 177 above, form a periodical supplement to the Acta sanctorum. See also C. NARBEY, Supplement aux Acta sanctorum pour les vies de saints de I'epoque Merov- ingienne, vols. I and II, Paris, 1899, 1912; and S. BARING- GOULD, Lives of the saints, 16 vols., Edinburgh, 1914. (e) MONASTIC RULES 964. Codex regularum monasticarum. Edited by L. HOLSTEN. 3 parts. Rome, 1661. 2nd edition, 6 vols., Vienna, 1759. Still the largest collection of monastic rules. §3. France and Belgium 965. Collection de documents inedits 'sur 1'histoire de France. Publie par les soins du ministre de 1 'instruction publique. Paris, 1835ff. Three hundred and thirty-one volumes had appeared in 1915. I: Chroniques, memoires, journaux, recits et composi- tions historiques; II: Cartulaires et recueils de cfiartes; III: Correspondances et documents politiques et administratives; IV: Documents de la periode revolutionnaire; V: Documents philologiques, philosophiques, juridiques, etc.; VI, Publica- tions archeologiques. The first 177 vols. are analyzed in A. FRANKLIN. Les sources de 1'histoire de France, no. 23 above, 107-183. POTT- HAST, Wegweiser, no. 18 above, I, p. liv, gives an alphabetical list of the contents of the first 212 vols. 966. Publications de la Societe de 1'histoire de France. Paris, 1835ff. Number 376 appeared in 1917. Contents of the first 130 vols. are anaylzed in A. FRANKLIN, Les sources de 1'histoire de France, no. 23 above, 207-251; and the contents of the first 203 vols in POTTHAST, Wegweiser, no. 18 above, I, p. cxl. See also no. 886 above. The Publications de la Societe de I'his- .toire de Normandie, Rouen, 1870ff., contain valuable additional material. CHAP, v FRANCE AND BELGIUM 97 967. Kerum Gallicarum et Francicarum scriptores. (Eecueil des historiens des Gaules et de la France). Edited by M. BOUQUET and others. 24 vols. Paris, 1738-1904. Extends to 1328. New impres- sion of first 19 vols. by L. DELISLE. Paris, 1868-1880; vols. XX- XXIII, 1893-1894. Vol. XXIV, Paris, 1904. Nouvelle serie in quarto, 7 vols., Paris, 1899-1906 (Documents financiers, obituaires, pouilles). There is an index in vol. XXIII. The contents of the first 22 vols. is analyzed in A. FRANKLIN, Les sources, no. 23 above, 82-94. POTTHAST, Wegweiser, no. 18 above, I, p. xlii, has a short analysis. This collection is commonly referred to as "Bouquet." 968. Collection de textes pour servir a 1'etude et a 1'enseigne- ment de 1'histoire. 1" serie. Des origines au XVIIP sieele. 49 vols. in 1913. Paris, 1886ff. Similar to the German Scriptores rerum Germanicarum in usum scholarum, no. 979 below, but more comprehensive. In- cludes sources for modern history. The texts are accom- panied by notes and introductions. Although designed prim- arily for instructional purposes, the set maintains a high standard of scholarship. Beginners will find much help in the following guides to the study of medieval chronicles of France: G. MASON, Early chroniclers of Europe: France, London, 1879; L. CONSTANS, Les grands historiens du moyen age, Paris, 1891; and A. DEBIDOUR and E. ETIENNE, Les chroniquers franc.ais au moyen age, Paris, 1895. 969. Collection complete des memoires relatif s a 1 'histoire de France depuis le regne de Philippe-Auguste jusqu'en 1763. Edited by C. B. PETITOT [and M. MONMERifnt, ?,i>iri>, no. 985 above. A convenient source book for the origin of the papal states is, Die Quellcn sur Geschichte der Entstehung des h'irrliriititaatcs, edited by J. II M.I.KIC. Leipzig and Berlin, 1907. The Latin text of the Life of Charlemagne by Ei SHARD has been edited recently by H. W. OARROD and R. B. MOWAT, with introduction and notes, Oxford University Press, 1915; but the 6th edition of the /'.'.; hurnli nni, i, 1 1 of ElNHARD in the Monumenta Gcrmaniae historica, edited by O. HOLDER-EOGER, and published separately, Hanover and I.cip/.ijr, 1911, part of no. 979 above, is still the standard text. See O. MONOD. h'.tmlis crit\)» •: l-'miK-f : L. HALHHEN, "Etudes tr. ('XXIV (1917), 52-64; and F. KURZE, Die karolingischcn his zum Todt Kinhnnla, Hcrlin, 1!M.'! (I'rogramm). 144 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Bibliographies. The best general bibliography is DAHLMANN- WAITZ, Quellenkunde, 289-324. For the relations with the church see especially the Cambridge medieval history, -II, 814-817 (see also 801-809, 813, for general bibliographies). The bibliographies in the footnotes of LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part I are of great value. The sources are best described in MOLINIER, Les sources de I'histoire de France, I, 181-227. Almost all the general bibli- ographies for France, Germany, and Italy, nos. 21-41 above, and those for the church, nos. 49—55 above, are useful. IX. FOES OF WESTEKN CHEISTENDOM, FKOM THE EIGHTH TO THE ELEVENTH CENTURY. FROM THE SOUTH. MOHAMMEDANS A. OUTLINE 1. Recent progress made in the historical study of Moham- medanism. Contrast with the interesting chapters on the subject in GIBBON, Decline and fall of the Eoman empire. In this outline no attempt is made to treat in detail the rise and spread of Moham- medanism in the east. The subject is treated from the standpoint of the Latin west. 2. The rise and spread of Mohammedanism in Arabia. The physical and political geography of the peninsula before 600 A.D. The civilization, and especially the religion, of the Arabs before that date. The Kaaba in Mecca. Mohammed (often also spelled Mahomet or Muhammad), 570-632. The Emigration (Hegira) in 622 from Mecca to Medina, which is the beginning of the Moham- medan era. Military exploits of Mohammed. The fall of Mecca in 630. The Koran. 3. Meaning of the terms: Moslems (or Muslims), Sabians, Islam, Moors, Saracens. 4. The spread of Mohammedanism in the east after the death of the prophet in 632. The successors of Mohammed, soon called Caliphs (representatives of the prophet), Abu Bekr, 632-634; Omar, 634-644; Othman, 644-655; All, 655-661. Conquest of Arabia, the Ridda war. Conquest of Syria, fall of Damascus in 634, the ter- rible defeat of the Byzantines on the Yarmuk in 636, fall of Jersalem in 638. Conquest of Persia by 652. Conquest of Egypt, evacuation of Alexandria, 642. 5. Attacks upon- Constantinople. Mohammedans took Chalcedon in 668 and from thence threatened the capital. Sea fights, ca. 674— 680. Great seige of Constantinople, 716-717. lx MOHAMMEDANS 145 6. Later history of Mohammedanism in the east. Divisions between Sunnites and Shiites. Ommiads with capital at Damascus in 661-750. Abbassides with capital at Bagdad, 750-1258. Ulti- mate division into three caliphates, with capitals at Bagdad, Cairo, and Cordova. 7. Conquest of northern Africa west of Egypt. Occupation of Barka, in the Pentapolis, in 642. The importance of the conversion of the Berbers to Mohammedanism. Weak hold of the Byzantine government in northern Africa. Foundation of Kairawan in 670. Conquest of Carthage in 697. Supremacy of the Arabian fleet in the Mediterranean. Disappearance of Latin civilization in northern Africa about 700. 8. Conquest of Spain. Weakness of the Visigothic state in Spain. Legend of the overtures made to the Mohammedans by count Julian (Urban) to avenge himself on the last Visigothic king, Roderic. Landing of Tarik near Gibraltar (= Gebel Tarik, the Mount Tarik), in 711. Easy conquest of Spain. Fall of Cordova and Toledo. Jealousy of his superior, Musa, who came over and subdued Seville. 9. Invasion of Gaul. Hurr crossed the Pyrenees in 717 or 718. Narbonne occupied in 720. Defense of Toulouse by Duke Eudo of Aquitaine. Internal dissensions among the Mohammedans due largely to quarrels between Arabs and Berbers. Their defeat by Charles Martel in the battle of Tours or Poitiers in 732. In 759 they gave up Narbonne to Pepin and disappeared behind the Pyrenees. Charlemagne's invasion of northern Spain and the estab- lishment of the Spanish march. 10. Occupation of Sicily. Sporadic attacks on the Byzantines in Sicily as early as 664. Derivation of the word corsair from Kovp&ov a summer campaign. Renewed raids upon many islands of the Mediterranean towards the end of the reign of Charlemagne. Crete occupied in 826. Conquest of Sicily by the Aghlabids from Kairawan, 827-902. (For the reconquest of Sicily by the Normans in 1061, see outline XX below.) 11. Invasion of Italy. Appeal of duke Andrea of Naples to the Saracens in Sicily against Duke Sikard of Benevento in 837. Saracens conquered Bari about 841. Attack on Rome in 846. Nava\ battle off Ostia in 849, Ineffective assistance given by the Caro- lingians. Co-operation with the Byzantines. Pillage and destruc- tion of Monte Cassino. Final expulsion of the Saracens from Italy about 915. The "Saracen towers" near Naples. 12. Peaceful relations between Moslems and Christians in the west. Mohammedan civilization in the ninth and tenth centuries 146 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII especially in Spain and Sicily. Lasting effects 6n the culture of western Christendom. (See outline X of part III below.) 13. In the eleventh century Latin Christians took the offensive against the Moslems from Spain to Palestine. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING General sifrveys. The best general survey is now in the Cam- bridge medieval history, II, ehs. x-xn. Another good account is in LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generals, I, chs. ix, xv. BEMONT and MONOD, Medieval Europe, chs. x-xi, is a more elementary sketch. GIBBON, Decline and fall, chs. L-LI, although out of date in many respects, will always remain interesting reading. A collection of very stimulating lectures has just come from the press, C. S. HUR- GRONJE, Mohammedanism: lectures on its origin, its religious and political growth, and its present state, New York and London, 1916. See also the articles "Mahomet" (by Margoliouth), "Mahommedan Institutions, " " Mahommedan Law, " " Mahommedan Religion, ' ' ' ' Caliphate, ' ' and ' ' Berbers, ' ' in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Mohammed. The best biography is W. MUIR, The Life of Mohammed from original sources, London, 1861, 3rd edition, 1894, a new and revised edition by T. H. WEIR, Edinburgh, 1912. D. S. MARGOLIOUTH, Mohammed and the rise of Islam, New York and London, 1905 (Heroes of the nations series) is very good. G. M. DRAYCOTT, Mahomet: founder of Islam, New York, 1916. H. GRIMME, Mohammed: die weltgeschichtliche Bedeutung Arabiens, Mainz, 1904 (Weltgeschichte in Charakterbildern), is particularly valuable for its pictures. Moors in Spain. U. R. BURKE, History of Spain, I, chs. xn, xiv, xvi. R. ALTAMIRA, Historia de Espana (1913 edition), I, 224-300. L. POOLE, Moors in Spain, New York, 1903 (Story of the nations). See the few pages from DOZY on ' ' Moslem civilization in Spain, ' ' in MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 224-239. HELMOLT, History of the world, IV, 494-510. HUME, The Spanish people, 71- 111. Saracens and the Byzantine empire. J. B. BURY, Later Soman empire, II, 258-273, 401-407; and his, A history of the eastern Eoman empire (802-867), ch. vui, "The Saracen wars." Saracens in Sicily, Italy, and Crete. J. B. BURY, A history of eastern Eoman empire (802-867), ch. ix, "The Saracen conquests of Crete and Sicily." R. LANCIANI, Destruction of ancient Some, New York, 1899, ch. xi. GREGOROVIUS, History of the city of Some, III, 65-68, 87-100, 178-187, 259-270. E. W. BROOKS, "The Arab occupa- tion of Crete," English historical review, XXVIII (1913), 431-443. MOHAMMEDANS 147 Original sources. The best translations of the Koran are by E. H. PALMER, Koran, 2 vols., Oxford, 1880 (Miiller's Sacred books of the east, vols. VI, IX); El-Tcor'an: or Koran, translated from the Arabic, the suras arranged in chronological order, with notes and index, by J. M. RODWELL, 2nd edition, London, 1876 (also reprinted in Everyman's library, New York, 1909); Koran, commonly called the Alcoran of Mohammed, translated by G. SALE, 2 vols., London, 1825, latest edition by E. M. WHERRY, A comprehensive commentary on the Quran: comprising Sale's translation and preliminary discourse, with additional notes and emendations, 4 vols., London, 1896 (Triibner's oriental series). Extracts from the Koran have been edited with a very good introduction by S. L. POOLE, under the title, The speeches and table-talk of Mohammed, New York, 1905, which is the best introduction to the study of the Koran. See also Selections from the Kuran, edited by E. W. LANE, London, 1879. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 53, 54-55, 58-59, 64, 66-67. Cambridge medieval history, II, maps 23, 24. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. For an encyclopaedia and a dictionary of Islam see no. 120 above. Many of the general books on Spain and Portu- gal, nos. 622-642 above, Italy, nos. 599-621 above, and the Byzan- tine empire, nos. 643-679 above, give much space to the Moham- medans. See also the general histories of the Mediterranean, nos. 360-361 above. General accounts. L. C. CAETANI, Annali dell' Islam, vols. I-VII, Milan, 1905-1914 (extends thus far through 32 a.H., or to August, 653 A.D.) ; C. HUART, Histoire des Arabes, 2 vols., Paris, 1912-1913; and A. MULLER, Der Islam im Morgen- und Abendland, 2 vols., Berlin, 1885-87 (part of no. 313 above), are standard and fundamental works. W. Mum, The Caliphate: its rise, decline and fall, from original sources, London, 1883, a new and revised edition by T. H. WEIR, Edinburgh, 1915 (first edition bore the title, Annals of the early Caliphate). T. W. ARNOLD, The preaching of Islam: a history of the propagation of the Muslim faith, Westminister, 1896, 2nd edi- tion, revised and enlarged, London, 1913. J. WELLHAUSEN, Das arabische Reich und sein Sturz, Berlin, 1902. I. GOLDZIHER, Muham- medanische Studien, 2 vols., Halle, 1889-90, translated from the Ger- man by KATE E. CHAMBERS, Aspects of Islam, Yale University Press, 1915. I. GOLDZIHER, Vorlesungen iiber den Islam, Heidelberg, 1910, translated by K. C. SEELYE, with an introduction by M. JASTROW, Mohammed and Islam, Yale University Press, 1916. C. H. BECKER, Christentum Und Islam, Tubingen, 1907, translated by H. J. CHAYTOR, 148 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Christianity and Islam, New York, 1909 (Harper's library of living thought). M. HARTMANN, Fiinf Vortrdge uber den Islam, Leipzig, 1912. AMEER ALT SYED, A short history of the Saracens, London, 1899, reprinted with corrections, 1900. A. GILMAN, The Saracens from the earliest times to the fall of Bagdad, New York, 1886 (The story of the nations). D. S. MARGOLIOUTH, Mohammedanism, London, [1911] (Home university library). E. DOZY, Essai sur I'histoire de I'Islamisme, translated from the Dutch by V. CHAUVIN, Leyden and Paris, 1879. S. L. POOLE, The Mohammedan dynasties, Westminister, 1894. G. WEIL, Geschichte der Chalifen, 5 vols., Mannheim, 1846- 1862. E. A. FREEMAN, The history and conquests of the Saracens: six lectures, London, 1856, 3rd edition, 1876. C. GUTERBOCK, Der Islam im Lichte der byzantinischen Polemilc, Berlin, 1912. E. MEYER, Ursprung und Geschichte der Mormonen, mit ExTcursen uber die Anfdnge des Islams und des Christentums, Halle, 1912. Mohammed. L. CAETANI, Studi di storia orientate, vol. Ill, La biografia di Maometto prof eta ed uomo di stato, II principio del Calif - fato, La conquista d' Arabia, Milan, 1914. E. BOSWORTH SMITH, Mohammed and Mohammedanism, 3rd edition, London, 1889. P. DE LACY JOHNSTONE, Muhammad and his power, Edinburgh, 1901, (The world's epoch-makers, 7). AMEER ALI SYED, The spirit of Islam: or the life and teachings of Mohammed, Calcutta, 1902. H. EECKENDORF, Mohammed und die Seinen, Leipzig, 1907 (Wissenschaft und Bildung). H. GRIMME, Mohammed, 2 vols., Miinster, 1892-1895. A. SPRENGER, Das Leben und die Lehre des Mohammad: nach bisher grosstentheils unbenutzten Quellen, 2nd edition, 3 vols., Berlin, 1869. T. NOLDEKE, Das Leben Muhammed's: nach den Quellen popular dar- gestellt, Hannover, 1863. A. GEIGER, Was hat Mohammed aus dem Judentum aufgenommen? 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1902. Koran. D. S. MARGOLIOUTH, The early development of Moham- medanism, London, 1914 (Hibbert lectures). T. NOLDEKE, Geschichte der Qordns, Gottingen, 1860, new edition, revised by F. SCHWALLY, vol. I, Leipzig, 1909. E. SELL, The historical development of the Quran, London, 1905. W. MUIR, The Goran: its composition and teaching, London, 1878. L SCHAPIRO, Die haggadischen Elemente im erzdhlenden Teil des Korans, Leipzig, 1907. Conquest of north Africa. M. CAUDEL, Les premiers invasions arabes dans I'Afrique du Nord, Paris, 1900. E. MERCIER, Histoire de I'Afrique septentrionale (Berberie) depuis les temps les plus recules jusqu'd la conquete frangaise, 3 vols., Paris, 1888-1890. S. L. POOLE, The history of Egypt in the middle ages, London, 1901. E. AME- LINEAU, "La conquete de 1'Egypte par les Arabes, I," in Revue historique, CXIX (1915), 273-310. H. FOURNEL, Les Berbers: etude IX MOHAMMEDANS 149 sur la conquete de I'Afrique par les Ardbes, 2 vols., Paris, 1875-1881. C. H. BECKER, Beitrdge zur Geschichte Jfgyptens unter dem Islam, 2 parts, Strasburg, 1902-1903. Moors in Spain and the Balearic islands. E. P. A. DOZY, His- toire des Musulmans d'Espagne, 4 vols., Leyden, 1861, translated by F. G. STOKES, with a biographical introduction and additional notes, Spanish Islam: a history of the Moslems in Spain, London, 1913. S. P. SCOTT, History of the Moorish empire in Europe, 3 vols., Phila- delphia, 1904. F. CODERA, Estudios criticos de historia drabe espanola, Saragossa, 1903. J. A. CONDE, History of the dominion of the Arabs in Spain, translated from the Spanish, 3 vols., London, 1854. H. COPPEE, History of the conquest of Spain by the Arab Moors, 2 vols., Boston, 1881. L. SCHWENKOW, Die lateinisch geschriebenen Quellen zur Geschichte der Eroberung Spaniens durch die Araber, Gottingen, 1894. A. FERNANDEZ GUERRA, Caida y ruina del imperio visigotico- cspanol, Madrid, 1883. E. SAAVEDRA, Estudio sobre la invasion de los drabes en Espana, Madrid, 1892. CAMPANER, Eesena historico-critica de la dominacidn de los Arabes y de los Moros en las islas Baleares [to 1286], Madrid, 1888. Mohammedan invasion of Gaul. G. LOKYS, Die Kdmpfe der Araber mit den Karolingern bis sum Tode Ludwigs II, Heidelberg, 1906 (Heidelberger Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte). M. H. ZOTENBERG, Invasions des Visigoths et des Arabes en France, Toulouse, 1876, is an extract from no. 540 above. M. REINAUD, Invasions des Sarrazins en France, Paris, 1836. Saracens in Italy and Sicily. M. AMABI, Storia dei Musulmani di Sicilia, 4 vols., Florence, 1854-68. J. GAY, L'ltalie meridionale et I'empire byzantin depuis I'avenement de Basile I jusqu'a la prise de Bari par les Normands, Paris, 1904. G. B. MOSCATO, Cronaca dei musulmani in Calabria, San Lucido, 1902. C. WAERN, Mediaeval Sicily, New York, 1911, chs. i-n. Arabian commerce in the north of Europe. G. JACOB, Der nordisch-baltische Handel der Araber im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1887; and his Welche Handelsartikel bezogen die Araber des Mittelalters aus den nordisch-baltischen Landern? 2nd edition, Berlin, 1891. E. BABELON, Du commerce des Arabes dans le nord de I'Europe avant les croisades, Paris, 1882. Periodical on Islam. Der Islam: Zeitschrift fur Geschichte und Kultur des islamischen Orients, edited by C. H. BECKER, Strasburg, 1910ff. Original sources. EL-BOKHARI, (died 870 A.D.), Les tradition* islamiques, translated from the Arabic with notes and an index by O. HOUDAS and W. MARCAIS, vols. I-III, Paris, 1903-1908. The 150 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII origins of the Islamic state: being a translation from the Arabic accompanied with annotations, geographic and historical notes of the Kitdb Futuh al-Bulddn of AL-!MAM ABU-L 'ABBAS AHMAD IBN JABIR AL-BALADHURI, vol. I, by P. K. HITTI, New York, 1916 (Studies in history, economics, and public law, Columbia University, vol. LXVIII, no. 163). Trades de paix et de commerce et documents divers contenant les relations des Chretiens avec les Arabs d'Afrique septen- trionale au moyen age, edited by DE MAS-LATRIE, Paris, 1866, sup- plement, 1872. Biblioteca Arabo-Sicula, versions italiana, 2 vols. and a supplement, edited by M. AMARI, Turin and Rome, 1880-1889. J. WELLHAUSEN, Muhammed in Medina: das ist Vakidi's Kitab al Maghazi in verkiirzter Wiedergabe, Berlin, 1882. Bibliotheca arabico-hispana, edited by F. CODERA Y ZAIDIN, 10 vols., Madrid, 1882-1895. Bibliographies. Cambridge medieval history, II. 758-765, and the special bibliographies indicated there. See also no. 42 above. X. FOES OF WESTERN CHRISTENDOM, FROM THE EIGHTH TO THE ELEVENTH CENTURY. FROM THE NORTH. NORTHMEN A. OUTLINE 1. The fury of the Northmen. "From the fury of the North- men, good Lord, deliver us" (a furore Normannorum libera nos). This phrase, so common in litanies of the middle ages, was not in use in Carolingian times, but the following prayer, dating ca. 900, is an interesting prototype: " Summa pia gratia nostra con- servando corpora et custodita, de genie fera Normannica nos libera, quae nostra vastat, deus, regna, etc." (See L. DELISLE, Littera- ture latine et histoire du moyen age, p. 17). 2. The civilization of the Teutonic people of the north, Danes, Norwegians, and Swedes. The scalds. The sagas. The Gokstad and Oseberg ships. The vikings (= warriors). 3. Causes and character of their migrations. Often women and even children accompanied the men on their ships. The chief raids of the Northmen occurred between 800 and 1000. 4. The Northmen in the British and northern islands. Men- tioned in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle under the year 787. Monastery of Lindisfarne raided in 793. In 795 they were in Ireland. lona was raided about 800. Faroe Islands, Orkneys, Shetland Islands and Hebrides were occupied in the time of Charlemagne. Towards the middle of the ninth century the Northmen were numerous in England. King Alfred (871-901) and the Danes. The Danelaw. NORTHMEN 151 Iceland occupied about 875. Greenland touched upon about 900 and North America about 1000. 5. Eaids on the continent in the west and in the Mediterranean. In 810, in Charlemagne's time, king Godfred of Denmark plundered the coast of Frisia. About the time, of the death of Charlemagne (814) Vikings visited the mouth of the Loire and in 843 made a settlement on the island of Noirmoutier and also occupied the He de Rhe near the mouth of the Charente. Antwerp was destroyed about 836, and the island of Walcheren was occupied in 837. In 841 they appeared on the Seine and destroyed Eouen. Nantes was plundered in 843. They were on the Garonne in 844, when Toulouse was attacked. In 845 they appeared before Paris and in the same year destroyed Hamburg. In 856 Paris was plundered. The next year they sailed down to Spain, appeared before Lisbon, sacked Cadiz and ascended the Guadalquivir to Seville. Under Hasting a band sailed into the Mediterranean to sack Rome in 859 but they got no further than Luna. Some sailed up the Ehone river and they occupied the island of Camargue. Charles the Bold treated with Hasting and his followers, some of whom became Christians and accepted feudal holdings. Orleans was reached in 865. Northmen were defeated at Saulcourt in 881 but they plundered Aachen, Cologne, etc. Paris was beseiged 885. Charles the Fat paid tribute and allowed the raiders to plunder Burgundy. Decisive defeat of the Northmen by the German king Arnulf near Louvain in 891. 6. Expeditions to the East. Eurik and his followers, the Varangians, came from Sweden and settled at Novgorod about 862. Varangians in the service of the emperor in Constantinople. 7. The important settlement of Northmen in northern France, in and about Eouen, about 911. Charles III, the Simple, offered Normandy as a fief to Eollo or Rolf and gave him his daughter Gisela in marriage. Eolf was baptized soon after. 8. Conversion of Northmen to Christianity in the tenth century and the political reorganization of the North. The beginnings of modern Norway and Sweden. 9. The sudden and short-lived burst of Danish imperialism under Canute the Great, 1014-1035. 10. The important part the Normans were destined to play in medieval history (see outline XX below). B. SPECIAL EECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Introductory surveys. C. H. HASKINS, The Normans in European liixtury, Boston and New York, 1915, ch. II, "The coming of the ]52 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Northmen." LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, II, ch. xni. OMAN, The dark ages (see "vikings" in the index). Longer general accounts. The best general survey is now in GJERSET, History of the Norwegian people, I, especially pp. 45-280. C. F. KEARY, The Vikings in western Christendom A.D. 789 to A.D. 888, London, 1891. A. MAWER, The Vikings, Cambridge university Press, 1913 (Cambridge manuals), is a recent popular sketch. BEAZLEY, Dawn of modern geography, II, 17-111. Danes in England. C. OMAN, England before the Norman con- quest, London, 1910, 382-491. C. PLUMMER, The life and times of Alfred the Great, Oxford, 1902, lecture iv. For Canute and Danish imperialism the best book is L. M. LARSON, Canute the Great, 995 (tire.) — 1035, and the rise of Danish imperialism during the Viking age, New York, 1912 (Heroes of the nations). Northmen in Russia. RAMBAUD, History of Russia, ch. iv. KLUCHEVSKY, A history of Russia, I, ch. v. Original sources. The sagas are the best introduction to a study of life in the Viking age. The following are especially interesting and easily accessible in English: Heimskringla of Snorro Sturle- son, translated by S. LAING, London, Norroena Society, 1906; The story of Burnt Njal, translated by G. W. DASENT, 2 vols., Edin- burgh, 1861, and London and New York, Norroena Society, 1906 (now also in Everyman 's library, New York, 1900) ; Volsunga Saga, translated by E. MAGNUSSON and W. M. MORRIS, London, Norroena Society, 1906. For interesting extracts concerning the raids of Northmen see OGG, Source book, 157-173. See A. BUGGE, "The origin and credibility of the Icelandic saga," in American historical review, XIV (1908-1909), 249-261. Maps, The best map for the raids and settlements of the Northmen, is in MEYERS Historischer Handatlas, 25. See also SHEPHERD, Atlas, 46-47, 57, 58-59, 64. VOGEL, Die Normannen, below, has an excellent map showing the territory overrun by Northmen in France, Germany, the Netherlands, and northern Spain. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. For general works on the Scandinavian coun- tries see nos. 717-728 above. Due to the wide range of the viking raids, many of the general works of all the countries of Europe, nos. 508—716 above, touch upon their history. General accounts. J. STEENSTRUP, Normannerne, 4 vois., Copen- hagen, 1876-82, vol. I, translated by E. de BEAUREPAIRE, Etudes preliminaires pour servir a I 'histoire de Normands et de leur invasions, Caen, 1880. SARAH O. JEWETT, The story of the Normans told NORTHMEN 153 chiefly in relation to their conquest of England, London and New York, 1886 (Story of the nations), chs. I and II. A. H. JOHNSON, The Normans in Europe, London, 1877, chs. l-m (part of no. 335 above). W. Roos, "The Swedish part in the viking expeditions," English historical review, VII (1892), 209-223. G. B. DEPPINO, His- toire des expeditions maritimes des Normands, Paris, 1843. ELEANOR HULL, The Northmen in Britain, London, 1913. T. CARLYLE, Early kings of Nonvay, New York, 1875. Civilization of the Northmen. P. B. Du CHAILLU, Viking age: the early history, manners, and customs of the ancestors of the Kni/lish-speaking nations, 2 vols., New York, 1889. A. BUGGE, Vikingerne, 2 series, Copenhagen, 1904-06, translated from the Nor- wegian by H. HUNGERLAND, Die Wikinger: Bilder aus der nordischen Vergangenheit, Halle, 1906. O. MONTELIUS, Kulturgeschwhte Schwedens von den altesten Zeiten "bis sum elften Jahrhundert nach Christi, Leipzig, 1906. S. MULLER, Nordische Altertumskunde, Ger- man edition by O. L. JIRICZEK, 2 vols., Strasburg, 1879-98. C. MULLER, Altgermanische Mceresherrschaft, Gotha, 1914, treats the period up to 1200. A. OLRIK, Nordisches Geistesleben in heidnischer und friihchristlicher Zeit, translated by W. EANISCH, Heidelberg, 1908. J. J. A. WORSAAE, The pre-history of the north, based on con- temporary memorials, translated by M. F. MORLAND SIMPSON, Lon- don, 1886. F. NIEDNER, Islands Kultur zur Wikingerzeit, Jena, 1913, in Thule: altnordische Dichtung und Prosa, I, 1. Northmen in France. W. VOGEL, Die Normannen und das frdnk- ische Beich bis zur Grundung der Normandie 799-911, with a very important map, Heidelberg, 1906 (in Heidelberger Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 14). This work of funda- mental importance is supplemented by F. LOT, "La grande inva- sion normande, 856-862," in Bibliothdque de I'ecole des chartes, LXIX (1908), 5-62; and by the same author's Etudes critiques sur I'abbaye de Saint-Wandrille, Paris, 1913, ch. HI. E. FREEMAN, "The early sieges of Paris," in his Historical essays, series I, 207- 251. H. H. HOWORTH, "The early intercourse of the Danes and Franks," in Soyal historical society, VI (1877), 147-182; VII (1878), 1-29. E. THUBERT, "Les Northmen en France," in Revue d'histaire diplomatique, XX (1906), 511-536. VAN DEB LINDEN, "Les Normands a Louvain (884-892;," in Eevue historique, CXXIV (1917), 64-81. Vikings in Spain. A. K. FABRICIUS, La premiere invasion des Normands dans I'Espagne musulmane en 814, Lisbon, 1892; and his, La connaissance de la pcninsule espagnole par les hommcs du Nord, Lisbon, 1892. R. DOZY, Bechcrches sur I'histoire et la littcrature 154 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII de I'Espagne pendant le moyen age, 3rd edition, 2 vols., Paris, 1881, II, 252-332. Eastward expeditions of Northmen. T. J. ARNE, La Suede et J 'orient: etudes archeologiques sur les relations de la Suede et I'orient pendent I'dge des Vikings, Upsala, 1914ff. (in Lundell's Archives d 'etudes orientales). V. THOMPSON, The relations between ancient Russia and Scandinavia, and the origin of the Eussian state, Oxford, 1878. Northmen in America. W. HOVGAARD, The voyages of the Norse- men to America, the American-Scandinavian Foundation, New York, 1914. F. NANSEN, In northern mists: arctic explorations in early times, translated by G. CHATER, 2 vols., London and New York, 1911 (bibliography, II, 384-396). W. H. BABCOCK, Early Norse visits to North America, Smithsonian Institution (no. 2138), 1913 (bibliography, pp. 179-189). A. SCHALCK DE LA FAVERIE, Les Nor- mands et la decouverte de I'Amerique au Xe siecle, Paris, 1912. J. FISCHER, Die Entdeckungen der Normannen in America, Freiburg, 1902, translated into English by H. SOULSBY, London, 1903. G. B. DE LAGREZE, Les Normands dans les deux mondes, Paris, 1890. Original sources. The following collections contain transla- tions of most of the important early literature relating to the Northmen: Norroena, the history and romance of northern Europe: a library of supreme classics printed in complete form, 15 vols., London Norroena Society, 1906; Corpus poeticum boreale: the poetry of the old northern tongue from the earliest times to the thirteenth century, classified and translated by G. VIGFUSSON and F. YORK POWELL, 2 vols., Oxford, 1883; Origines Islandicae: a col- lection of the more important sagas and other native writings relating to the settlement and early history of Iceland, edited and translated by G. VIGFUSSON and F. YORK POWELL, 2 vols., Oxford, 1905; £0*70 booJc of the Viking society, London, 1895ff. A convenient short introduction to the sagas is W. A. CRAIGIE, The Icelandic sagas, Cambridge University Press, 1913 (Cambridge manuals). A very sumptuous work on the Oseberg burial ship, to consist of five volumes, is being published by the Norwegian government, Osebergfundet, edited by A. W. BROGGER and others, 1916ff. The. ship, which was found in 1904 and dates from the ninth century, is now exhibited in a special building in Christiania; the objects found in it are on exhibition in the Historical Museum. The well- known Gokstad ship is described briefly by I. UNDSET, A short guide for the use of visitors to the viking ship from Gokstad, Chris- tiania, 1889, 3rd edition, 1898. The sources for the Norsemen in America may be found tran- SLAVS AND NOMADS 155 slated in the Flateyjarbok : the Flatey book and recently discovered Vatican manuscripts concerning America as early as the tenth cen- tury, documents now published for the first time, which establish beyond controversy the claim that North America was settled by Norsemen fire hundred years before the time of Columbus, London, Norroena Society, 1906; and in the Original narratives of early American history: the Northmen, Columbus and Cabot, 985-1503, New York, 1906 (the voyages of the Northmen are edited by J. E. OLSON) ; as well as in vol. V of Norroena mentioned above. Bibliographies. For the old Norse Sagas, see GROSS, no. 36 above, §35, and for modern books on the Northmen, especially in their rela- tion to England, ibid., §42. The notes in GJERSET, History of the Norwegian people, contain many bibliographical references. For the sources on the Northmen in France, see A. MOLINIEB, Les sources, I, 264-271. J. STEF^NSSON, List of books belonging to the Viking club, society for northern research, London [1907]. H. HERMANNSON, Catalogue of the Icelandic collection bequeathed by Willard Fiske to the Cornell University library, Ithaca, New York, 1914; and his The Northmen in America (982-c.iSOO) : a contribution to the bibli- ography of the subject, Ithaca, 1909, in Islandica: an annual relating to Iceland and the Fiske Icelandic collection in Cornell University library, edited by G. W. HARRIS, 1908ff., vol. II, are vast mines of references to books on the North. See also the first part of P. RIANT 's library, 2641 items on Scandinavia, acquired by Yale University. XI. FOES OF WESTERN CHRISTENDOM FROM THE EIGHTH TO THE ELEVENTH CENTURY. 'FROM THE EAST. SLAVS AND ASIATIC NOMADS A. OUTLINE 1. The grand divisions of European peoples in the middle ages; Romanic, Teutonic, Slavic, and the eastern background formed by the Asiatic nomads. 2. The role of the Slavs in medieval history. They serve as a buffer between the Teutonic west and the Asiatic nomads. Lack of organization among the Slavs. Enslavement of the Slavs by Teutons and Asiatic nomads. 3. The rivili/ation and extent of the Slavs about 700 A.D. Wends, Serbs, Slavs. Western Slavs: Polabians (Sorbs, Abodrites, Wil- x.ians, Pommeranians), Czechs, Moravians, Slovaks; eastern and northern Slavs: Russians (White, Little, and Great Russians), 156 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Slovenes (Bulgarians, Croats and Serbians). The Lithuanians (Letts and Prussians). 4. Relations of Merovingians and Carolingians with the Slavs. Samo, a Frank adventurer, became king of the Czechs of Bohemia, 623-668. 5. The evanescent empire of Moravia. Struggles of the Mor- avians with the Franks after Charlemagne. Svatopluk II acknowl- edged by Charles III, the Fat (881-887). The conversion of these Slavs. The eastern emperor Michel III (842-867) sent as apostles of the Slavs two brothers, born in Salonica, Constantine (later Cyrillus, died 869) and Methodius (died 885). Their relations with the pope in Eome. 6. Decline of the Slavs in the region between the Elbe and the Oder where the Polabians were practically wiped out by the Germans in the tenth and eleventh centuries. 7. Kise and decline of Poland. Boleslav the Valiant (992- 1025) conquered far and wide but did not gain a permanent hold on the Baltic. Poland declined after his death. Close relations with the Latin church. The archbishopric of Gnesen founded about 1000A.D. Quasi-parliamentary government under Boleslav. 8. Bohemia. Amalgamation of the Czechs. Latin Christianity prevailed. Vratislav II was the first king (1086). Practically a vassal of the Emperor Henry IV. 9. The glorious era of Bulgarian history. The Bulgares, a Finnish tribe, organized the Slavs of old Moesia in the seventh century. Converted to Byzantine Christianity in the ninth cen- tury. Simeon (829-927), the first Czar of the Bulgarians. Pre- slav the capital. Golden era of literature. The Bogomiles (Mani- chaean heretics). Subjugation of Bulgarians by the eastern emperors, especially by Basil II, the "Slayer of the Bulgarians." 10. The beginnings of Eussia. Eurik and his Swedes, the Varangians, settled around Novgorod about 962. Oleg, Eurik 's successor, made Kiev his capital. Attacked Constantinople in 907. Sviotoslav (964-972) seriously threatened Constantinople, but was checked in 971 by John Zimisces. Vladimir (972-1015), the Clovis of Eussia, was baptized about 990. A flood of Byzan- tine civilization came into Eussia with eastern Christianity. Yaro- slav the Great (1015-1054), the Charlemagne of Eussia. Close relations of Eussia with the west during this early period. 11. The Asiatic nomads. The peculiar geographic influences which shaped their destinies. Finns, Huns, Avars, (Bulgars), Khazars, Petchenegs, Cumans, Magyars, etc. 12. Avars occupied old Pannonia and Dacia when the Lombards SLAVS AND NOMADS 157 forsook that region. Their "rings." Charlemagne's campaigns against them 795-796. Shortly after his death they were dispersed as the Huns had been in the fifth century. 13. Hungarians or Magyars. About 900 they dispossessed the Moravians in modern Hungary. Their low state of civilization. Their dread invasions of Europe in the tenth centry, penetrating even into Provence and Lorraine. Crushed by Otto I in 955 in the battle of the Lechfeld. Stephen I (955-1038) was the founder of modern Hungary. Accepted Latin Christianity. The great archbishopric of Gran was established about 1000 A.D. 14. The state of eastern Europe just before the crusades. B. SPECIAL EECOMMENDATIONS FOR BEADING General accounts. The best short survey is in LAVISSE and EAM- BAUD, Histoire generate, I, ch. xiv. Cambridge medieval history, II, ch. xiv, is authoritative and important, but rather confusing. A fairly comprehensive account may be pieced together from J. B. BURY'S books, History of the later Roman empire, II, 11-24, 274- 280, 331-338, 470-476; A history of the eastern Boman empire, ehs. xi-xin. The same is true of HELMOLT, History of the world, vol. V, 222-223, 227-242, 271-288, 326-338, 347-348, 353-355, 374-379, 425- 461, 469-476. See also GIBBON, Decline and fall, ch. LV. Nomads. The general character of nomadic life is well described in Cambridge medieval history, I, ch. xn ; and by ELLEN C. SEMPLE, Influences of geographic environment, ch. xiv. Histories of various countries of eastern Europe. Make a selec- tion from the general books on eastern Europe, nos. 680-716 above. Maps. Cambridge medieval history, I, map 3 ; II, maps 25, 26a, 26b. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 2-3, 46-47, 52-59. Use FREEMAN, The his- torical geography of Europe, especially pp. 113-117, 155-158, as a guide to these maps; and see also KIPLEY, The races of Europe, chs. xin, xv. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. For books on eastern Europe see nos. 680-716, 588-596, 311-312 above; but for the contact of Slavs and nomads with western civilization a large number of general books on other European countries are also of value; see e.g., nos. 313-361, 499-598, 643-679, 717-727 above. For histories of Slavic literature see no. 814 above. Early Slavic history in general L. LEGER, Le monde slave: etudes politiqucs et litteraires, series 1 and 2, 2 vols., Paris, 1897- 1902; and his Etudes slaves; his Nouvelle etudes slaves: histoire et litterature, Paris, 1880; and his La mythologie slave, Paris, 1901. 158 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII H. MERBACH, Die SlawenTcriege des deutschen Volkes, Leipzig, 1914. W. OHNESORGE, Ausbreitung und Ende der Slawen swischen Nieder- Elbe und Oder, Liibeck, 1911. A. MEITZEN, Siedelung und Agrar- wesen der West- und Ostgermanen, der Kelten, Romer, Finnen und Sloven, 3 vols. and an atlas, Berlin, 1895. M. MURKO, Geschichte der dlteren siidslawischen Literaturen, Leipzig, 1908. A. LEFEVRE, Germains et Slaves: origines et croyances, Paris, 1903. W. E. S. RALSTON, Early Russian history, London, 1874. E. W. SETON- WATSON, Racial problems in Hungary: a history of the Slovaks, London, 1909. E. MISSALEK, "Die Forschung auf dem Gebiete der altesten polnischen Geschichte," in Historische Zeitschrift, CXIII (1914), 62-69. E. ZHABSKI, Die Slavenkriege zur Zeit Ottos III und dessen Pilgerfahrt nach Gnesen, Lemberg, 1882 (Programm). Samo. O. NEMECEK, Das Reich des Slawenfursten Samo, Mah- risch-Ostrau, 1906 (Programm). Rumania. N. JORGA, Les elements originaux de I'ancienne civilisation Roumaine, Jassy, 1911. E. FISCHER, Die Herkunft der Rumdnen, Bamberg, 1904. Conversion of Slavs to Christianity. Chief interest centers in the work of Constantine and Methodius. The following are special works on the subject: A. BRUCKNER, Die Wahrheit uber die Slavenapostel, Tubingen, 1913; F. SNOPEK, Konstantinus-Cyrillus und Methodius: die Slavenapostel (Operum academiae Valehradensis, II), Kremsier, 1911; L. K. GOETZ, Geschichte der Slavenapostel Kon- stantinus (Kyrillus) und Methodius, Gotha, 1897; and L. LEGER, Cyrille et Methode: etude historique sur la conversion des Slaves au chritianisme, Paris, 1868 (see also A. NAEGLE, Kirchengeschichte Bohmens, under no. 461 above). L. K. GOETZ, Staat und Kirche in Altrussland: Kiever Periode, 998-1240, Berlin, 1908. L. K. GOETZ, Das Kiever Hohlenldoster als Kulturzentrum des vormongolischen Russlands, Passau, 1904. M. USPENSKI, La Russie et Byzance au W siecle, Odessa, 1888. The home of the Asiatic nomads. E. HUNTINGTON, The pulse of Asia: a journey in central Asia illustrating the geographical basis of history, New York, 1907. F. H. SKRINE and E. D. Eoss, The heart of Asia, London, 1899. SVEN HEDIN, Central Asia and Tibet, 2 vols., New York, 1903. G. F. WRIGHT, Asiatic Russia, 2 vols., New York, 1902. A, VAMBERY, Travels in central Asia, New York, 1865. Asiatic nomads. F. EATZEL, The history of mankind, translated from the 2nd German edition by A. J. BUTLER, 3 vols., London, 1896-1898, III, 313-533. H. v. KUTSCHERA, Die Chasaren: histor- ische Studie, Vienna, 1909. E. H. PARKER, Thousand years of the MEDIEVAL INSTITUTIONS 159 Tartars, London, 1895. A. THIERRY, Histoire d'Attila et de ses suc- cesseurs jusqu'd I'etablissement des Hongrois en Europe, suivis des It'ficndes et traditions, 2 vols., Paris, 1856. Avars. K. GROH, Kiimpfe der Avaren und Langobarden, Halle, 1889 (dissertation). Hungarians in Europe. K. LUTTICH, Ungarnziige in Europa im 10 Jahrhundert, Berlin, 1910 (Historisehe Studien, edited by E. Ebering, 84). For literature on the battle of the Leehfeld in 955 see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, no. 4816. J. B. BURY, "The coming of the Hungarians: their origin and early homes," Scottish review, XX (1892), 29-52. A. VAMBERY, Der Ursprung der Mag- yaren, Leipzig, 1882. L. DUSSIEUX, Essai sur les invasions des Hon- grois en Europe et en France, Paris, 1839. Original sources. See the large collections, nos. 1002-1006 above, and Enchiridion fontium historiae Hungarorum, edited by H. MARCZALI and others, Budapest, 1901. Bibliographies. Cambridge medieval history, I, 660-665; II, 770-784. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, I, 741-742. See also nos. 46-47 above. XII. EARLY MEDIEVAL INSTITUTIONS A. OUTLINE 1. The danger of massing together almost all medieval institu- tions, and studying them under the caption "Feudalism." Mean- ing and application of this term in the history of medieval Europe and in other times and places. In this outline chief attention is given to the institutions of the area which is now France. 2. The intermingling of ancient institutions, Graeco-Roman, Jewish, Celtic, Teutonic, and Slavic. Impossibility of disentang- ling the various elements. 3. Germanic ideas of law and their application. Personality of law. Peculiar ideas about legal evidence. Compurgation. Ordeals. Wager of battle. Wergeld. The Leges barbarorum, espe- cially the Lex Salica, the Lex Bipuariorum, the Leges Visigothorum, Leges Burgundionum, Lex Saxonum, Lex Frisionum, Lex Alaman- norum, and the Leges Langobardorum. The Leges Bomanae, epitomes of Roman law. 4. The survival of a very narrow stream of Roman law (Lex Bomana) in the early middle ages. Its chief hold was in the church which also fostered Jewish ideas of law. .Until about 1100 A.D. the Justinian code was little known in the west. The Edictum Theo- id about 500, the Breviarium Alarici, 506 (also known as the 160 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Breviarium Alaricianum or Lex Eomana Visigothorum) , and the Lex romana Burgundionum promulgated by king Gundobad. / 5. The dreams of a universal empire and a universal Christian brotherhood contrasted with the actual political and social state of Europe after Charlemagne. 6. Political disorganization caused by the inroads of the foes of western Christendom and by internal disorder. Consequent lack of improvement of economic conditions. Failure of the empire to guard life and property and the consequent rise of other agents who performed this service. Unusual importance of the strongly armed and mounted man and the fortified house and walled town. Petty feudal warfare. 7. Older institutions which may have had some influence in shaping feudal institutions. The Germanic comitatus. The Eoman patrocinium and precarium. I 8. Fundamental elements in feudalism: .(1) the personal ele- ment; (2) the economic element; and (3) Jthe governmental ele- ment. The very gradual fusion of all these elements. Endless con- fusion resulting from this commingling which made feudalism any- thing but a system. 9. The personal element. Need of the weaker and poorer man to bind himself to a stronger and richer man in times of disorder when the state did not give adequate protection. Commendation. Homage and fealty. Lord and vassal. Capitulary of Kiersey, 877 A.D. Duties of lord to his vassal: protection and justice. Duties of vassal to his lord: aid and counsel. Aid consisted largely of military service, which was honorable, noble service (castle- ward) ; but in time the vassal was bound to aid his lord in many other ways, e.g., relief, fines on alienation, the technical ' ' aids, ' ' three ordinary and two extraordinary, entertainment (droit de gite, coshering). The lord had many special rights, escheat, for- feiture, coinage. Counsel consisted largely of service in the lord's court, but might also be merely advice and helpfulness when the lord was in difficulties. 10. The economic element. The infeudation of land and other sources of income. The benefice. The fief (feudum). Earity of allodial holdings. Peculiar ideas about tenure (ridiculous ten- ures). Development of primogeniture. 11. The governmental element. The localization of govern- mental functions by usurpation, long undisputed exercise, and the granting of immunities. Special importance of the legal rights of land holders. Feudal courts and feudal law. Justice as a source of income. XH MEDIEVAL INSTITUTIONS 161 12. Sharp division of classes of people. Drastic distinction between nobles and non-nobles. Slavery in the early middle ages. Feudal relations existed only among the nobles. The non-nobles were not concerned in feudalism except that they formed the economic basis upon which it was reared. A serf was not the vassal of his lord. Lay nobles and ecclesiastical nobles. Tor the life of nobles in the middle ages, see outline XXVII below; for the life of non-nobles, see outline XXVI below. 13. Monarchy in the midst of feudalism. Theoretically the king was the apex of an imaginary feudal pyramid, but actually monarchy was fundamentally at variance with feudal conditions. 14. The church in the midst of feudalism. Especially by bequests the church acquired much land and wealth which became infeudated as did almost all property in the middle ages. Mort- main. Lay investiture. Efforts of the church to serve as peace- maker in the endless feudal warfare. The "Truce of God" and the "Peace of God." B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR EEADING Short general accounts. Most of the subjects of this outline are treated briefly in EMERTON, Introduction to the middle ages, chs. vin and xv ; and in his Mediaeval Europe, ch. xiv. ADAMS, Civilization during the middle ages, ch. ix (see also the same author's article "Feudalism" in the eleventh edition of the Encyclopaedia Britan- nica). ROBINSON, History of western Europe, ch. ix, or his, Medieval and modern times, ch. vi. MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 159-211. The beginnings of these conditions are now briefly described by VINOGRADOFF in the Cambridge medieval history, II, ch. xx (see also pp. 151-155). More extended accounts. The best survey of moderate com- pass is by SEIGNOBOS, in LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire g&nerale, II, ch. i, which has been translated by E. W. Dow, The feudal regime, New York, 1902. A similar treatment with more particular refer- ence to France is in LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part I, 194- 215, 414-439; part II; 1-38. The article "FSodalite" by MORTET in La grande encyclopedic, XVII, 191-229, is authoritative. Germanic ideas of law. In addition to ch. vm of EMERTON, Introduction, read H. C. LEA, Superstition and force, Philadelphia, 1878; J. B. THAYER, A preliminary treatise on evidence at the com- mon law, Boston, 1898, chs. I and ii; and G. NEILSON, Trial by com- bat, London, 1890, 1-74. Roman law in the early middle ages. P. VINOORADOFF, Roman law in mediaeval Europe, New York, 1900, is an excellent book. 162 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII The church and feudalism. H. C. LEA, Studies in church history, has a good chapter on "The church and feudalism," 342-391 (see also pp. 524-574 on slavery). Peace of God and Truce of God. LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 133-138. The article "Truce of God" in the Encyclo- paedia Britannica. Original sources. For illustrative documents in English trans- lation see Translations and reprints, IV, no. 3, ' ' Documents illustra- tive of feudalism," and no. 4, "Ordeals, compurgation, etc."; OGG, Source book, 196-232; THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 341-387; and ROBINSON, Readings, I, 171-191. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 69. LONGNON, Atlas historique de la France, plates vn-xi. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. Feudal conditions are touched upon in a large number of general books on the middle ages, but see especially the manuals on the history of institutions of France, Germany and Italy, nos. 528-536, 552, 578-587, 605-609, above. See also the important books of FUSTEL DE COULANGES, p. 137 above. Feudalism in general. V. MENZEL, Die Entstehung des Lehns- wesens, Berlin, 1890. F. LOT, Fideles ou vassaux : etude sur la nature juridique du lien qui unissait les grands vassaux a la royaute depuis le milieu du IXe siecle jusqu'd la fin du Xlle siecle, Paris, 1904 (dis- sertation). J. T. ABDY, Feudalism: its rise, progress, and conse- quences, London, 1890 (lectures delivered at Gresham College). S. E. TURNER, A sketch of the Germanic constitution from early times to the dissolution of the empire, New York and London, 1888. E. WIART, Essai sur la precaria, Paris, 1894. A. PROST, L'im- munite: etudes sur I'histoire et la developpement de cette insti- tution, Paris, 1882, extract from the Nouvelle revue historique du droit frangais. E. BOUTARIC, ' ' Le regime feodal, son origine et son etablissement, et particulierement de 1'immunite, " in Revue de questions historiques, XVIII (1875), 325-380. P. ROTH, Feudalitat und Unterthanenverband, Weimar, 1863 (see the important review of this book by G. WAITZ, "Die Anfange des Lehnwesens, " in Historische Zeitschrift, XIII (1865), 90-111). P. ROTH, Geschichte des Benefisialwesens von den dltesten Zeiten bis ins zehnte Jahrhun- dert, Erlangen, 1850. E. BEAUDOIN, Etudes sur les origines du regime feodal: la recommandation et le justice seigneuriale (Annales de 1'enseignement superieur de Grenoble, 1889). G. L. v. MAURER, Geschichte der Frohnhofe, Bauernhofe und Hofverfassung in Deutsch- land, 4 vols., Erlangen, 1862. G. WAITZ, fiber die Anfange der MEDIEVAL INSTITUTIONS 163 Vassalitdt, Gb'ttingen, 1856 (from vol. VII of no. 897 above). H. P. FANGERON, Les benefices et la vassalite au IXc siecle, Rennes, 1868. Du CANGE, Glossarium, no. 309 note above, contains much valuable information about feudal terms. Feudalism in France. P. GUILHIERMOZ, Essai sur I'origine de la noblesse en France au moyen age, Paris, 1902. H. SEE, Les classes rurales et la regime domanial en France au moyen age, Paris, 1901, has an excellent bibliography, pp. vi-xxxvii. A. GENGEL, Die Geschichte des frdnkischen Eeichs im besonderen Hinblick auf die Entstehung des Feudalismus, Frauenfehl, 1908. M. KROLL, L 'im- munity franque, Paris, 1911. E. BOURGEOIS, Le capitulaire de Kiersy- sur-Oise (877), Paris, 1885 (dissertation). C. SEIGNOBOS, Le regime feodal en Bourgogne jusqu 'en 1360, Paris, 1882. A. MOLINIER, ' ' Geographic feodale du Languedoc, ' ' in Histoire generate de Lajiguedoc, XII, 225-312; and his "Etude sur 1 'administration feodale dans le Languedoc, 900-1250," ibid., VII, 132-213. Slavery and serfdom. P. ALLARD, Les esclaves Chretiens, Paris, 1914; and his, Les origines du servage en France, Paris, 1913. AGNES M. WERGELAND, Slavery in Germanic society during the middle ages, Chicago, 1916. F. SCHAUB, Studien zur Geschichte der Slclaverei im Friihmittelalter, Berlin, 1913 (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 44). F. PIJPER, "The Christian church and slavery in the middle ages," in American historical review, XIV (1909), 675-695. Church and feudalism. E. LESNE, Histoire de la propriete eccle- siastique en France aux epoques romaine et merovingienne, Paris, 1910. G. A. PREVOST, L'eglise et les campagnes au moyen age, Paris, 1892. U. STUTZ, Geschichte des kirchlichen Benefizialwesens von seinen Anfdngen bis auf die Zeit Alexanders III, Berlin, 1896. Peace of God and Truce of God. L. HUBERTI, Studien zur Rechtsgeschichte der Gottesfrieden und Landfrieden, vol. I, Die Friedens-Ordnungen in Frankreich, Ansbach, 1892. K. W. NITZSCH, Heinrich IF und der Gottes- und Landfrieden (in Forschungen zur deutschen Geschichte, 21). S. HERZBERG-FRANKEL, Die dltesten Land- und Gottesfrieden in Deutschland, (ibid., 3). E. SEMICHON, La paix et la treve de dieu, Paris, 1857, 2nd edition, 1869. F. KOcn, Die Landfriedensbestrcbungen Kaiser Friedrichs I, Marburg, 1887 (dissertation). J. FEHR, Der Gottcsfricde und die katholische Kirche des Mittelalters, Augsburg, 1861. A. KLUCKHOLM, Geschichte des Gottesfriedens, Leipzig, 1857. Germanic law. K. VON AMIRA, Grundrisn des (jermanutchen Sechts, 3rd edition, Strasburg, 1913 (vol.%V of the 3rd edition of no. 307 above). E. H. MACNEAL, The minores and mediocres in the Germanic 164 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII tribal laws, Chicago, 1905 (dissertation). E. JENKS, Law and politics in the middle ages with a synoptic table of sources, London, 1913 (see especially ch. i). F. POLLOCK and F. W. MAITLAND, The history of English law before the time of Edward I, 2 vols., Cambridge, 1895; 2nd edition, 1898. O. DECLAREUIL, Les epreuves judiciaires dans le droit franc du Ve au VIII siecle, Paris, 1899. F. PATETTA, Le ordalie, Turin, 1890. S. BIDAULT DES CHAUMES, Etude sur le Mallum, Paris, 1906. J. J. H. DAGASSAN, Du relevement de I'autorite publique sous Charlemagne, etude sur le droit public aux VHIe et IXe siecles d'apres les capitulaires, Bordeaux, 1895. H. BRUNNEE, Die Entstehung der Schwurgerichte, Berlin, 1872; to be supplemented by C. H. HASKINS, "The early Norman jury," in American historical review, VIII (1902-03), 613-640. Roman law in the early middle ages. A. v. HALBAN-BLUMEN- STOCK, Das romische Becht in den germanischen Volksstaaten, Bres- lau, 1899-1907 (parts 56, 65, and 89 of Untersuchungen zur deutschen Staats und Eechtsgeschichte, edited by O. GIERKE, Breslau, 1878ft.). Original sources. Much miscellaneous matter may be found in such general collections as nos. 967, 978, and 988 above. The important For- mulae Merovingici et Karolini aevi, edited by K. ZEUMER in no. 978 above, Leges, vol. V, Hannover, 1882-1886, had been edited by E. DE KOZIERE entitled, Becueil general des formules usites dans' I' empire des Francs du V& au Xe siecle, 3 vols., Paris, 1859-1871. Textes rela- tifs aux institutions privees et publiques aux epoques merovingienne et carolingienne, edited by !M. THEVENIN, Paris, 1887, is a part of no. 968 above. Layettes du tresor des chartes, edited by A. TEULET and DE LABORDE, 3 vols., Paris, 1863-1875. Livre des vassaux du Comte de Champaigne et de Brie, 1172-1222, edited by A. LONGNON, 2 vols., Paris, 1901-1904. A very interesting picture of the way in which the most famous abbey of Paris was involved in feudalism is furnished by the Polyptique de I'abbe Irmion ou denombrement des manses, des serfs et des revenus de I'abbaye de St. Germain de Pres sous le regne de Charlemagne, edited with prolegomena by B. GUERARD, 2 vols., Paris, 1844, new edition by A. LONGNON, 2 vols., Paris, 1886-1895 (Documents de la Societe de 1'histoire de Paris). Bibliographies. The best bibliography is in DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenlcunde, nos. 4383-4614. See also Cambridge medieval history, II, 810-812. BEGINNINGS OP MONARCHIES 165 XIII. THE BEGINNINGS OF THE GREATER MEDIEVAL MONARCHIES A. OUTLINE 1. The inevitable conflict between the various political factors in the middle ages: (1) papacy, (2) empire, (3) kingdoms, (4) local feudal principalities, (5) cities. The ultimate victory of the king- doms. The nature and importance of kingship in the middle ages. 2. Louis the Pious, the successor of Charlemagne, 814-840. His relations with the church and the papacy. Various divisions of his empire during his reign. The birth of Charles (the Bald), in 822. Wars with his sons. The ' ' Field of Lies, ' ' 833. 3. The breakup of the empire of Charlemagne. The fatal prin- ciple of division, the attacks of foes from all sides, and other causes. Civil strife between the sons of Louis the Pious: Lothair, Louis the German, and Charles (Pepin had died in 838). The battle of Fontenay, 841. The Strasburg oaths, 842. The important Treaty of Verdun, 843. The shoe-string portion of Lothair, Loth- arii regnum (later Lotharingia), a permanent source of trouble. Well-defined East-Frankish and West-Frankish regions. Partition of Mersen, 870. Charles II, the Bald, 875-881. Charles the Fat (881-888), sole ruler of the Franks in 885. His weakness was illustrated by the .siege of Paris by the Northmen in 885, and he was deposed in 887. 4. The grand divisions of the Carolingian empire: (1) West- Frankish kingdom, (2) East-Frankish kingdom, (3) Italy, (4) Bur- gundy, (5) Provence, (6) Lorraine. 5. Germany, the East-Frankish kingdom. The great stem- duchies: (1) Saxony, (2) Franconia, (3) Bavaria, (4) Swabia. The intermediate position of Lotharingia or Lorraine. The early kings of Germany: Arnulf of Carinthia (887-899), Louis the Child, (899- 911), Conrad I of Franconia (911-918), Henry I, the Fowler (919- 936). The importance of the last reign. Battle near Merseburg on the Unstrut against the Hungarians in 933. 6. France, the West-Frankish kingdom. Odo, count of Paris, the hero of the siege of Paris, king of West Frank land 888-898, but soon after became the vassal of Arnulf, king of Germany. For a whole century it was doubtful whether France would be inde- pendent or subject to Germany. The successors of Odo: Charles the Simple, 898-923; Robert I, 923; Rudolf of Burgundy, 923-936. Reinstatement of the Carolingian line in the person of Louis IV, d'Outre-mer, 936-954, (who was the son of Charles the Simple). 166 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII His successors, Lothaire, 954-986, and Louis V, le DSbonnair, 986- 987, were the last of the Carolingians in the West. The change of dynasty in 987 when Hugh Capet (987-996, founder of the Capetian line of French kings) was chosen king. Paris became the capital. Painfully slow growth of kingly power under his suc- cessors, Eobert II, the Pious, 996-1031; Henry I, 1031-1060; Philip I, 1060-1108. During this last reign, William of Normandy won England, 1066, and the crusades began in 1095. 7. Italy. Rivalry between Berengar of Friuli and Guy of Spoleto. Invasions of the Saracens (see outline IX above) and Hungarians (see outline XI above). Alberic's domination in Borne, 928-941. The degradation of the papacy (Marozia, pope John XI, 931-936). 8. England, from Alfred the Great (871-901) to William the Conqueror (1066-1087). 9. The importance of the middle region, Lorraine and Bur- gundy. 10. The rising kingdoms of Spain (see outline XXXIV below). B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general sketches. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, ehs. i and in. DAVIS, Medieval Europe, chs. HI-IV. Longer general accounts. OMAN, The dark ages, chs. xxm-xxix, together with TOUT, Empire and papacy, chs. n (in part) and iv. A similar account in French is in LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, I, chs. vin, x, xi. France. Short sketches in English may be found in ADAMS, Growth of the French nation, chs. v-vi; KITCHIN, History of France, 4th edition, I, 153-215; MACDONALD, A history of France, I, chs. VI- vn. The best account is in LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part I, 358-413; part II, 39-77, 144-178. Germany. E. F. HENDERSON, A history of Germany in the middle ages, chs. vi-vni. W. STUBBS, Germany in the early middle ages, chs. IH-V. Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte, edited by GEBHARDT, I, portions of chs. vi and vm. Italy. P. VILLARI, Mediaeval Italy from Charlemagne to Henry VII, 1-75. H. B. COTTERILL, Mediaeval Italy, 385-398. H. D. SEDG- VVICK, Short history of Italy, chs. vii-vm. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 56, 58-65. Read FREEMAN, Historical geography of Europe, in connection with it. For France, see LONG- NON, Atlas historique de la France, plates vi-xi, and read the explana- tory text which goes with it. BEGINNINGS OP MONARCHIES 167 C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general books on France, Belgium and the Netherlands, Germany, and Italy, nos. 508-621 above, are espe- cially useful. Some of the books mentioned in the outline on "Charlemagne," above, such as MUHLBACHER and KLEINCLAUSZ, pertain to this period. The same is true of many books in the previous outline on "Early medieval institutions," such as GENGEL and BOURGEOIS, Le capitulaire de Kiersy-sur-Oise. Decline of the Caroling!" ns. J. CALMETTE, La diplomatic caro- lingienne du traite de Verdun a la morte de Charles le Chauve, 843-77, Paris, 1901, part 135 of no. 888 above. J. W. THOMPSON, The decline of the missi dominici in Prankish Gaul, Chicago University Press, 1903, is a short paper of 23 pages. G. MONOD, Du role de I'opposi- tion des races et des nationalites dans la dissolution de I'empire caro- lingien (in Annuaire de 1'Ecole pratique des hautes Etudes, 1896). T. POUZET, La succession de Charlemagne et le traite de Verdun, Paris, 1890. F. LOT and L. HALPHEN, Annales de I'histoire de France d I'epoque carolingienne : le regne de Charles le Chauve (840-877), part 'I, 840-851, Paris, 1909, part 175 of no. 888 above. Oaths of Strasburg. A. GASTE, Les serments de Strasbourg: etude historique, critique et philologique, 2nd edition, Paris, 1888. A. KRAFFT, Les serments carolingiens de 84% d Strasbourg en roman et tudesque: avec nouvelles interpretations linguistiques et considera- tions ethnographiques, Paris, 1901. Beginnings of France. J. FLACH, Les origines de I'ancienne France: X* et XI* siecles, 3 vols., Paris, 1886-1904. F. FUNCK- BRENTANO, L'ancicnne France: le roi. H. SCHREUER, Die rechtlichen Grundgedanken der franzosischen Konigskronung. A. LONGNON, Origines et formation de la nationalite fran^aise, elements ethniques, nn iti', territorial, Paris, 1912. R. LATOUCHE, Histoire du comte du Maine pendant le Xe et le Xle siecle, Paris, 1910. L. HALPHEN, Le comt6 d'Anjou au XIc siecle, Paris, 1906. F. LOT, Melanges d'his- toire bretonne [6-11 century], Paris, 1907. J. FLACH, "Le comt6 ilc Fliindre et ses rapports avec la couronne de France du IX* au XII" siecle," in Revue historique, CXV (1914), 1-33, 241-271. Early kings of France, 888-987. E. FAVRE, Eudes, comte de I'm -is et roi de France, 882-898, Paris, 1893, part 99 of no. 888 above. A. ECKEL, Charles le Simple, Paris, 1899, part 124 of no. 888 above. P. LAUER, Robert Ivr ct Raoul de Hourgogne, rois de France, 923-936, Paris, 1910, part 188 of no. 888 above. W. LIPPERT, A' iin iff Rudolf von Frankreich, Leipzig, 1886 (dissertation). P. LAUER, Le regne de Louis IV, d'Outre-mcr, Paris", 1900, part 127 of no. 888 above. A. HEIL, Die politischen Bczifhunf/cn zwischen Otto 168 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII dem Grossen und Ludwig IV von Frankreich (936-954), Berlin, 1904 (Historische Studien, 46). F. LOT, Les derniers Carolingiens: Lothaire, Louis V, Charles de Lorraine (954-991), Paris, 1891, part 87 of no 888 above. A. HIMLY, Wala et Louis le Debonnaire, Paris, 1849. Hugh Capet and the first Capetian kings of France, 987-1108. A. LUCHAIRE, Histoire des institutions monarchiques de la France (987-1180), 2 vols., 2nd edition, Paris, 1891ff. F. Lor, Etudes sur le regne de Hugues Capet et la fin du Xc siecle, Paris, 1903, part 147 of no. 888 above. C. PFISTER, Etudes sur le regne de Robert le Pieux, 996-1031, Paris, 1885, part 64 of no. 888 above. A. FLICHE, Le regne de Philippe I*r, roi de France (1060-1108), Paris, 1912. Germany. B. SIMSON, Jahrbiieher des frdnkischen Reiches unter Ludwig dem Frommen, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1874-1876, part of no. 570 above. E. DUMMLER, Geschichte des ostfrdnkischen Reiches [to 918], 2nd edition, 3 vols., Leipzig, 1887-1888, part of no. 570 above. G. WAITZ, Jahrbiieher des deutschen Reiches unter Heinrich I, 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1885, part of no. 570 above. Italy. G. ROMANO, Le dominazioni barbariche in Italia, 395- 1024, Milan, 1909ff., part of no. 599 above. C. W. PREVIT£ ORTON, The early history of the House of Savoy, 1000-1233, Cambridge University Press, 1912. G. MENGOZZI, La cittd italiana nell' alto medio evo: il periodo Longobardo-Franco, Home, 1914. S. HELLMANN, Die Graf en von Savoyen und das Reich bis zum E-nde der staufischen Periode, Innsbruck, 1900. Lorraine. R. PARISOT, Le royaume de Lorraine sous les Caro- lingiens, 843-923, Paris, 1899 (dissertation); and his, Les origines de la Haute-Lorraine et sa premiere maison ducale, 959-1033, Paris, 1909. H. WELSCHINGER, Strasbourg, Paris, 1908 (Les villes d'art celebres). See also nos. 597-598 above. Burgundy. A. HOFMEISTER, Deutschland und Burgund im friih- eren Mittelalter: eine Studie iiber die Entstehung des Arelatischcn Reiches und seine politische Bedeutung, Leipzig, 1914. E. PETIT, Histoire des dues de Bourgogne de la race capetienne [to 1363], 9 vols., Paris, 1885-1905. R. POUPARDIN, La royaume de Bourgogne (888-1038), Paris, 1907. L. JACOB, Le royaume de Bourgogne sous les empereurs Franconiens, 1038-1125, Paris, 1906. A. J. KLEIN- CLAUSZ, Dijon et Beaume, Paris, 1907 (Les villes d'art celebres). A. HALLAYS, Nancy, Paris, 1908 (Les villes d'art celebres). Provence. G. DE MANTEYER, La Provence du premier au dou- zieme siecle, Paris, 1908, in Memoires et documents of the Societe de 1'ecole des chartes, vol. VIII. R. POUPARDIN, Le royaume de Provence sous les Carolingiens (855-933), Paris, 1901, part 131 of GERMAN EMPIRE 169 no. 888 above. F. KIENER, Ferfassungsgeschichte der Provence seit der Ostgothenherrschaft bis zur Errichtung der Konsulate (510-1200), Leipzig, 1900. Original sources. Practically all the important sources have been published in nos. 965-994 above. Die Eegesten des Kaiser- reichs unter den Karolingern, 751-918, 2nd edition, completed by J. LECHNER, Innsbruck, 1908, are continued by Die Segesten des Kaiserreichs under den Herrschern aus dem sdcJisischen Hause, 919— 1024, new edition by E. v. OTTENTHAL, part I (to 973), Innsbruck, 1893, parts of no. 985 above. For documentary material on early France, see especially no. 975 above. Bibliographies. DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, pp. 289-295 passim, 298-301, 324-333. The sources, especially for France, are best described in A. MOLINIER, Les sources, I, pp. 227-286, II, 1-18. See also the general bibliographies, nos. 21-41 above. XIV. REVIVAL OF THE MEDIEVAL EMPIRE IN THE WEST IN GERMANY A. OUTLINE 1. The manifold transformations of the medieval empire make it a difficult and elusive subject to study. Glaring contrasts between theory and actuality. 2. The early years of the reign of Otto I, 936-962. Splendid coronation at Aachen. Local German affairs with feudal nobles and the church. Wars with Slavs and Hungarians (Lechfeld, 955). Relations with Italy. The political state of Italy and the p:il>acy in the tenth century. Alberic II. Saracens and Byzan- tines in the south. Adelaide of Burgundy, widow of Lothair, was imprisoned by Berengar of Ivrea. Otto intervened in Italy in !i")1, married Adelaide, and became king of Italy. 3. The creation of the German-Roman empire. Fearful degrada- tion of the papacy and the church in Italy. In 961 Otto crossed the Alps to restore order. In 962 he was crowned emperor by pope John XII. Otto's empire compared with that of Charlemagne. Results of the revival of the imperial dignity for Germany and Italy, especially the papacy. Otto I relations with the Byzantine empire. His son (later Otto II), who had been crowned king of the Germans in 961 and emperor on Christmas day 967, was mar- ried in 972 to Theophano, daughter of the eastern emperor Romanus II. 170 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PABTII 4. Otto II, 973-983. He ascended the throne at the age of eighteen. Laid more stress on his position as emperor than on his position as German king. Crescentius, duke of the Eomans, ca. 980. Wars with the Greeks in south Italy. Diet of Verona in 983 to plan a campaign against the Saracens. Otto II died at the age of twenty-eight and was buried in St. Peter's church in Rome. 5. Otto III, 983-1002, the "Wonder of the world." Only three years old at his accession. His Greek mother Theophano (died 991) became regent. Coronation of Otto in 996. Eevolt of the second Crescentius. Influence of the clergy on Otto III. His dream of a real Roman empire with Rome as its capital. Gerbert of Aurillac (pope Sylvester II, 999-1003). Learning at the Ottonian court. Otto's loss of hold in Germany and failure in Italy. He died in 1002 at the age of twenty-two, and was buried in Aachen. 6. The legend of the year 1000. 7. Henry II, (the Saint) 1002-1024, son of Henry the Quarrel- some of Bavaria. Wars with the king of Poland, Boleslav, and extension of German influence and the Roman church eastward. Crowned emperor in Rome in 1014 by pope Benedict VIII. Close relations of Henry with the Cluniac reforming monks in Germany. 8. The empire at its height; Conrad II (1024-1039), and Henry III (1039-1056). With Conrad the Saxon line of kings and emperors (911-1024) ended, and the Franconian or Salian line (1024-1125) began. Conrad's wars with the Poles. Union of Bur- gundy with the empire in 1032. Henry III successful foreign policy. Comparative order within his empire. His control of the German church and his ardor for church reform. The synod at Sutri, 1046, and the deposition of three rival popes (Sylvester III, Benedict IX, Gregory VI). Henry appointed as pope the German Clement II, who crowned him emperor December 25, 1046. 9. The impending irrepressible conflict between the empire and the papacy. 10. The origin of the name ' ' Holy Roman Empire of the Ger- man People. ' ' 11. Kings of Germany, 887-1056, Arnulf, 887-896 Otto III, 983-1002 Louis, the Child, 899-911 Henry II, the Saint, 1002- Conrad I, 911-918 1024 Henry I, the Fowler, 918- Conrad II, 1024-1039 936 Henry III, the Black, 1039- Otto I, the Great, 936-973 1056 Otto, II, 973-983 XIV GERMAN EMPIRE 171 B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING General accounts. Best of all is J. BRYCE, Holy Roman Empire, chs. vn-ix. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, chs. ni-vi. TOUT, The empire and the papacy, chs. i-m. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, His- toire generate, I, 542-569. HENDERSON, A history of Germany in the middle ages, chs. vin-xil (or a shorter sketch in his, A short history of Germany, ch. in). FISHER, The medieval empire, I, chs. i-n, passim. Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte, edited by B. GEB- HARDT, I, ch. vin. Italy in this period. VILLARI, Mediaeval Italy from Charlemagne to Henry VII, part I, chs. v-vi. GREGOROVIUS, Rome in the middle ages, II, book VI. Nature of the German empire. A. KLEINCLAUSZ, L'empire caro- lingien, pp. 541-585, "Les origines carolingiennes du Saint-Empire romaine germanique. " J. JANSSEN, "International conception of the Holy Roman empire, ' ' in his History of the German people, translated from the German by M. A. MITCHELL, St. Louis, 1896ff., II, 105-17. Origin of name, "Holy Roman Empire of the German People." K. ZEUMER, Heiliges romisches Reich deutscher Nation. Legend of the year 1000. G. L. BURR, "The year 1000," in .Imrrican historical review, VI (1901), 429-439. Original sources. Among the interesting sources of the period is, Der Hrotsuitha Gedicht iiber Gandersheims Griindung und die Thatcn Kaiser Oddo I, translated into German by T. G. PFUND, 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1891, part of no. 981 above. For short extracts from the sources see ROBINSON, Readings, I, 245-265; and THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 72-81. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 58-59, 62-63. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See especially the works on the medieval empire in the west, nos. 499-507 above, but the general books on Germany and Italy, nos. 560-621 above, are equally important. See also no. 538 above. General accounts. M. MANITIUS, Deutsche Geschichte unter den sachsischen und salischen Kaisern, 911-1125, Stuttgart, 1889, part of no. 560 above. K. HAMPE, Deutsche Kaiseraeschichte in der Zeit der Salier und Staufer, Leipzig, 1909, 2nd edition, 1912, part of no. 320 above. J. ZELLER, Fondation de I'empirc germanique: Otton le Grand et les Ottonides, Paris, 1873. E. ROSENSTOCK, Konighaus und Stamme in Deutschland zwischen 911 und 1250, Leipzig, 1914. 172 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII A. KROENER, Wahl und Kronung der deutschen Kaiser und Konige in Italien (Lombardei), Freiburg, 1901. T. LINDNER, Die deutschen Konigswahlcn, und die Entstehung des Kurfiirstenthums, Leipzig, 1893. Otto I. E. KOPKE and E. DUMMLER, Jahrbiicher Kaiser Otto der Grosse, Leipzig, 1876, part of no. 570 above. The life of the empress Adelaide is told in the following two doctoral disserta- tions: E. P. WIMMER, Kaiserin Adelheid, Gemahlin Ottos I der Grosse, in ihrem Leben und 1>t %r~ken von 931-973, Erlangen, 1897; and J. BENTZINGER, Das Leben der Kaiserin Adelheid, Gemahlin Ottos I, wdhrend der Eegierung Ottos III, Breslau, 1883. For wars with Slavs and especially Hungarians, see outline XI above. Otto II. K. UHLIRZ, Jahrbiicher des deutschen Eeiches unter Otto II und Otto III, vol. 1, Otto II, Leipzig, 1902, part of no. 570 above. G. MULLER-MANN, Die auswdrtige PolitiTc Kaiser Ottos II, Lorrach, 1898 (dissertation, Gb'ttingen). For the Greek Theo- phano, wife of Otto II, see J. MOLTMANN, Theophano, die Gemahlin Ottos II, in ihrer Bedeutung fur die Politilc Ottos I und Ottos II, Gottingen, 1878 (dissertation). Otto III. E. WILMANS, Jahrbiicher des deutschen Eeiches unter Otto III, Berlin, 1840. P. KEHR, "Zur Geschichte Ottos III," in Historische Zeitschrift, LXVI (1891), 385-443. L. HALPHEN, "La cour d'Otto III a Borne (998-1001)," in Melanges d'archeologie et d'histoire, XXV. C. Lux, Papst Silvester II Einfluss auf die Politik Kaiser Ottos III, Breslau, 1898. W. NORDEN, Erzbishof Friedrich von Mains und Otto der Grosse, Berlin, 1912. Henry II. S. HIRSCH, Jahrbiicher des deutschen Eeiches unter Heinrich II, 3 vols., Leipzig, 1862-1874, part of no. 570 above. Conrad II. H. BRESSLAU, Jahrbiicher des deutschen Eeichs unter Konrad II, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1879-1884, part of no. 570 above. J. v. PFLUGK-HARTTUNG, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte Kaiser Konrads II, Stuttgart, 1890. Henry III. E. STEINDORF, Jahrbiicher des deutschen Eeichs unter Heinrich III, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1874-1881, is part of no. 570 above. Original sources. All the essential sources are printed in nos. 978-987 above. Bibliographies. DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, pp. 324-337. 344-345. See also nos. 29-35 above. EARLY MEDIEVAL CHURCH 173 XV. THE CHUKCH FROM THE EIGHTH TO THE ELEVENTH CENTURY A. OUTLINE 1. Eelation of the church and state in Carolingian times. Con"- trast between the reigns of Charlemagne and Louis the Pious. Beginnings of the struggle between empire and papacy for pre- eminence. The question of the crowning of emperors by popes and the recognition of popes by emperors. 2. The papacy in the ninth century. The donations to the papacy. The states of the church ("Patrimony of St. Peter"). Attacks of Saracens on Rome before and during the pontificate of Leo IV, 847-855. The "Leonine City." The pseudo-Isidorian Decretals ("False Decretals"). The very real power of pope Nicholas I (858-867), illustrated by his action in the Photian schism in Constantinople, in the divorce of King Lothair II of Lorraine, and by his victory over Hincmar, the defiant archbishop of Rheims. 3. The widening gulf between the Latin and Greek churches. The iconoclastic controversy began early in the eighth century, when the emperor Leo III, the Isaurian (717-740), declared against images. In 754 the Synod of Constantinople condemned images. The position of Charlemagne and the empress Irene on this ques- tion. Other differences between the eastern and western churches. In 863, pope Nicholas I deposed the patriarch Photius in Con- stantinople, who in turn deposed the pope in a synod at Constanti- nople in 867. In 1054, pope Leo IX had a bull of excommunication against the patriarch Michael Cerularius and his church laid upon the high altar of St. Sophia. This marks the practical separation of the two churches. 4. Period of utter degradation of the papacy: last quarter of the ninth and first half of the tenth century. Practical disap- pearance of the empire in the west during this same period. The trial of the corpse of pope Formosus, by pope Stephen VI (896- 897). Local factions in Rome in control of the papacy. Theo- dora and her two daughters, Marozia and Theodora. Alberic and the papacy, 932-954. The interference of Otto I in Rome. 5. The monastic (Cluniac) reform movement in the church in the ninth and tenth centuries. Foundation of the monastery of Cluny in 910. The great abbot Odo of Cluny, 927-941. "The Congregation of Cluny." 6. The papacy and the new German empire. Otto I and pope John XII, 955-964, who crowned him emperor in 962. In his 174 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII time the empire was supreme over the papacy. Bruno, cousin of Otto III, was the first German pope, with the title Gregory V, 996-999. Dependence of Otto III upon the great French scholar Gerbert, whom he made pope Sylvester II, 999-1003. Absolute control of Henry II over appointment to bishoprics in Germany and Italy. Independence of the German clergy and their zeal for reform. Pope Benedict VIII, 1012-1024, and his sympathy with the Cluniac reform movement. Degradation of the papacy in the reign of Conrad II. The boy pope, Benedict IX, 1033-1045. Reforming zeal of Henry III. Three popes deposed in the synod at Sutri, 1046. Henry's German popes. Gradual rise of power and dignity of the papacy. The strength of pope Leo IX, 1048-1054. Creation of the college of cardinals by the Lateran council held in 1059. Impending struggle between the papacy and empire. Peter Damian, 1006-1072. Eomuald. 7. The expansion of the Latin church, 800-1100. Ansgar, the ' ' Apostle of the North, ' ' archbishop of Hamburg in 846, effect- ually introduced Christianity bjl Denmark and Sweden, 827ff. Sweden was not completely Christianized until the middle of the twelfth century. Christianity found entrance in Norway in the tenth century. Olaf (died 1000) established it firmly, and the famous Olaf the Saint (^014-1030) completed the work. Chris- tianity in Greenland about 1000. As a missionary center in the Slav region of the Elbe, the archbishopric of Magdeburg was established in 968. /Adalbert was the first archbishop. For the conversion of Moravia by Cyrillus and Methodius see outline XI above. In Bohemia the archbishopric of Prague was established in 973. In Poland, Posen became an important ecclesiastical center. King Stephen of Hungary made Latin Christianity the legal religion about 1000, and the great archbishopric of Gran was established. 8. The church and society. Increasing wealth of the church and the machinery created to take care of it. Mortmain. Tithes. The church and feudal conditions. The ' ' Truce of God ' ' and the "Peace of God." The life and morals of the clergy. The exten- sive social and educational work of the church. The church and slavery. The church as a civilizing force in an age of disorgani- zation. 9. The growth of church institutions and practices. The church service; preaching, hymns, the mass, the sacraments. Saints and relics. 10. The growth of ecclesiastical jurisdiction and church dis- cipline. The beginnings of canon law. Conflicts with secular law. XV EARLY MEDIEVAL CHURCH 175 Attitude of the church towards ordeals. Ecclesiastical courts. "Benefit of clergy." Means Of enforcing church discipline; spiritual suasion and threat, penance, excommunication and inter- dict. Co-operation on the part of the state. 11. The development of the ecclesiastical hierarchy among the secular clergy; pope, archbishop (primate, or metropolitan), bis- hop, priest. The cardinals. Ranks and grades among the regular clergy or monks. The election of the clergy. Investiture. Simony. 12. Popes, 816-1054. Stephen IV, 816-817 Paschal I, 817-824 Eugenius II, 824-827 Valentinus, 827 Gregory IV, 827-844 Sergius II, 844-847 Leo IV, 847-855 Benedict III, 855-858 Nicholas I, 858-867 Hadrian II, 867-872 John VIII, 872-882 Martin II, 882-884 Hadrian III, 884-885 Stephen V, 885-891 Formosus, 891-896 Boniface VI, 896 Stephen VI, 896-897 Romanus, 897 Theodore II, 897 John IX, 898-900 Benedict IV, 900-903 Leo V, 903 Christopher, 903-904 Sergius III, 904-911 Anastasius III, 911-913 Lando, 913-914 John X, 914-928 Leo VI, 928 Stephen VII, 929-931 John XI, 931-936 Leo VII, 936-939 Stephen VIII, 939-942 Martin III, or Marinus II, 942-946 Agapitus II, 946-955 John XII, 955-964 Benedict V, 964-965 John XIII, 965-972 Benedict VI, 972-974 Benedict VII, 974-983 John XIV, 983-984 Boniface VII (antipope, 974-984), 984-985 John XV, 985-996 Gregory V, 996-999 Sylvester II, 999-1003 John XVII, 1003 John XVIH, 1003-1009 Sergius IV, 1009-1012 Benedict VIII, 1012-1024 John XIX, 1024-1033 "Benedict IX, 1033-1045 »[ Sylvester III, 1044-1045 antipope] •Gregory VI, 1045-1046 Clement II, 1046-1047 Damasus II, 1048 Leo IX, 1048-1054 B. SPECIAL, RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general accounts. FLICK, The rise of the mediaeval church, chs. xv-xvin. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, 41-88, 115-209. W. H. *Deposed in 1046. 176 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII BUTTON, The church and the barbarians, London, 1906, chs. xi, xrv- xvn. BARRY, The papal monarchy, chs. vm-xii. WELLS, The age of Charlemagne, chs. xxm-xxiv, xxxn-xxxiv. Longer account. A large portion of this outline is treated authoritatively in H. C. LEA, Studies in church history. Cluny. LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 123-132 (trans- lated in MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 137-152). TOUT, The empire and the papacy, ch. v. See also the introduction to the the book by DUCKETT, under ' ' Original sources ' ' below. Pope Nicholas I. J. ROY, St. Nicholas ler, Paris, 1899 (Les Saints), translated by MARGARET MAITLAND, London, 1901. Gerberb (Pope Sylvester II). MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilisation, enlarged edition, 376-405. R. ALLEN, "Pope Sylvester II," in English historical review, VII (1892), 625-668. The best biography of Gerbert is F. J. PICAVET, Gerbert, un pape philosophe, Paris, 1897. Interdict. E. B. KREHBIEL, The interdict, its history and its operation, with especial attention to the time of pope Innocent III, Washington, 1909, pp. 1-85. Original sources. The foundation charter of the order of Cluny is translated in OGG, Source book, 245-249, and also in HENDERSON, Select documents, 329-333. HENDERSON, 361-365, has a translation of the Decree of 1059 concerning papal elections, which may also be found in THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 126-131 (see also pp. 109-126 for other interesting documents). There are examples of excommunication and interdict in Translations and reprints, vol. IV, no. 4, "Ordeals, compurgation, excommunication and inter- dict, ' ' pp. 22-32. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 94-95, 97. G. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general histories of the medieval church are listed above, nos. 394-498. See also the encyclopaedias for the history of the church and religion, nos. 104-114, and the periodicals for church history, nos. 176-180 above. General accounts. MILMAN, Latin Christianity, vol. Ill, book V. R. H. WRIGHT, The " Sancta Eespublica Eomana," A.D. 395-888, 2nd edition, London, 1891. The papacy in this period. MANN, Lives of the popes, vols. II- VI, gives a systematic account of the numerous popes of this period. L. DUCHESNE, Les premiers temps de I'etat pontifical. R. BAXMANN, Die Politik der Pdpste von Gregor I bis auf Gregor VII. H. DOPFFEL, Kaisertum und Papstweschsel unter den Karolingern, Freiburg, 1889. EARLY MEDIEVAL CHURCH 177 M. HEIMBUCHER, Die Papstwahlen unter den Karolingern, Augsburg, 1889. A. LAPOTRE, L'Europe et la Saint-Siege a I'epoque caro- lingienne, vol. I, Le pape Jean VIII (872-882), Paris, 1895. Pope Nicholas I. A. GREINACHER, Die Anschauungen des Papstes Nikolaus I iiber das Verhaltnis von Staat und Kirche, Berlin, 1909. J. RICHTERICH, Papst Nikolaus I, Bern, 1903 (dissertation). F. ROCQUAIN, La papaute' au moyen age: Nicolas I«r, Gregoire VII, Innocent III, Boniface VIII, Paris, 1881. Pseudo-Isidorlan Decretals. DOLLINGER, Fables respecting the popes in the middle ages; and his The pope and the council. E. H. DAVENPORT, The False Decretals, Oxford, 1916. The schism between the Greek and Latin churches. The icono- clastic controversy. A very convenient summary of the split between the churches is in W. NORDEN, Das Papsttum und Byzanz, 1-31. L. DUCHESNE, The churches separated from Rome, translated by A. H. MATHEW, London, 1907. G. B. HOWARD, The schism between the oriental and western churches, London, 1892. L. BREHIER, Le schisme oriental du XIe siccle, Paris, 1899. A. PICHLER, Geschichte der kirchUchen Trennung zwischen Orient und Okzident, vols. I and II, Munich, 1864-1865. L. BREHIER, La querelle des images, Paris, 1904. K. SCHWARZLOSE, Der Bilderstreit, Gotha, 1890. J. HERGENROTHER, Photius: Patriarch von Constantinople, 3 vols., Regensburg, 1867-69. For the interest- ing monks of the Studium in Constantinople, who braved persecu- tion in their resistance to the iconoclasts, see L'ABB£ E. MARIN, De Studio Coenobio Constantinopolitano, Paris, 1897; and his Les moines de Constantinople depuis la fondation de la ville jusqu'd la mort de Photius (300-898), Paris, 1897. Their leader in the eighth century was Theodore, whose biography has been written by A. GARDNER, Theodore of Studium: his life and times, London, 1905, and G. A. SCHNEIDER, Der hi. Theodor von Studion: sein Leben und Wirken, Miinster, 1900, part V of no. 492 above. Hincmar. G. C. LEE, Hincmar: an introduction to the study of the revolution in the organization of the church in the ninth century, Baltimore, 1897 is a doctoral dissertation printed in American society of church history, VIII. H. SCHRORS, Hincmar Erzbischof von Reims: sein Leben und seine Schriften, Freiburg, 1884. C. VON NOORDEN, Hincmar, Erzbischof von Rhcims, Bonn, 1863. Cluniac reform. The standard work on this subject is E. SACKUR, Die Cluniacenser in ihrrr kirchlivhen und allqemeingeschichtlichc Wirksamkeit bis zur Mitte des elften Jahrhunderts, 2 vols., Halle, 1892-1894. LUCY M. SMITH, "Cluny and Gregory VII," in English historical review, XXVI (1911), 20-33. L. CHAUMONT, Histoire de 178 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Cluny depuis les origines jusqu'd la mine de I'abbaye, 2nd edition, enlarged, Paris, 1911. For Saint Odo, the famous abbot of Cluny (927-948), see A. Du BOUBG, Saint Odon (879-942), Paris, 1905 (Les Saints). Of Saint Odilo, who soon followed Odo, we have two biographies: P. JARDET, Saint Odilon, abbe de Cluny: sa vie, son temps, ses oeuvres, 962-1049, Lyons, 1898; and O. RINGHOLZ, Der heilige Abt Odilo von Cluny, Briinn, 1885. The spread of Christianity. G. F. MACLEAR, A history of Chris- tian missions during the middle ages, Cambridge, 1863, chs. xi-xiv; Apostles of mediaeval Europe, London, 1869; Conversion of the Slavs, London, 1879; Conversion of the northern nations, London, 1865. C. MERIVALE, The conversion of the northern nations, London, 1865. T. SMITH, Mediaeval missions, Edinburgh, 1880. K. MAURER, Bekeh- rung des norwegischen Stammes sum Christentum, 2 vols., Munich, 1855-1856. Ecclesiastical elections. Simony. G. WEISE, Konigtum und Bischofswahl im frdnTcischen und deutschen Eeich vor dem Investitur- streit, Berlin, 1912. J. DREHMANN, Papst Leo IX und die Simonie, Leipzig, 1908 (Beitrage zur Kulturgeschiehte, II). A. FLICHE, "Le cardinal Humbert de Moyenmoutier: etude sur les origines de la reforme gregorieune, " in Eevue historique, CXIX (1915), 41-76. H. LEVY-BRUHL, Etudes sur les elections abbatiales en France jusqu'd la fin du regne de Charles le Chauve, Paris, 1913 (dissertation). P. IMBART DE LA TOUR, Les elections episcopales dans I'eglise de France, du IX« au XII* siecles (814-1150), Paris, 1890. H. PAHNCKE, Geschichte der Bischofe Italiens deutscher Nation von 951-1264, I: einleitender Teil; Geschichte der Bischofe Italiens deutscher Nation von 951-1004, nebst eine Beilage zur Kritik von P. B. Gams Series episcoporum, Berlin, 1913. College of Cardinals. G. SCHOBER, Das WahldeTcret vom Jahre 1059, Breslau, 1914 (dissertation). For additional special litera- ture on this subject see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, no. 4954; and see no. 453 above. The church, and feudalism. A. BERR, Die Kirche gegeniiber Gewalttaten von Laien (Merovinger- Karolinger- und Ottonenzeit), Berlin, 1913 (Historische Studien, 111). P. IMBART DE LA TOUR, "Des immunites commerciales accordees aux eglises du VIIe au IXe siecle, " in no. 939 above. T. SOMMERLAD, Die wirthschaftliche Thatiglfeit der Kirche in Deutschland, vols. I-II, Leipzig, 1900- 1905. Evolution of church institutions. H. C. LEA, A history of auri- cular confession and indulgences in the Latin church, 3 vols., Phila- delphia, 1896. E. HATCH, The growth of church institutions, 4th INVESTITURE STRIFE 179 edition, London, 1895. L. DUCHESNE, Les origines du culte Chretien, Paris, 1890, 4th edition, 1910, translated from the 4th edition, Christian worship: its origin and evolution, London, 1910. P. IMBART DE LA TOUR, Les origines religieuses de la France, les paroisses rurales du 4e au lle siecle, Paris, 1900. W. SCHMITZ, S. Chrodegangi Meten- sis episcopi (742-766) Eegula canonicorum, Hannover, 1889. The church and society. G. KURTH, Notger de Liege et la civili- sation au Xe siecle, 2 vols., Paris, 1905. M. DMITREWSKI, Die christ- liche freiwillige Armut vom Ursprung bis sum 12 Jahrhundert, Ber- lin, 1913 (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 53). S. E. MAITLAND, The dark ages. Life of the clergy. H. C. LEA, An historical sketch of sacerdotal celibacy in the Christian church, 2 vols., 3rd and enlarged edition, New York, 1907, ehs. i-xn. A. DRESDNER, Kultur- und Sittenge- schichte der italienischen Geistlichkeit, Breslau, 1890. W. E. H. LECKY, History of European morals. L. ZOPF, Das Heiligenleben im 10 Jahrhundert, Leipzig, 1908 (Beitrage zur Kulturgeschichte, I). Romuald, W. FRANKE, Eomuald v. Camaldoli und seine Beform- tatigkeit zur Zeit Ottos III, Berlin, 1913. Peter Damian. E. BIRON, Saint Pierre Damien (1007-1042), Paris, 1908. Original sources. The great collections of material are listed above, nos. 953-964. See especially the Liber pontificalis, no. 959 note. The best edition of the famous False Decretals is that by P. HINSCHIUS, Decretales pseudo-Isidorianae et capitula Angil- ramni, Leipzig, 1863. Charters and records of the ancient Abbey of Cluni, 1077-1534, edited by G. DUCKETT, 2 vols., London, 1888, has a good historical introduction. Bibliotheca symbolica ecclesiae universalis: the creeds of Christendom, with a history and critical notes, edited by P. SCHAFF, 3 vols., 4th edition, revised and enlarged, New York, 1905, contains the original texts with trans- lations into English. Bibliothek der Symbole und Glaubensregeln der alien Kirche, edited by A. HAHN, 3rd edition, Breslau, 1897. Bibliographies. The general bibliographies for church history are listed above, nos. 49-55. XVI. THE INVEST1TUEE STE1FE, 1056-1122 A. OUTLINE 1. This first phase of the irrepressible conflict between the empire and papacy grew out of a sincere and well-nigh universal movement to reform the papacy and the church. As soon as the papacy became powerful and dignified, its high claims to power 180 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII clashed with those of the emperor as well as of all other temporal rulers. The importance of this dramatic duel between an emperor and a pope has been unduly exaggerated in modern books due to the painstaking research and the voluminous writings of recent German historians. 2. The grand period of the papal monarchy lay between 1073, the accession of Gregory VII, and 1303, the death of Boniface VIII. 3. The minority of the emperor Henry IV, 1056-1072. Weak- ness of the regent, the empress Agnes, 1056-1062. Strength of the nobles, especially the ecclesiastical lords, Anno, archbishop of Cologne, and Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen. 4. The youth of Hildebrand. Born between 1120 and 1125 in the village of Eovaco near Soana in Tuscany. He was of humble origin, probably the son of a peasant, and had a very unprepossess- ing personality. Educated in Rome at the time when the papacy was utterly degraded. Became the chaplain of pope Gregory VI, who was deposed in 1046. Hildebrand never was a monk in Cluny. 5. Hildebrand the power behind the papal chair. He was a cardinal-subdeacon in Rome under pope Leo IX, 1048-1054. In 1054 he was in France as a papal legate. Victor II, 1054-1057, Stephen IX, 1057-1058, and Nicholas II, 1059-1061, were prac- tically nominated by him. The alliance with the Normans, by the treaty of Melfi, 1059, and the decree of 1059 which placed the election of the popes in the hands of a college of cardinals, were largely his work. In 1059 Hildebrand was made archdeacon of the Roman church, and Alexander II, 1061-1073, made him chancellor of the apostolic see. The Patarini in Lombardy, and Matilda, countess of Tuscany, strengthened the papacy in the north of Italy as did the Normans in the south. 6. The qhief evils in the churfh which confronted Hildebrand: simony, marriage of the clergy, lay investiture. 7. Hildebrand became pope Gregory VII in 1073. His uncanon- \ , ical election. His character and his ideal of papal power. I The Dictatus papae. Troubles at the beginning of his pontificate. \ 8. The duel between Gregory VII and Henry IV. The general decree against simony and lay investiture in the synod of Rome, 1075. Henry IV and his German bishops deposed the pope at the council at Worms in 1076. Thereupon the pope excommunicated and deposed the emperor at the Vatican synod of 1076. The famous scene at Canossa, 1077, where Henry IV was absolved by Gregory VII. Duke Rudolf of Swabia was elected anti-king. Henry's excommunication and deposition renewed in 1080. Clement III was elected anti-pope in 1080 and crowned Henry IV emperor INVESTITURE STRIFE 181 in Rome in 1084. Upon the death of Rudolf of Swabia, Herman of Luxenburg succeeded him as anti-king. Henry IV beseiged Gregory VII in Rome. The pope was rescued by Robert Guiscard and his Normans, who sacked Rome in 1084. Gregory left Rome with the Normans and died in exile at Salerno in 1085. 9. The relations of Gregory VII with other princes of western Europe. His relations with the eastern emperor who feared the Turks and addressed Gregory VII for help in 1074. 10. The continuance of the struggle between Henry IV and popes Victor III, 1086-1087, and Urban II, 1088-1099. The preach- ing of the first crusade by Urban II at Clermont, in 1095, diverted interest from the investiture contest. Paschal II, 1099-1118, renewed Henry 's excommunication. Revolt of the Saxons led by his rebel son, also named Henry. Sad end of the excommunicated Henry IV, who died in Liegej 1106. 11. Echoes of the investiture strife outside of Germany and Italy. Anselm of Canterbury. 12. Henry V, 1106-1125, and his contests with the papacy. The compromise of 1111. Pope Paschal II renounced the tem- poralities of the church and crowned Henry V emperor in St. Peter's, but soon after repudiated these rash concessions. Finally when Calixtus II, 1119-1124, was pope, the great difficulty was compromised by the concordat of Worms in 1122. 13. The inevitable sequel of strife between the empire and the papacy. 14. Popes, 1054-1124. Victor II, 1054-1057 Victor III, 1086-1087 Stephen IX, 1057-1058 Urban II, 1088-1099 Benedict X, 1058-1059 Paschal II, 1099-1118 Nicholas II, 1059-1061 Gelasius II, 1118-1119 Alexander II, 1061-1075 Calixtus II, 1119-1124 Gregory VII, 1073-1085 B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOE READING Brief general accounts. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, ch. vin. TOUT, Empire and papacy, ch. vi. BRYCE, Holy Roman empire, ch. x. BARRY, Papal monarchy, chs. xm-xiv. VILLARI, Mediaeval Italy, 169-203. FLICK, Rise of the mediaeval church, chs. xvm-xix. W. MILLER, Mediaeval Rome, ch. i. LEA, History of sacerdotal celibacy, I, ch. xiv, treats the subject of celibacy in the time of Hildebrand. Longer general accounts. D. J. MEDLEY, The church and the empire 100S-1S04, New York, 1910, chs. i-m. LAVISSE and RAM- 182 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII BAUD, Histoire generale, II, ch. n. MILMAN, Latin Christianity, IV, chs. i-m. GREGOROVIUS, History of Rome in the middle ages, IV, part I, chs. m-vi. HENDERSON, A history of Germany in the middle ages, chs. xn-xiv. STUBBS, Germany in the early middle ages, chs. IX-X. Biographies of Hildebrand. A. H. MATHEW, The life and times of Hildebrand, pope Gregory VII, London, 1910. W. STEPHENS, Hildebrand and his times, New York, 1888. M. R. VINCENT, Age of Hildebrand, New York, 1896. MANN, Lives of the popes, VII. Original sources. All the ' ' source books ' ' contain a good deal of illustrative material. DUNCALF and KREY, Parallel source prob- lems in medieval history, 29-91, have translated many contempor- ary accounts of the famous scene at Canossa. The violent letters which passed between pope Gregory VII and the emperor Henry IV, along with much additional material, may be found in HENDER- SON, Select documents, 351-409; ROBINSON, Readings, I, 266-295; THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 121-166; and OGG, Source book, 261-281. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 62-63, 64, 66-67. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general histories of the church are listed above, nos. 395-498. The books on the medieval empire, nos. 499- 507, especially 501, and those on Germany, nos. 560-598, and Italy, nos. 599-621 above, are especially useful. General accounts. M. MANITIUS, Deutsche Geschichte, 911-1125. A. HAUCK, Kirchengeschichte Deutschlands, III. BAXMANN, Die Politik der Pdpste, II. Z. N. BROOK, The so-called investiture strug- gle of the eleventh century, Rome, 1913. T. GREENWOOD, Cathedra Petri, IV, 139-678. J. HERGENROTHER, Katholische Kirche und christ- licher Stoat in ihrer geschichtlichen Entwickelung und in Beziehung auf die Fragen der Gegenwart, 2nd edition, Freiburg, 1876, trans- lated into English, Catholic church and Christian state, I, 380ff. J. v. PFLUGK-HARTTUNG, Die Papstwahlen und Eaisertum, 1046- 1328, Gotha, 1908. Gregory VII. W. MARTENS, Gregor VII : sein Leben und Wirken, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1894. O. L'abbe DELARC, Saint Gregoire VII et la reforme de I'eglise au XIe siecle, 3 vols., and an index, Paris, 1889- 1890. A. F. GFRORER, Papst Gregorius VII und sein Zeitalter, 7 vols., and index, Schaffhausen, 1859-64, is distinctly Roman catholic in tone and very polemical. J. BRUGERETTE, Gregoire VII et la reforme du XIe siecle, Paris, 1906. A. F. VILLEMAIN, Histoire de Gregoire VII, 2 vols., Paris, 1873; translated into English, The XVI INVESTITURE STRIPE 183 life of Gregory VII, 2 vols., London, 1874. E. LANGERON, Leglise au moyen age: Gregoire VII et les o^ignies de la doctrine ultramon- taine, 2nd edition, Paris, 1874. The first seriously critical work on Gregory VII was J. VOIGT, Hildebrand ah Papst Gregorius VII und sein Zeitalter, Weimar, 1815, 2nd edition, 1846, translated into French with additions by 1 'abbe JAGER, Histoire du pape Gregoire VII et de son siecle, 4th edition, 2 vols., Paris, 1854. C. MIRBT, Die Wahl Gregors VII, Marburg, 1892. Dictatus papae. The latest word about the register of Gregory VII, including the famous Dictatus papae, is in E. L. POOLE, Lec- tures on the papal chancery, ch. vi. See the literature quoted in his footnotes and in DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenlcunde, no. 4928. Canossa. W. SACHSE, Canossa: histdrische Untersuchung, Leip- zig, 1896. E. FRIEDRICH, Studien zur Vorgeschichte von Canossa, 2 parts, Hamburg, 1905-1908. For other special works on the famous scene at Canossa see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenlcunde, no. 5007. Gregory VII and the Byzantine empire. W. NORDEN, Das Papst- tum und Bysanz, 38-46. Henry IV. G. MEYER v. KNONAU, Jahrbucher des deutschen Beichs unter Heinrich IV und Heinrich V, 7 vols., Leipzig, 1890- 1909, part of no. 570 above. E. HOHNE, Kaiser Heinrich IV: sein Leben und seine Kampfe 1050-1106, nach dem Urteile seiner deutschen Zeitgenossen, Giitersloh, 1906. T. LINDNER, Kaiser Heinrich IV, Berlin, 1881. H. FLOTO, Kaiser Heinrich der Vierte und sein Zeit- alter, 2 vols., Stuttgart, 1855-56, defends Henry IV against the accusations of pope Gregory VII. O. SCHUMANN, Die pdpstlichen Legaten in Deutschland zur Zeit Hcinrichs IV und Heinrichs V (1056-1125), Marburg, 1912 (dissertation). Henry V. G. PEISER, Der deutsche Investiturstreit unter Kaiser Heinrich V bis zu dem pdpstlichen Privileg vom 13 April, 1111, Berlin, 1883. Investiture. F. X. BARTH, Hildebert von Lavardin (1056- 1183) und das Becht der Jcirchlichen Stellenbesetzung, Stuttgart, 1906, parts 34-36 of no. 491 above. H. FEIERABEND, Die politische Stellung der deutschen Beichsabteien wahrend des Investiturstreites, Breslau, 1913 (Historische Untersuchungen, III). Investiture strife in France. B. MONOD, Essai sur les rapports de Pascal II avec Philippe I, 1099-1108, Paris, 1907, part 164 of no. 888 above. Polemical literature concerning investiture. J. DE GHELLINCK, "La litte'rature polSmique durant la querelle des investitures," in Bevue des questions historiques, XCIII (1913), 71-89. The funda- mental work on the subject is C. MIRBT, Die Publizistik im Zeit- 184 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII alter Gregors VII, Leipzig, 1894. It should be supplemented by L. SALTET, Les reordinations : etude sur le sacrement de I'ordre, Paris, 1907. A. FLICHE, Etudes sur la polemique religieuse a I'epoque de Gregoire VII: les pregregoriens, Paris, 1916. For the vast mass of controversial pamphlet literature which has come down to us see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, no. 4925. See also M. T. STEAD, "Manegold of Lautenbach, " in English historical review, XXIX (1914), 1-15, and A. SCHARNAGL, Der Begriff der Investitur in den Quellen nach der Literatur des Investiturstreits, part 56 of no. 490 above. Concordat of Worms, 1122. E. BERNHEIM, Das Wormser Kon- kordat und seine Vorurkunden, Breslau, 1906 (part 81 of Untersuch- ungen zur deutschen Staa'ts- und Eechtsgeschichte, edited by O. GIEBKE). For special literature on the Concordat of Worms of 1122 see DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, no. 5039. Matilda of Tuscany. NORA DUFF, Matilda of Tuscany: la Gran Donna d' Italia, London, 1909.- E. HUDDY, Matilda, countess of Tuscany, London, 1906. A. OVERMANN, Grafin Mathilde von Tuscien, ihre Besitzungen, Geschichte ihres Guts, 1115-1230, und Hire Eegesten, Innsbruck, 1895. Original sources. A very convenient collection of extracts has been edited by E. BERNHEIM, Quellen zur Geschichte des Investitur- streites, vol. I, 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1913, vol. II, 1907, part of no. 980 above. A selection of the letters of Hildebrand, edited by G. FINCH, London, 1853. Bibliographies. By far the best bibliography for both original sources and secondary works is in DAHLMANN-WAITZ, Quellenkunde, nos. 4872-5039, but the general bibliographies for Germany, nos. 29-34, Italy, nos. 37—41, and the church, nos. 49-55 above, are all useful. XVII. THE BYZANTINE EMPIEE FEOM THE DEATH OF JUSTINIAN, 565, TO THE FIEST CEUSADE, 1095 A. OUTLINE 1. The place of Constantinople and the Byzantine empire in European history has been indicated in outline III above. 2. The work of Justinian was ruined by his immediate suc- cessors. The Avars established themselves in Pannonia. The Lom- bards invaded Italy in 568. The Slavs crossed the Danube and moved into the Balkan peninsula. The Persian wars dragged on until 591, and were resumed again in 603. The rebellion of the BYZANTINE EMPIRE 185 uncultured cut-throat Phocas in 602 illustrated the utter degrada- tion of the empire. He was recognized, however, by Pope Gregory the Great. 3. Heraclius, 610-641, and the Persians. Under Chosroes they captured Jerusalem in 614 and in 616 overran Egypt. In 617 Chal- cedon fell. The church and the emperor now declared a crusade against the Persian fire-worshippers. Persians, Avars, and Slavs made a combined but unsuccessful attack on Constantinople in 626. By the peace of 628 with Persia the boundaries of the empire were restored. 4. The Heraclian dynasty and the Mohammedans, 610-717. In this period the Persian menace gave way to a still- greater one, namely, Islam. In 637 Jerusalem was taken by the Moslems. Not only Syria but Egypt and all northern Africa soon fell into the hands of the Mohammedans. Eolations of Constans II and Con- stantine IV with Italy and Sicily. The two great sieges of Con- stantinople in 673-677, and in 717-718, which formed a turning point in the relations between Christians and Mohammedans. 5. Byzantine civilization and administration under the Hera- clian dynasty. Latin practically disappeared in the east and the. empire became virtually Greek. Decline of Greek learning co-eval with the decline of Latin learning in the west in Merovingian times. The new provinces called "themes" of military origin. Greek diplomacy. Poor fiscal administration. Reorganization of the army. Main stress now laid on the cavalry. Remarkable advance of military tactics and theory. Development of a strong fleet under Constans II, 642-668. Liquid or marine fire, which we call "Greek fire." 6. The iconoclastic period, 717-867. Image worship among Greek Christians was made the mark of taunts of the Moham- medans. In 726, the emperor Leo III issued his first edict against images. Opposition in both the Latin and Greek churches. Icono- elasm sactioned by the council of Constantinople in 753. Reaction in favor of images under Constantino and Irene, 780-802. Leo V, 813-820, again denounced image worship, but those who favored images won a final victory in 843 under Theodora and Michael III, 842-867. Echoes of the iconoclastic controversy in the west. 7. Political history in the iconoclastic period, 717-867. The internal reforms of Leo III, 717-740. Increasing oriental influence. Desultory warfare with the .Saracens. The Lombards ended the exarchate of Ravenna in 750. Shortly after, the eastern emperors definitely lost Rome at the hands of the Franks. Relations of Charlemagne with the Byzantine empire in the time of Constantino 186 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII and Irene. Early in the ninth century the rising power of the Bulgarians became a menace. In 826 a band of Moslem adven- turers from Spain took Crete. 8. The Byzantine empire at its height under the Macedonian dynasty, 867-1057. Basil I and his successor reconquered southern Italy, 875-894, but in 878 Syracuse fell into the hands of the Moors. A revival of learning began in the ninth century and Cyrillus and Methodius converted the Slavs (outline XI above). In the east, Crete was won back in 961, Antioch in 968, and Cyprus about the same time. The reign of Basil II, 963-1025, marks the culmination of the power and glory of the Byzantine empire. He subdued the Bulgarians, hence he is usually called Bulgaroctonus, ' ' Slayer of Bulgarians." The Eussians, who under Sviotoslav had seriously threatened Constantinople, were checked in 971 by John Zimisces and when Vladimir, the Clovis of Eussia, was baptized about 990, Eussia was opened to a flood of Byzantine influence. In 1054 came the practical separation between the Greek and Latin churches. 9. The rise of the Seljuk Turks. With the end of the Mace- donian dynasty in 1057 there came a period of decline and turmoil •such as that after the death of Justinian. This gave an oppor- tunity for conquest to the nomad Seljuk Turks who had become Mohammedans and in 1055 occupied Bagdad and in 1076 entered Jerusalem. In 1071 the Turks under Alp Arslan defeated and took prisoner the emperor Eomanus at the famous battle of Manzikert. In the same year the Normans took Bari from the Byzantines. In 1074 Michael VII appealed to pope Gregory VII for help against the Turks. The Turks captured Nicaea in 1080. Constantinople seemed to be doomed. 10. Alexius Comnenus, 1081-1118, saved the empire by his states- manship. He kept at bay the Seljuk Turks, the Petchenegs, and the Normans, who, under Eobert Guiscard, attacked him, 1081- 1085, but were beaten back with the help of Venice. Venice was granted exceptional commercial privileges in the Levant. In 1095 Alexius appealed to pope Urban II for aid and that ushered in the crusades which completely transformed the Byzantine empire. 11. Byzantine emperors, 565-1118. J.ustinianean dynasty (1) Justin II, 565-578 (2) Tiberius II, 578-582 (3) Maurice, 582-602 Phocas, 602-610 BYZANTINE EMPIRE 187 Heraclian dynasty, 610-711 (1) Heraclius, 610-641 (2) Constantino III, 641 (3) Heracleonas, 641-642 (4) Constans II, 642-668 (5) Constantine IV, 668-685 (6) Justinian II, 685-695 [Leontius, 695-698 Tiberius II, 698-705] (6) Justinian II (restored), 705-711 Philip Bardanes, 711-713 Anastasius II, 713-716 Theodosius III, 716-717 Isaurian (Syrian) dynasty, 717-802 (1) Leo III, 717-740 (2) Constantine V, 740-775 (3) Leo IV, 775-780 (4) Constantine VI, 780-797 (5) Irene, 797-802 Nicephorus I, 802-811 Stauracius, 811 Michel I, 811-813 Leo V (Armenian), 813-820 Phrygian or Armorian dynasty, 820-867 (1) Michael II, 820-829 (2) Theophilus, 829-842 (3) Michael III, 842-867 Macedonian dynasty, 867-1057 (1) Basil I, 867-886 (2) Leo VI and Alexander, 886-912 (3) Constantine VII (Porphyrogennetos), 912-959 (4) Romanus I, 920-944 (5) Romanus II, 959-963 (6) Basil II (Bulgaroctonus) and Constantine VIII, 963- 1025 Nicephorus II (Phocas), 963-969 John Zimisces, 969-976 (7) Constantine VIII (sole ruler), 1025-1028 (8) Romanua III, 1028-1034 (9) Michael IV, 1034-1041 (10) Michael V, 1041-1042 (11) Constantine IX, 1042-1054 188 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII (12) Theodora, 1054-1056 (13) Michael VI, 1056-1057 Isaac I (Comnenus), 1057-1059 Constantino X, 1059-1067 Michael VII, Andronicus, and Constantine XI, 1067 Eomanus IV, 1067-1071 Michael VII (sole ruler), 1071-1078 Nicephorus III, 1078-1081 Comnenian dynasty, 1081-1204 (1) Alexius I (nephew of Isaac I), 1081-1118 B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING General surveys. OMAN, Doric ages, chs. ix, xn, xiV, xvm, xxvm, together with TOUT, Empire and papacy, eh. vn. LAVISSE and RAM- BAUD, Histoire generale, I, 193-203, 625-687 (pp. 672-682 of this selection have been translated by MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 212-223, under the title "Byzantine civilization" [9th to llth centuries]). BRYCE, Holy Eoman empire, 4th edition, eh. xvn, "The east Roman empire." A somewhat longer account is in OMAN, The Byzantine empire, chs. ix-xx. The period to 717 is now treated in the Cambridge medieval history, II, eh. ix, "The successors of Justinian," and ch. xni, "The successors of Heraclius to 717." The article "Roman empire, later" in the Encyclopaedia Britannica is written by J. B. BURY, the greatest English authority in this field. Standard accounts in English. The best and most authoritative account of the period to 867 is J. B. BURY, A history of the later Eoman empire, vol. II, together with his A history of the eastern Eoman empire, 802-867. The first comprehensive history in Eng- lish which met the requirement of modern historical scholarship was written by G, FINLAY, History of Greece, vol. II (see nos. 645 and 656 above). Until the time of FINLAY the English-speaking world drew its information about this period of Byzantine his- tory largely from- GIBBON, Decline and fall, chs. XLV, .XLVI, XLVIII, LII, Lin, who was chiefly responsibly for a general misunderstanding of the true nature of the history of the eastern empire during these centuries when it did much service for western civilization. Italy and the Byzantine empire after Justinian. P. VILLARI, The barbarian invasions of Italy, II, 274-374. DUDDEN, Gregory the Great, I, ch. vi, "Gregory at Constantinople," contains a good description of Constantinople at the end of the sixth century; see also, II, ch. x, for Gregory's relations with the churches of the east. BYZANTINE EMPIRE 189 Byzantine warfare. OMAN, Art of war, 169-226, and H. DEL- BRUCK, Geschichte der Kriegskunst, III, 194-209, should be read side by side if possible because DELBEUCK differs from OMAN in some important points. The great siege of Constantinople in 717 is told in a popular way by E. A. FOORD, "The repulse of the Sara- cens from Europe," in Contemporary review, XCVI (1909), 327- 341. The Byzantine empire at its height. The glorious period about the year 1000 is described in a spirited way by J. B. BURY, "Roman emperors from Basil II to Isaac Komnenos, " in English historical review, IV (1889), 41-64, 251-285. Constitutional history. J. B. BURY, The constitution of the later Roman empire, Cambridge, 1910 (Creighton memorial lecture). Byzantine scholarship. SANDYS, History of classical scholarship, I, chs. xxn, xxni. Original sources. HENDERSON, Select documents, 441-477, "Liut- prand's report of his mission to Constantinople, 968A.D. ". C. H. HASKINS, "A Canterbury Monk at Constantinople, c. 1090," in English historical review, XXV (1910), 292-295. E. W. BROOKS, "Byzantines and Arabs in the time of the early Abbasids,," in English historical review, XV (1900), 728-747. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 54-55, 58-59, 66-67. Cambridge medieval history, II, maps 18 and 25. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See nos. 643-679 above, and also the periodicals for Byzantine history, nos. 174-175 above, as well as the books on Byzantine literature, nos. 800-802 above. General survey. The best handbook on things Byzantine is K. KRUMBACHER, Geschichte der byzantinischen Literatur, second edition, 1897. On pp. 91 Iff. there is a general survey of Byzantine history by H. GELZER, ' ' Abriss der byzantinischen Kaisergeschiehte. ' ' Sicily and southern Italy and the Byzantine empire. B. PACE, I barbari e i bizantini in Sicilia: studi sulla storia dell' itola dal sec. V al IX, Palermo, 1911. J. GAY, L'ltalie meridionale et I'empire byzantin, 867-1071, Paris, 1904, part 90 of no. 887 above. Relations between the Greek East and the Latin West. N. JOROA, "Der lateinische W eaten und der byzantinische Osten in ihrem Wechselbeziehungen wahrend des Mittelalters: einige Gesichtspunkte, " p. 89-99 in Lipsiense: Ehrengabe Karl Lamp- recht dargebraoht, Berlin, 1909. G. REVERDY, Lea relations de Childc- bert II et de Byzance, Paris, 1913, ia an extract from the Revue his- torique, CX1V (1913), 61-86. L. HARTMANN, Bin Kapitel vom 190 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII spdtantiken und fruhmittelalterlichen Staate, Stuttgart, 1913, is a short sketch of 24 pages which contrasts the Byzantine empire with the Lombard and Frankish kingdoms. C. TIEDE, Quellen- mdssige Darstellung der Beziehungen Carls des Grossen zu Ost-Bom, Kostock, 1892. A. GASQUET, £tudes byzantines: I' empire byzantin et la monarchic franque, Paris, 1888. O. HARNACK, Die Beziehungen des frdnkisch-italischen zum byzantinischen Beiche unter der Begier- ung Karls des Grossen und der spdteren Kaiser Tcarolingischen Stam- mes, Gottingen, 1880. B. MYSTAKIDIS, Byzantinisch-dcutsche Bezieh- ungen zur Zeit der Ottonen, Stuttgart, 1891. The Greek church. For books on the schism between the Greek and Latin churches and the iconoclastic controversy, see above, p. 177. A. FORTESCUE, The orthodox eastern church, London, 1907, third edition, 1911. A. H. HORE, Eighteen centuries of the orthodox Greek church, New York, 1899. J. PARGOIRE, L'eglise byzantine de 527-847, Paris, 1905. H. F. TOZER, The church and the eastern empire, new impression, London, New York, 1904. L. BREHIER, "L'hagiographie Byzantine des VHP et IXe siecles a Constanti- nople et dans les provinces, ' ' in Journal des savants, August, Octo- ber, 1916. A. P. STANLEY, History of the eastern church, 5th edition, London, 1883. Administration. J. B. BURY, The imperial administrative system in the ninth century, with a revised text of the Kletorologion of Philotheos, London, 1911, II, part of no. 904 above, Supplementary papers, 1. Byzantine warfare. J. B. BURY, The naval policy of the Roman empire in relation to the western provinces from the seventh to the ninth centuries, Palermo, 1910 (Centenario della nascita di M. Amari, 2). F. AUSSARESSES, L'armee byzantine d la fin du VI siecle, d'apres le Strategicon de I'Empereur Maurice, Bordeaux, 1909 (Bibliotheque des Universites du Midi, fasc., 14). Byzantine scholarship. L. LABORDE, Les ecoles de droit dans I'empire d'Orient, Bordeaux, 1912. F. SCHEMMEL, Die Hochschule von Konstantinopel vom 5 bis 11 Jahrhundert, Berlin, ca. 1912. Histories of various emperors arranged chronologically. K. GROH, Geschichte des ostromischen Kaisers Justin II, nebst den Quellen, Leipzig, 1889. A. PERNICE, L'imperatore Eraclio: saggio di storia bizantina, Florence, 1905. K. SCHENK, Kaiser Leo III, Halle, 1880. A. LOMBARD, Etudes d'histoire byzantine: Constantin V, empereur des Bomains (740-775), with a preface by C. DIEHL, Paris, 1902, part XVI of no. 889 above. A. VOGT, Basile Icr empereur de Byzance et la civilisation byzantine d la fin du IXe siecle, Paris, 1908. A. EAM- BAUD, L'empire grec au Xe siecle: Constantin Porphyrogenete, Paris, xvm EARLY MEDIEVAL CULTURE 191 1870. G. SCHLUMBERGEB, Un empcrew Byzantin au We siccle: Nic£- phore Phocas, Paris, 1890. F. GHALANDON, Alexis Comnene (1081- 1118), Paris, 1900. The Byzantine empire at its height. G. SCHLUMBERGER, L'epopec byzantine a la fin du dixieme siecle, 3 vols., Paris, 1890-1905, covers the period 960-1057 and has excellent illustrations. Byzantine history just before the crusades. C. NEUMANN, Die Weltstellung den byzantinischen Seiches vor den Kreuzziigen, Leipzig, 1894 (dissertation). W. FISCHER, Studien zw byzantinischen Geschichte des elften Jahrhunderts, Plauen, 1883. Seljuk Turks. M. T. HOUTSMA, Histoire des Seljoukides d'Asie Mineure d'apres Ibn Bibi, Leyden, 1903. Original sources. The large collections of sources for Byzan- tine history are listed above, nos. 1002-1003. The important col- lection of Byzantine coins in the British Museum is described and illustrated in W. WROTH, Catalogue of the imperial Byzantine coins in the British Museum, 2 vols., London, 1908. Bibliographies. Cambridge medieval history, II, 747-757, 766- 769. BURY, History of the eastern Roman empire, 493-510. KRUM- B AT i IKK. Geschichte der byzantinischen Literatur, 2nd edition, 1068ff. XVIII. THE CULTURE OF THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES A. OUTLINE 1. The gradual change from ancient to medieval modes of thought and learning. Christianity and the barbarian invaders as factors in this change. 2. The universality of the Latin language in western Europe. The decadence of Greek. 3. "The classical heritage" of the early middle ages. 4. The Christian ideal of life. 5. Books that were studied and written during this period. 6. Medieval schools before the rise of universities. 7. The illustrious part played by the British Isles in the his- tory of learning from the fifth to the eighth centuries. 8. The age of Charlemagne. 9. Slow advancement of culture in Christian Europe from the ninth to the eleventh century. Contrast with the Mohammedan world. 10. The beginning of a new era towards the end of the eleventh century. 192 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING The best book on the transition from ancient to medieval con- ditions is S. DILL, Roman society in the last century of the western empire, London, 1898, 2nd edition, revised, 1910. After that, the best general guides in English are the two books by H. O. TAYLOR, The Mediaeval mind, and The classical heritage of the middle ages, New York, 1901, 3rd edition, 1911. MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilisation, is a collection of valuable miscellaneous extracts. For the period before Charlemagne, M. ROGER, L'enseignement des let- tres classiques d'Ausone a Alcuin, Paris, 1905, is extremely useful. Much can be gleaned from LAVISSE, Histoire de France (see table of contents of each volume). Essential books for reference are SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship; and MANITIUS, Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur des Mittelalters. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY For detailed outlines and bibliographies see part III, period I, below. PERIOD II, 1100-1500 XIX. THE BEGINNING OF A NEW ERA IN THE HISTORY OF WESTERN EUROPE ABOUT 1100 A. OUTLINE Introduction. Current misconceptions concerning the middle ages. "The twelfth century renaissance." The following were the main features of the new era: 1. Political: (1) The struggle for empire. (2) Losing struggle of the great feudal nobles with the rising kingdoms. Parliamen- tary machinery. 2. Religious: (1) Conflict between church and state. (2) New monastic movement, especially the mendicants. (3) Heresies. (4) Crusades. (5) The conciliar movement. 3. Social and economic: (1) Emancipation of the lower rural classes. (2) Growth of cities and commerce. (.3) Geographical explorations and discoveries. (4) Crusades. 4. Intellectual and artistic: (1) Spirit of inquiry. (2) Better Latin literature. (3) New interest in classical Latin. (4) Some interest in Greek and other languages. (5) Revival of Roman law. (6) Revival of medicine. (7) Some interest in natural sciences. (8) Systematization of theology and philosophy. (9) Growth of universities. (10) Development of vernacular languages and litera- tures. (11) Gothic architecture. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Re-read the article "Middle ages" by Professor SHOTWELL, in the last edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Read LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 203, and observe the scheme of this division called "La renaissance franchise. " See also F. HARRISON, The meaning of history, New York, 1908, chs. v, "A survey of the 13th century," first printed in the Fortnightly review, LVI (1891), 325-345. 194 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII XX. THE NOEMANS A. OUTLINE 1. The transformation of the Northmen in northern France into Normans in the tenth and eleventh centuries. The nature of the land which Kollo won as a dukedom about 911. Its history under the first six dukes. The influence of Frankish customs and insti- tutions. The work of the Eoman church and schools in Normandy. Mont St. Michel. The monastic school of Bee established in 1042 by Lanfranc who was followed by Anselm. Striking Norman char- acteristics. 2. The expansion of the duchy of Normandy into a Norman empire. Marriage of duke William with Matilda, daughter of the count of Flanders. Conquest of Maine, 1063. The famous con- quest of England by William the Conqueror in 1066. Battle of Hastings. The Bayeux tapestry. Separation of England and Normandy at the death of William in 1087. They were reunited in 1106 under Henry I. His daughter, Matilda, married count Geof- frey of Anjou, who wrested Normandy from Stephen of Blois. Origin of the name ' ' Angevin empire. ' ' Plantagenets. Geoffrey 's son Henry became duke of Normandy in 1150, count of Anjou in 1151. In 1152 he married Eleanor, duchess of Aquitaine, divorced wife of king Louis VII of France, and thus became lord of Poitou, Aquitaine and Gascony. In 1154 he became king of England and was thus ruler of a large empire which straddled the English chan- nel. "Occupying this international position, Henry must not be viewed, as he generally is, merely as an English king." — Haskins. 3. Norman administration in England and the continent, espe- cially the fiscal and judicial system. The Dialogue on the Exche- quer, written by Richard, the treasurer of Henry II, in 1178-1179. The Norman jury. 4. Break-up of the Norman empire. Wars of Henry II with king Philip of France and with his faithless sons. His tragic death at Chinon in 1189. He was succeeded by his son Kichard the Lion- Hearted, 1189-1199. In spite of the fact that he and king Philip of France went on the third crusade together, they soon came to blows on account of Richard's possessions on the continent which Philip coveted. Chateau Gaillard, Richard's strong castle on the Seine. King John's quarrel with his suzereign, king Philip of France. The murder of Arthur, 1203. Capture of Chateau Gail- lard in 1204. In 1204 John lost Normandy and all his lands north of the Loire, which now were attached directly to the French crown. That marked the end of the Norman empire. THE NORMANS 195 5. The Normans in southern Italy. The roaming spirit of the Normans. Norman pilgrims to the Holy Land and other famous shrines. The shrine of St. Michael on Monte Gargano in Italy. There is a record of Normans at this spot as early as 1016. Their dealings with Greeks and Saracens and Latins in southern Italy. Aversa founded in 1030. The sons of Tancred of Hauteville in Italy, especially Koger and Robert Guiscard (died 1085). Their relations with the papacy. The defeat of the papal army at Civi- tate, in 1053. The treaty of Melfi between Robert Guiscard and pope Nicholas II in 1059. Robert was acknowledged as a duke by the papacy. Monte Cassino and the Normans. Gregory VII and the Normans. The sack of Rome by the Normans in 1084. Death of Gregory VII among the Normans in Salerno in 1085, in which year Robert Guiscard also died. 6. Conquest of Sicily by the Normans, 1061-1091. The island under the rule of the Saracens. Count Roger captured Messina in 1061, Palermo in 1072. In 1091 Noto, the last Saracen fastness fell to Roger (died 1101). Relations of Roger with the papacy. 7. The Normans as a Mediterranean power. The development of a strong fleet. Robert Guiscard and the Byzantine empire. His conquests in the Balkan peninsula. The opposition of Venice. The Normans on the first crusade, Bohemond (lord of Antioch), and Tancred. Normans in Spain and in northern Africa. 8. The Norman Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. In 1130 Roger II had united all the Norman possessions in Italy and Sicily and was crowned king by the pope. Palermo became the capital of the new kingdom. The Norman power and civilization was at its height in the reign of Roger, who died in 1154. Decline under his successors, William I, 1154-1166, and William II, 1166-1189. Wars of the latter with Frederick Barbarossa. Marriage of the heiress of the Norman kingdom, Constance, daughter of Roger II, with Henry VI. For the history of the kingdom under the Hohen- staufen, see outline XXII below. 9. Norman administration and culture in Sicily and southern Italy. Mingling of Byzantine, Mohammedan, Jewish, and Latin civilization in Sicily. The study of Greek, and translations from the Greek into Latin. The adaptability of the Norman conquerors. Their tolerance. The splendor of Palermo. Relations of the Nor- man kingdom in the Mediterranean with the Norman empire in the north. Consequent close touch of England with Mediterranean civilization. Similarity of institutions in Sicily and England. 10. The ultimate absorption of the Normans by the native popu- lation in all the lands where they ruled in the middle ages. 196 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII 11. Dukes of Normandy. Rolf (Bollo), 911-927 William (Longsword), 927-943 Richard (The Fearless), 943-996 Richard (The Good), 996-1026 Richard III, 1026-1028 Robert (The Magnificent), 1029-1035 William the Conqueror, 1035-1087 Robert II, 1087-1106 William (Rufus), regent, 1096-1100 Henry I, 1106-1135 Stephen of Blois, 1135-1144 Geoffrey, Count of Anjou and Maine, 1144-1150 Henry II, 1150-1189 Richard (The Lion-Hearted), 1189-1199 John, 1199-1204, when Normandy was conquered by the king of France. 12. Sons of Tancred of Hauteville of Normandy. (1) William of the Iron Arm, lord of Apulia, died 1046. (2) Drogo, Count of Apulia, died 1051. (3) Humphrey, Count of Apulia, died 1057. (4) Robert Guiscard, Duke of Apulia, died 1085. (5) Roger I, Count of Sicily, died 1101. 13. Norman kings of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. Roger II, son of Roger I, first king of Sicily, 1130, died 1154. William I, 1154-1166. William II, 1166-1189. Henry VI, the Hohenstaufen, married Constance, daughter of Roger II, 1189-1197. Frederick II, 1197-1250. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING General surveys. By far the best account in any language is C. H. HASKINS, The Normans in European history, Boston and New York, 1915. The best brief sketch is in LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 53-57, 87-106. In TOUT, Empire and papacy, information about the Normans is scattered in the following pages, 83-86, 103- 109, 114-119, 135, 174-175. In the Encyclopaedia Britannica the article on "Normandy" is by R. LATOUCHE; that on the "Nor- mans" by E. A. FREEMAN. The history of the Normans in Eng- land is not treated in detail in this Guide, but attention may be called to two general books which treat the subject chiefly from that aspect: A. H. JOHNSON, The Normans in Europe, chs. vi-xvii; THE NORMANS 197 and SAKAH O. JEWETT, The Normans: told chiefly in relation to their conquest of England. A short popular account in German is H. DON- DORPF, "Die Normaunen und ihre Bedeutung fiir das europaische Kulturleben im Mittelalter, ' ' in Sammlung gemeinverstdndlicher wissenschaftlicher Vortrage, edited by E. VIRCHOW and F. v. HOLT- ZENDORFF, Berlin, 1866-1901, X (1875), 259-298. Normans in Sicily and southern Italy. In an English translation the best short account is P. VILLARI, Mediaeval Italy, 126-133, 150- 161, 179-203, 241-252. C. H. HASKINS, "England and Sicily in the twelfth century," in English historical review, XXVI (1911), 433- 447. E. A. FREEMAN, "The Normans at Palermo," in his Historical essays, third series, 437-476. E. CURTIS, Eager of Sicily and the Normans in lower Italy, 1016-1154, New York, 1912. F. M. CRAW- FORD, The rulers of the south, Sicily, Calabria, Malta, 2 vols., New York, 1901, II, 124-333. COTTERILL, Medieval Italy, 399-412. GIB- BON, Decline and fall, ch. LVI. Mont St. Michel. H. ADAMS, Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres, Boston, 1913. The shrine of Saint Michel on Monte Gargano in Italy is described by E. GOTHEIN, Die Culturentwickelung Siid- Italiens, Breslau, 1886, pp. 41-111. Normans in Spain. E. DOZY, Becherches sur I'histoire et la lit- terature de I'Espagne, II, 332-371. Original sources. For reproductions of the famous Bayeux tap- estry see no. 202 above. The well-known Dialogue of the Exchequer is translated in HENDERSON, Select documents, 20-134. CECILIA WAERN, Mediaeval Sicily, New York, 1911, is largely devoted to Norman Sicily. It is included under this heading because ch. iv contains translations from contemporary sources. Maps. The only satisfactory map is in MEYERS Historischer Handatlas, 25. See also SHEPHERD, Atlas, 61, 65, 66-67, 69; and Dow, Atlas, 13 (inset). C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. Information concerning the Normans is almost hopelessly scattered in the general books on medieval history. The general histories of France, nos. 608-548 above, and Italy, nos. 599- 621 above are especially useful. See also nos. 360-361 above. Normandy. H. PRENTOUT, Essai sur les origines et la fondation du duche de Normandie, Paris, 1911; and his, La Normandie, Paris, 1910 (Les regions de la France, VII, Publications de la Revue de synthese historique); and his recent Etude critique sur Dudon de Saint-Quentin et son Histoire des premiers dues Normands, Paris, 1916. A. ALBERT-PETIT, Histoire de Normandie, 6th edition, Paris, 198 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII 1912. G. MONOD, Le role de la Normandie dans I'histoire de France, Paris, 1911. F. M. POWICKE, The loss of Normandy, Manchester, 1913. J. Abbe TOUFLET, Le Millenaire de la Normandie: souvenirs, etudes, Rouen, 1913, is an illustrated collection of popular com- memorative essays. There is an important introduction in L. DELISLE, Eecueil des actes de Henri II, roi d'Angleterre et due de Normandie, concernant les provinces fran^aises et les affaires de France, Paris, 1909. DELISLE 's Etude sur la condition des classes agricoles en Normandie, Evreux, 4851, reprinted 1906, is still our most thorough study of life in Normandy. A. LABUTTE, Histoire des dues de Normandie jusqu'd la mort de Guillaume le Conquerant, 2nd edition, Paris, 1866. F. PALGRAVE, The history of Normandy and of England, 2 vols., London, 1851-1857, for a long time was the standard work in English on Normandy. It was superseded by the works of Freeman and others whose books are not listed in this Guide and should be sought for in GROSS' Sources and literature of English history. H. BOHMER, Kirche und Staat in England und in der Normandie im 11 und 12 Jahrhundert, Leipzig, 1899, extends to 1154. Professor HASKINS called attention to E. N. SAUVAGE, L'ab- baye de Saint-Martin de Troarn au diocese Bayeux des origines au seizieme siecle, Caen, 1911, as the best study of a Norman monastery. T. A. COOK, The story of Rouen, London, 1905. C. ENLART, Eouen, Paris, 1910 (Les villes d'art celebres). H. PRENTOUT, Caen et Bayeux, Paris, 1909. Norman institutions. C. H. HASKINS, Studies in Norman institu- tions, Harvard University Press, 1917, incorporates studies on Nor- man matters which appeared in the English historical review and the American historical review. On Norman law see especially chs. vn- ix of H. BRUNNER, Die Entstehung der Schwurgerichte, Berlin, 1872; also book I, ch. ni of F. POLLOCK and F. W. MAITLAND, The history of English law, 2 vols., Cambridge, 1895, 2nd edition, 1899; and L. VALIN, Le due de Normandie et sa cour (913-1204) : etude d 'his- toire juridique, Paris, 1910, to be supplemented by E. DE FREVILLE, "fitude sur 1 'organisation judiciaire en Normandie au XII* et XIII* siecles, " in Nouvelle revue historique de droit, 1912, pp. 681- 736. The following are recent studies on Norman institutions in Sicily and Italy: H. NIESE, Die Gesetzgebung der normanischen Dynastic im Eegnum Siciliae, Halle, 1910. EVELYN JAMISON, The Norman administration of Apulia and Capua, more especially under Eager I and William I, 1127-1166 (Papers of the British school at Borne, 1913, VI, no. 6). M. HOFMANN, Die Stellung des Konigs von Sizilien nach den Assisen von Ariano (1140), Miinster, 1915. C. A. GARUFI, "Sull' ordinamento amministrativo Normanno in Sicilia: THE NORMANS 199 exhiquier o diwan?" in Archivio storico italiano, 5th series, XXVII (1901), 225-263. Bayeux tapestry. For literature on the Bayeux tapestry see C. GROSS, Sources and literature, no. 2139, and, in addition, P. LAUER, "Le poeme de Baudri de Bourgueil adresse a Adele, fille de Guil- laume le Conquerant, et la date de la tapisserie de Bayeux," in Melanges d'histoire offerts a Charles Bemont, 43-58; J. B. BERTRAND, Notice historique sur la tapisserie brodee de la reine Mathilde, epouse de Guillaume le Conquerant, exposee dans la galerie de la bibliotheque de Bayeux, Bayeux, 1914; and C. GARNIER, La tapisserie de la reine Mathilde: notice historique et descriptive, textes frangais et anglais, Bayeux, 1914. Normans in Sicily and southern Italy. On this phase of the history of the Normans there is a good deal of literature. The fol- lowing are the most important general surveys of large portions of the field: F. CHALANDON, Histoire de la domination normande en Italic et en Sidle, 1009-1194, 2 vols., Paris, 1907; L. VON HEINEMANN, Geschichte der Normannen in Unteritalien und Sicilien bis zum Aus- stcrben des jwrmannischen Konigshauses, vol. I, to 1085, Leipzig, 1894; O. DELARC, Les Normands en Italie, depuis les premieres inva- sions jusqu'd I'avenement de S. Gregoire VII (859-862, 1016-1073), Paris, 1883; J. W. BARLOW, Short history of the Normans in southern Europe, London, 1886; A. F. VON SCHACK, Geschichte der Normannen in Sicilien, 2 vols., Stuttgart, 1889; A. PALOMES, La storia di li Nurmanni 'n Sicilia, 4 vols., Palermo, 1883-1887; H. OTTENDORFF, Die Eegierung der beiden letzten Normannenkonige, Tancreds und ll'illiclms III von Sizilien und ihre Kampfe gegen Kaiser Heinrich VI, Bonn, 1899; G. B. SIRAGUSA, II regno di Guglielmo I in Sicilia, 2 vols., Palermo, 1885-1886. The standard work on the first Norman king in the south is E. CASPAR, Roger II (1101-1154) und die Griindung der norman- nixcli-sicilianischen Monarchic, Innsbruck, 1904. R. STRAUS, Die Juden im Konigreich Sizilien untcr Normannen und Staufern, Heidel- berg, 1910. On Norman art see E. BERTAUX, L'art dans I 'Italic nn'ridionale, vol. I, Paris, 1904. C. DlEHL, L'art byzantin dans I'ltalie meridionale, Paris, 1894; and his Palcrme et Syracuse, Paris, 1907. Di GIOVANNI, La topografia antica di Palermo dal secolo 10 al 15, 2 vols., Palermo, 1889-1890. N. MACCARRONE, La vita del latino in Sicilia fino all' eta normanna, Florence, 1915. Popular books which attempt to revive interest in Norman Sicily and Italy are numerous; the following are examples: M. 8. BRIOOS, In the heel of Italy: a study of an unknown citi/ [Lecce], London, 1910; and N. DOUGLAS, Old Calabria, London, 1915. 200 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Monte Cassino and the Normans. E. PALMAROCCHI, L'abbazia di Montecassino et la conquista normanna, Eome, 1913. See also the short but valuable introduction to E. A. LOEW, The Beneventan script. The Normans and the papacy. A. WINCKLER, "Gregor VII und die Normannen," in vol X (1875), 605-643, of Sammlung gemeinverstdndlicher wissenschaftlicher Vortrdge. A. WAGNER, Die unteritalischen Normannen und das Papstthum, von Victor III bis Hadrian IV (1086-1156), Breslau, 1887. The Normans and the Byzantine empire. J. GAY, L'ltalie meridionale et I' empire byzantin, Paris, 1904. G. L. F. TAFEL, Kom- nenen und Normannen: Beitrage zur Erforschung ihrer Geschichte im verdeutschten und erlduterten Urlcunden des swolften und drei- zehnten Jahrhunderts aus dem GriecMschen, Ulm, 1852, 2nd edition, part II, Stuttgart, 1870. C. SCHWARTZ, Die Feldzilge Robert Guis- card's gegen das byzantinische Reich, Fulda, 1854 (Programm). W. COHN, Die Geschichte der normannisch-sicilischen Flotte, Breslau, 1910. G. SCHLTJMBERGER, " Deux chefs normands des armees byzan- tines," in Revue historique, XVI (1881), 289-303. See also outline XVIII above. Normans in Syria, B. KUGLER, Boemund und Tankred, Tubingen, 1862. G. KEY, in Revue de I- 'Orient latin, IV (1896), 321-407; VIII (1900), 116-157. E. KUHNE, Geschichte des Filrstentums Antiochia unter normannischen Heerschaft (1098-1130), Berlin, 1897 (Pro- gramm). O. VON SYDOW, Tancred: ein Lebensbild aus den Zeiten der Kreuzziige, Leipzig, 1880. Original sources. The general collections for France and Bel- gium, nos. 965-977 above, and for Italy, nos. 988-994 above, espe- cially no. 988, contain much material valuable for a study of the Normans. Historiae Normannorum scriptores antiqui . . . 838- 1220, edited by A. DUCHESNE, Paris, 1619. The publications of the Societe de 1'histoire de Normandie, Rouen, 1870ff., contain source materials; recent publications in this set are: L. MARX, Gesta nor- mannorum ducum of WILLIAM of JUMIEGES, Paris, 1914; and L. HALPHEN and E. POUPARDIN, Chroniques des comtes d'Anjou et des seignieurs d'Amboise, Paris, 1914. A rather important source for the Normans in the south is AMATUS (AIME) OF MONTE CASSINO, j^'ystoire de li Normant [to 1078], edited by O. DELARC, Eouen, 1892. K. A. KEHR, Die Urlcunden der normannisch-sicilischen Konige: eine diplomatische Untersuchung, Innsbruck, 1902, is a very careful dip- lomatic study of the archive material for the Normans in Sicily. Bibliographies. The most serviceable bibliography is that at the end of chapters in HASKINS, The Normans in European history. THE CRUSADES 201 GROSS, Sources and literature, part IV. Catalogue des ouvrages nor- mands de la Bibliotheque municipale de Caen, Caen, 1910-1912. A. MOLINIER, Les sources d I'histoire de France, II, chs. xxv, xxxni. U. CHEVALIER, Repertoire: Topo-bibliographie, II, 2140. XXI. THE CRUSADES A. OUTLINE 1. After having been more or less on the defensive against its foes from the eighth to the eleventh centuries, western Christendom was ready to take the offensive towards the end of the eleventh century. Compare the ousting of the Mohammedans from Sicily by the Normans, 1061-1091. 2. Nature and causes of the crusades. Contact between Europe and Asia in the early middle ages. The "Syrians" in the west. Pilgrimages to Jerusalem and other holy places. 3. Syria and Asia Minor in the eleventh century. The Christian state of Armenia. Treatment of Christian pilgrims in Jerusalem before and after the capture of the holy city by the Seljuk Turks in 1076. 4. The preaching of the first crusade by pope Urban II at the council of Clermont, 1095. The legend of Peter the Hermit. Persecutions of the Jews. In the spring of 1096 several unorgan- ized bands, mostly peasants, set out under Peter the Hermit, Wal- ter the Penniless, and others. Most of them perished miserably in Asia Minor. 5. The first crusading army set out in the fall of 1096. The following were some of the prominent leaders: Godfrey of Lor- raine (of Bouillon) and his brother Baldwin; Raymond of Saint- Gilles, count of Toulouse; Robert, duke of Normandy; Hugh, count of Vermandois; Stephen, count of Blois; Bohemund, son of Robert Guiscard, and his nephew Tancred; Adhemar, bishop of Puy, the legate of the pope. 6. The crusading hosts in Constantinople. Their relations with the emperor Alexius Comnenus. The anomalous position of the Norman leaders. The Alexiad of Anna Comnena, the daughter of Alexius. 7. The march through Asia Minor and the conquest of the Holy Land. Siege of Nicaea. Battle of Dorylaeum. Capture of Edessa and Antioch in 1098. The legend of the holy lance. Fall of Jerusalem in 1099. 8. The organization of the crusaders' conquests in the east. The Latin kingdom of Jerusalem. The Assizes of Jerusalem. Feud- 202 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII alism in Palestine. The county of Tripoli, the principality of Antioch, and the county of Edessa. 9. The religious military orders; Hospitallers, Templars, Teu- tonic knights. The Teutonic knights in Prussia in the first half of the thirteenth century under their Grand Master, Hermann of Salza. 10. The management of the constant flow of population and goods to and from the Holy Land. Passagia. Importance of the sea routes. The rapid rise of Italian towns and merchants. 11. Eesults of the fall of Edessa in 1144. The preaching of St. Bernard of Clairvaux. Conrad III of Germany and Louis VII of France led armies to Palestine. 12. The capture of Jerusalem in 1187 by Saladin led to the crusade of the three kings, Frederick I (Barbarossa) of Germany, Richard the Lion-Hearted of England, and Philip II of France. The death of Frederick Barbarossa by drowning in the river Saleph, 1190, and the consequent destruction of the German army. Capture of Acre by the Christians in 1191. Truce with Saladin, 1192. The failure of this crusade, which was planned on a very large scale, marked the end of the heroic crusading era. 13. The crusading plans of the emperor Henry VI, 1190-1197. 14. The ambitions of pope Innocent III to launch an overwhelm- ing crusade. The capture of Constantinople by so-called crusaders in 1204 and the establishment of the Latin empire of Constan- tinople, 1204-1261. The children's crusade, 1212. Innocent preached a "crusade" against the Albigensian heretics in south- ern France, and aided the Christians against the Mohammedans in Spain (Battle of Tolosa, 1212). 15. The capture of Damietta by the Christians in 1219 under John of Brienne. Ultimate loss of the city and failure of this expedition into Egypt. St. Francis of Assisi in Egypt. 16. The emperor Frederick II in the Holy Land. His treaty with El-Kamil, the Sultan of Egypt, in 1229, by which he got possession of Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth. Frederick assumed the crown of Jerusalem. Capture of Jerusalem by the fierce Charis- mian Turks in 1244. 17. The crusading fervor of king Louis IX of France. The Life of St. Louis by his friend Joinville. Capture of Damietta in Egypt in 1249. Louis did not follow up his first successes and finally was taken prisoner. When released he went as a pilgrim to Palestine. Fall of Jaffa and Antioch, 1268, into the hands of the Sultan Bibars. The second crusade of St. Louis to Tunis where he died in 1270. XXI THE CRUSADES 203 18. The fall of Acre in 1291 and the end of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem. 19. Crusading movements after 1291. The De recuperatione Terrae Sanctae of Pierre Dubois (1309). Missionary activities set in motion largely by the crusades. Eaymund Lull. 20. Changes in Europe in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries which can in a measure be attributed to the crusades. 21. Latin emperors in Constantinople. Baldwin I, 1204-1205 Henry of Flanders, 1205- 1216 Peter of Courtenay, 1216- 1219 22. Kings of Jerusalem. Godfrey of Bouillon, 1099- 1100 (without the title of king) Baldwin I, 1100-1118 Baldwin II, 1118-1130 Fulk of Anjou, 1130-1143 Baldwin III, 1143-1163 Amalric I, 1163-1174 Baldwin IV, 1173-1185 Baldwin V, 1185-1186 Guy of Lusignan, 1186- 1194 Robert, 1219-1228 Baldwin II, 1228-1261 [Conrad of Montferrat, 1191-1192] [Henry of Champagne, 1192-1197] Amalric II of Lusignan, 1197-1205 Amalric III, 1205-1206 John of Brienne, 1210-1225 lolande of Brienne, 1225- 1228 Frederick II, 1228-1250 Hugh of Lusignan (King of Cyprus), 1268-1284 B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief surveys. The following are reviews of the subject in a more or less elementary fashion. BEMONT and MONOD, Medieval Europe, 336-374. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, 357-397. ADAMS, Civilization, 258-278. MUNRO, A history of the middle ages, 106- 121. FLICK, Mediaeval church, ch. xx. The article "Crusades'* in the Encyclopaedia Britannica was written by E. BARKER, that in the Catholic encyclopedia by L. BREHIER; both are excellent and contain good bibliographical notes. LANGLOIS, Lectures historiques, ch. ix, reprints several famous passages from modern authors on the crusades. Longer accounts. TOUT, The empire and the papacy, chs. VIM. xm, xv, xix. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generate, II, ch. vi (translated in part by MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 248-256). LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 227-250. GIB- BON, Decline and fall, treats of the crusades in chs. LVII-LX. 204 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PABTII Short books on the crusades in English. The best account is by T. A. ARCHER and C. L. KINGSFORD, The crusades: the story of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, New York, 1895 (Stories of the nations). W. B. STEVENSON, The crusaders in the east: a brief his- tory of the wars of Islam with the Latins in Syria during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, Cambridge, 1907, presents the subject from the eastern point of view. J. M. LUDLOW, The age of the crusades, Edinburgh, 1897. J. I. MOMBERT, A short history of the crusades, New York, 1894. M. M. C. CALTHROP, The crusades, London, [1913], (The peoples books), is a very slight manual for the general reader. G. W. Cox, The crusades, New York, 1875 (Epochs of history) is very antiquated. Speech of Pope Urban II. This speech has been analyzed care- fully by D. C. MUNRO, "The speech of pope Urban II at Clermont, 1095," American historical review, XI (1905-1906), 231-242. Pilgrimages. BEAZLEY, Dawn of modern geography, I, 125-175, II, 112-217. LACROIX, Military and religious life in the middle ages, 262-393. Original sources. Translations and reprints, vol. I, no. 2, "Urban and the crusaders" (contains translations of the speech of Urban II); vol. I, no. 4, "Letters of the crusaders"; vol. Ill, no. 1, ' ' The fourth crusade. ' ' For translations of several accounts of the capture of Jerusalem in 1099 see DUNCALF and KREY, Parallel source problems, 95-133. MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 257-268, "Ibn Jubair's account of his journey through Syria (1184)." ROBINSON, Readings, I, 312-345. THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 510-544. OGG, Source book, 282-296. HENDERSON, Documents, 337-344. The following are the most available longer accounts in Eng- lish: Chronicles of the crusades: being contemporary narratives of the crusade of Richard Coeur de Lion by Richard of Devizes and Geoffrey de Vinsauf and of the crusade of St. Louis, by Lord John de Joinville, London, 1848. T. A. ARCHER, The crusade of Richard I, 1189-1192, New York, 1889 (English history by contemporary writers). VILLEHARDOUIN 's Chronicle of the fourth crusade and the conquest of Constantinople, and JOINVILLE 's Chronicle of the crusade of St. Lewis, are translated by Sir F. MARZIALS, Memoirs of the crusades, London [1908] (Everyman's library). The second of these is also translated conveniently in The memoirs of the Lord of Joinville: a new English version, by ETHEL WEDGEWOOD, London, 1906. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 66-67, 68, 70-71, 73. xxi THE CRUSADES 205 C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. Information on the crusades is widely scattered in the general books on medieval history. Those on the church, nos. 394—498 above, France, Germany, and Italy, nos. 508-621 above, and the Byzantine empire, nos. 643-679 above, are espe- cially useful. General accounts. B. KUGLER, Geschichte der Kreuzziig'e, Berlin, 1880, 2nd edition, 1891, part of no. 313 above. L. BREHIER, L'eglise et I'Orient au moyen age: les croisades, 2nd edition, Paris, 1907. E. HEYCK, Die Kreuzziige und das heilige Land, Bielefeld and Leip- zig, 1900 (Monographien zur Weltgeschichte). E. ROHRICHT, Geschichte der Kreuzziige im Umriss, Innsbr,uck, 1899. The two most comprehensive histories of the crusades unfor- tunately are antiquated, having been written near the beginning of the nineteenth century under the influence of the romantic movement. J. F. MICHAUD, Histoire des croisades, 3 vols., Paris, 1812-1817, in 7 vols., 1824-1829, translated into English by W. ROBSON, History of the crusades, 3 vols., [1852] (often reprinted). F. WILKEN, Geschichte der Kreuzziige nach morgenldndischen und abendlandischen Berichten, 7 vols., Leipzig, 1807-1832. Pilgrimages to the Holy Land, A. BAUMSTARK, Abendlandische Paldstinerpilger des ersten Jahrtausends und ihre Berichte, Koln, 1906. P. RIANT, Expeditions et pelerinages des Scandinaves en Terre Sainte au temps des croisades, Paris, 1865. First crusade. R. ROHRICHT, Geschichte des ersten Kreuzzuges Innsbruck, 1901. H. HAGENMEYER, Chronologic de la premiere croi- sade, 1094-1100, Paris, 1902, is taken from Revue de I'Orient Latin, VI-VIII. Historiography of the first crusades. H. VON SYBEL, Geschichte des ersten Kreuzzuges, Leipzig, 1841, 3rd edition, 1881, partly trans- lated by Lady DUFF GORDEN, The history and literature of the crusades, London, 1861. O. J. THATCHER, "Latin sources of the first crusade," Annual report of the American historical association, I (1900), 499-509. T. A. ARCHER, "The Council of Clermont and the first crusade," Scottish review, XXVI (1895), 274-295. L. DU SOMMERARD, Deux princesses d'Orient au 12 siecle: Anne Comnene, li'niniii ilcn croisades; Agnes de France, Paris, 1907. C. NEUMANN, kische Geschichtschreiber und Gtschichtsquellen im IS Jahr- hundert: Studien zu Anna Comnena, Theod. Prodromus, Joh. Cinna- mus, Leipzig, 1888. See also MOLINIER, Les sources d I'histoire de France, V, pp. xcvff. The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem and other Latin states in Syria. C. R. CONDER, The Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099-1291, 206 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII London, 1897. B. ROHRICHT, Geschichte des Konigreichs Jerusalem (1100-1291), 2 vols., Innsbruck, 1898. G. DODU, Histoire des insti- tutions monarchiques dans le royaume latin de Jerusalem (1099- 1291), Paris, 1894; and his Le royaume latin de Jerusalem (Con- ference donnee a 1'Universite Nouvelle de Bruxelles). HELEN G. PRESTON, Eural conditions in the kingdom of Jerusalem during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, Philadelphia, 1903 (dissertation). G. KEY, Les colonies franques de Syrie aux XIIe et XIIIs siecles, Paris, 1884. G. SCHLUMBERGER, Les principautes franques dans le Levant, Paris, 1879. G. SCHLUMBERGER, Fin de la domination franque en Syrie apres les dernieres croisades: prise de Saint-Jean d'Acre en I 'an 1291 par I'armee du Soudan d'Egypte, Paris, 1914, is an extract from the Revue des deux mondes, July 15, 1913. Second crusade. B. KUGLER, Analekten zur Geschichte des zwei- ten Kreuzzuges, Tubingen, 1878, 1885; Neue Analekten, 1885. C. NEUMANN, Bernard von Clairvaux und die Anfdnge des zweiten Kreuzzuges, Heidelberg, 1882. H. COSACK, "Konrads III Ent- schluss zum Kreuzzug, ' ' in Milteilungen des Instituts fur osterreich- ische Geschichtsforschung, XXXV (1914), 278-296. Third crusade. S. L. POOLE, Saladin and the fall of the king- dom of Jerusalem, New York, 1898. A. CARTELLIERI, ' ' Richard Lowenherz im heiligen Lande, " in Historische Zeitschrift, CI (1908), 1-25. G. SCHLUMBERGER, Eenaud de Chdtillon, prince d'Antioche, Paris, 1898; and his, Campagnes du roi Amaury I de Jerusalem en Egypte, au Xlle siecle, Paris, 1906. A. GRUHN, Der Kreuzzug Richards I, Berlin, [1892]. K. FISCHER, Geschichte des Kreuszuges Kaiser Friedrichs I, Leipzig, 1870. Henry VI plan for a crusade. W. LEONHARDT, Der Kreuzzugs- plan Kaiser Heinrichs VI (dissertation, Giessen, ca. 1914). E. TRAUB, Der Kreuzzugsplan Kaiser Heinrichs VI im Zusammenhang mit der Politik der Jahre 1195-1197, Jena, 1910. Capture of Constantinople in 1204 and the Latin Kingdom established there 1204-1261. A. LUCHAIRE, Innocent III, 6 vols., Paris, 1905-1908, vol. IV, La question d 'Orient. E. PEARS, The fall of Constantinople: being the story of the fourth crusade, New York, 1886. E. GERLAND, Geschichte des lateinischen Kaiserreiches von Konstantinopel, part I, Geschichte der Kaiser Balduin I und Heinrich, 1204-1216, Homburg, 1905. W. NORDEN, Der vierte Kreuz- zug im Rahmen der Beziehungen des Abendlandes zu Byzanz, Berlin, 1898. H. MOESER, Gottfried von Villehardouin und der Lateinerzug gegen Byzanz, 1899. J. TESSIER, La quatrieme croisade: la diversion sur Zara et Constantinople, Paris, 1884. L. STREIT, Beitrdge zur Geschichte des vierten Kreuzzuges, Anklam, 1877. Count RIANT, Le THE CRUSADES 207 changement de direction de la quatrieme croisade, Paris, 1878. C. D. DU CANGE, Histoire de I' empire de Constantinople sous les empereurs Francois, Paris, 1657, new edition by J. A. BUCHON, 2 vols., Paris, 1826. OMAN, Story of the Byzantine empire, 274-306, is a brief summary. The Byzantine empire and the crusades. W. NORDEN, Das Papsttum und Byzanz, Berlin, 1903. F. CHALANDON, Essai sur le regne d' Alexis Comnene (1081-1118); and his Jean II Comnene (1118-1143), Paris, 1912. ALICE GARDNER, The Lascarids of Nicaea: the story of an empire in exile, London, 1912. W. MILLER, The Latins in the Levant. FINLAY, History of Greece, II-IV. Sir R. icODD, The princes of Achaia and the chronicles of Morea, a study of Greece in the middle ages, London, 1907. J. K. FOTHERINGHAM, Marco Sanudo, conqueror of the Archipelago, Oxford, 1915. G. SCHLUMBERGER, Eecits de Byzance et des croisades, Paris, 19*16. A. GRUHN, Die byzantinische PolitiJc zur Zeit der Kreuzziige, Berlin, 1904, J. DRASEKE, "Bischof Anselm von Havelberg und seine Gesandtschaf tsreisen nach Byzanz, ' ' Zeitschrift fur Kirchenge- schichte, XXI (1901), 160-185. For a summary see LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, II, ch. xv. The children's crusade. D. C. MUNRO, "The children's cru- sade," American historical review, XIX (1914), 516-524. G. E. GRAY, The crusade of the children in the thirteenth century, New York, 1870. R. ROHRICHT, "Der Kinder Kreuzzug, 1212, *' in His- torische Zeitschrift, XXXVI (1876), 1-8. DE JANSSENS, Etienne de Cloyes et les croisades d' en fonts au XIIIe siccle, Paris, 1890. A. DES ESSARTS, La croisade des enfants, Paris, 1852. Fifth crusade. R. ROHRICHT, Studien zur Geschichte des fiinften Kreuzzuges, Innsbruck, 1891. Frederick II and the crusades. W. JACOBS, Patriarch Gerold von Jerusalem: ein Beitrag zur Kreuzzugsgeschichte Friedrichs II, Aachen, 1905 (dissertation, Bonn). R. ROHRICHT, Die Kreuzfahrt Friedrich II, Berlin, 1874. Crusades of King Louis IX. E. J. DAVIS, The invasion of Egypt in .t.l). 1249 by Louis 9th of France, London, 1898. R. STERNFELD, Ludwigs des Heiligen Kreuzzug nach Tunis 1210 and die Politik A"fi/-/.s / von Si:ili<'n, Berlin, 1896. H. F. DELABORDE, Jean de Join- ville et les seigneurs de Joinville, Paris, 1894. Religious military orders. H. PRUTZ, Die gewtliclien Ritter- nrili a : ilirt SI/ ih/iii/ ^iir kin-liHi-lu n. politischen, gesellschaftlichen und wirtschaftlicliai /•,'///// •irlclnn n des Mittelalters, Berlin, 1908; and his, Der Anted der geistlichcn Ritterordcn an dem geistigen Leben 208 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII ihrer Zeit, Miinchen, 1908. F. C. WOODHOUSE, The military religious orders, London, 1879. A. EASTOUL, Les Templiers 1118-1312, 2nd edition, Paris, 1905. H. PRUTZ, Entwicklung und Untergang des Templerherrenordens, Berlin, 1888. J. GMELIN, Schuld oder Unschuld des Templerordens: kritischer Versuch zur Losung der Frage, Stuttgart, 1893. K. SCHOTT- MULLER, Der Untergang des Tcmpler-Ordens, 2 vols., Berlin, 1887. L. DELISLE, "Operations financieres des Templiers," in Memoires de V Academic des Inscriptions, XXXIII (1889). C. G. ADDISON, The history of the Knights Templars, London, 1842; 3rd edition, 1852. G. LIZERAND, ' ' Les depositions du Grand Maitre Jacques de Molay au proces des Templiers, 1307-1314," in Le moyen age, XXVI (1913), 81-106. M. SCHUPFERLING, Der Templerherren Orden in Deutschland, Bamberg, 1915. F. LUNDGREEN, Wilhelm von Tyrus und der Templerorden, part I, Berlin, 1911 (dissertation). V. CAR- RIERE, ' ' Les debuts de 1 'Ordre du Temple en France, " in Le moyen age, XVIII (1914), 308-335. Baron DE DELABRE, Rhodes of the Knights, Oxford, 1909. J. DELAVILLE LE EOULX, Les Hospitaliers en Terre Sainte et d Chypre, 1100-1310, Paris, 1904; Les Hospitaliers a Rhodes jusqu'a la morte de Philibert de Nailhac, 1310-1421, Paris, 1914; Melanges sur I' Ordre de S. Jean de Jerusalem, Paris, 1910. W. K. E. BEDFORD and E. HOLBECHE, The order of the hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, London, 1902. W. PORTER, Knights of Malta or the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, 2 vols., London, 1858; 3rd edition of vol. I, 1884. E. PETIET, Contribution d I'histoire de I'Ordre de Saint- Lazare de Jerusalem en France, Paris, 1914. Crusading movements after 1291. F. HEIDELBERGER, Kreuzzugs- versuche um die Wende des 13 Jahrhunderts, Berlin and Leipzig, 1911 (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 31). A. GOTTRON, Ramon Lulls Kreuzzungsideen, Berlin, 1912. J. DELA- VILLE LE EOULX, La France en Orient au XlVe siecle: expeditions du marechal Boucicaut, 2 vols., Paris, 1886, parts 44-45 of no. 887 .above. N. IORGA, Notes et extraits pour servir d I'histoire des croi- sades au XVe siecle, 5 vols., Paris, 1899-1915. Preaching of crusades. A. LECOY DE LA MARCHE, "La predica- tion de la eroisade au XIIP siecle," in Revue des questions his- toriques, XL VIII (1890), 5-28. E. EOHRICHT, "Die Kreuzpredigten gegen den Islam," in Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte, VI (1884), 550-572. Privileges of the crusaders. E. BRIDREY, La condition juridique des croises et le privilege de la croix, Paris, 1901. EDITH BRAMHALL, THE CRUSADES 209 "The privileges of the crusaders," American journal of theology, V (1902), 279ff. Archaeological evidences of the crusades. G. KEY, Etudes sur les monuments de I 'architecture militaire des croisades en Syrie et dans I'ile de Chypre, Paris, 1871. C. ENLART, L'art gothique et la renaissance en Chypre, 2 vols., Paris, 1899. G. SCHLUMBERGER, Numismatique de I'Orient Latin, Paris, 1878. Cyprus. B. STEWART, Cyprus: the people, mediaeval cities, castles, antiquities, and history of the island, London, 1908. W. STUBBS, "The mediaeval kingdoms of Cyprus and Armenia," in his Seventeen lectures, ch. vin. Culture and the crusades. H. PRUTZ, Kulturgeschichte der Kreuzzuqe, Berlin, 1883. O. HENNE AM RHYN, Kulturgeschichte der Kreuzziige, Leipzig, 1894. O. HENNE AM RHYN, Die Kreuzziige und die Eultur ihrer Zeit, Leipzig, 1886. A. v. KREMER, Culturgeschicht- liche Beziehungen zwischen Europa und dem Oriente, Vienna, 1876, is a short lecture. Legends of the crusades. The classic refutation of the legend of Peter the Hermit is H. HAGENMEYER, Peter der Eremite, Leipzig, 1879. The famous legend of the finding of the holy lance in Antioch is treated in full by J. STRAUBINGER, Die Ereuzauffind- ungslegende, Paderborn, 1912 (vol. IX, part 3, of no. 489 above). B. KUGLER, Albert von Aachen, Stuttgart, 1885; and his Analek- ten zur Kritik Alberts von Aachen, Tubingen, 1888 (Albert was the author of a "saga" of the first crusade c. 1120). G. PARIS, in the introduction of his edition of L'estoire de la guerre sainte, Paris, 1897, discussed the legend of the third crusade. H. PIGON- NEAU, Le cycle de la croisade et de la famille de Bouillon, Paris, 1877. Art of war of the crusaders. O. HEERMANN, Die Gefechtsfiihr- ung abendldndischer Heere im Orient in der Epoche des ersten Krcuzzugs, Marburg, 1888. See also OMAN, The art of war, 229- 350; and H. DELBRUCK, Geschichte der Kriegskunst, III, 226-231. Miscellaneous books. D. C. MUNRO, H. PRUTZ, and C. DIEHL, Essays on the crusades, Burlington, Vermont, 1903. R. ROHRICHT, Beitrdge zur Geschichte der Kreuzziige, 2 vols., Berlin, 1874-1878. G. DESDEVISES DU DEZERT, Bibliographic du centenaire des croisades, Clermont, 1895, and his Les croisades, Clermont, 1895, are publica- tions called forth by the octocentenary of the crusades celebrated at Clermont-Ferrand in 1895. O. VOLK, Die abendldndischhierarch- ische Krcuzzugsidee, Halle, 1911. G. MARCAIS, Les Arabes en Ber- berie du XIC au XIV« siecle, Paris, 1914. Oriens christianus, rom- ische Halbjahrheftc fiir Kunde des christlichen Orients, Leipzig, 1901ff. C. M. WATSON, The story of Jerusalem, London, 1912 210 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII (Mediaeval towns). ESTELLE BLYTHE, Jerusalem and the crusades, New York, 1914. G. LE STRANGE, Palestine under the Moslems: a description of Syria and the Holy Land from A. D. 650 to 1500, Lon- don, 1890. Original sources. The most comprehensive collection of sources for the crusades is the Secueil des historiens des croisades, public par les soins de 1 'Academic des inscriptions et belles-lettres, in 14 huge folio vols., Paris, 1841-1898. This almost entirely super- sedes the old collection by J. BONGARS, Gesta dei per Francos sive orientalium expeditionum et regni Francorum hierosolimitani his- toria, vols. I and II, Hannover, 1612. The Societe de 1 'Orient Latin, founded in 1875 by Count Riant, published much source material for a history of the crusades in its Publication^, 1879ff., in a serie geographique, and a serie historique, the contents of which are listed in POTTHAST, Wegweiser, I, p. cxxiii; its Archives, 2 vols., 1881 and 1884; and its Eevue, 1893-1902, which, besides articles, book-reviews, and bibliographies, contains many texts. English translations of pilgrimages to the Holy Land are collected in great numbers in Palestine pilgrims text society, 13 vols., London, 1897 (the contents of which is analyzed in J. W. THOMPSON, Reference studies in medieval history, second edition, Chicago, 1914, pp. 102-104); and in Early travels in Palestine, com- prising the narratives of Arculf, etc., edited by T. WRIGHT, London, 1848. See also Deutsche Pilgerreisen nach dem Heiligen Lande, edited by R. ROHRICHT and H. MEISNER, Berlin, 1880, new abridged edited by R. ROHRICHT, Innsbruck, 1900. French translations of extracts from the sources of the crusades were issued long ago by J. MICHAUD, Bibliothcque de croisades, 2nd edition, 4 vols., Paris, 1829-1830. GUIZOT'S Collection des memoires, no. 971 above, also contains translations of accounts of the cru- sades. It would carry us too far afield to try to enumerate separate editions of original sources of the crusades. It will be serviceable, however, to mention the following works edited by H. HAGENMEYER, Historia Hierosolymitana, 1095-1127, of FOULCHER OF CHARTRES, Heidelberg, 1913; Anonymi gesta Francorum et aliorum Hierosoly- mitanorum, Heidelberg, 1890; Ekkehardi urangiensis abbatis Hiero- solymita nach der Waitzschen Recension, Tubingen, 1877; Die Kreuzzugsbriefe aus dem Jahren 1098-1100, mit Erlaiiterungen, Inns- bruck, 1901 (RIANT has an Inventaire critique of these letters in the Archives de I'Orient latin, I). See also the documentary mate- rial for the Kingdom of Jerusalem, edited by R. ROHRICHT, Regesta regni Hierosolymitani (1098-1291), Innsbruck, 1893, with an Addi- POPES AND HOHENSTAUPEN 211 tamentum, 1904. Important material has been edited by P. RIANT, Excuviae sacrae constantinopolitanae, 2 vols., Geneva, 1877-1878; ami an additional volume by F. DE MELY, Paris, 1904. PIERRE DUBOIS, De recuperatione Terrae Sanctae, edited by C. V. LANGLOIS, Paris, 1891 (part 9 of no. 968 above), written in 1309, is the be'st source of information concerning crusading ideas in the four- teenth century. Cartulairc general de I'ordre du Temple, 1119-1150, edited by MARQUIS D'ALBON, Paris, 1913; and Cartulaire generate de I'ordre des Hospitaliers de S. Jean de Jerusalem, 1100—1310, edited by J. DELAVILLE LE ROULX, 4 vols., Paris, 1894ff., are two important collections of source material for the study of the military religious orders. Chronicle of Morea, edited by J. SCHMITT, London, 1904. Naturally much material on the crusades is also found scattered in many of the great national collections, such as nos. 965-971, 978, 986, 988, 995 above. Bibliographies. The best bibliography of the sources of the crusades, especially the first, is in MOLINIER, Lea sources de I'his- toire de France, II, 266-304, III, 25-54, 104-113, 237-244. A great amount of bibliographical information may be found in the various publications of the Socie'tfi de 1 'Orient Latin (see above). The large library of Count RIANT was acquired by Harvard Uni- versity in 1899. The catalogue is printed under the title Cata- logue de la bibliothPque de feu M. le Comic Riant: redig6 par L. DE GERMON et L. POLAIN, 2nd part, 2 vols., Paris, 1899 (for crusades see especially nos. 2958-3433); and the collection is described by A. C. POTTER, The library of Harvard University, 3rd edition, Har- vard University Press, 1915. XXII. THE POPES AND THE HOHENSTAUFEN A. OUTLINE 1. A new phase of the irrepressible conflict between the empire ami the papacy. The struggle was now almost a purely political one, and the immediate bone of contention was the possession of Italy. 2. The truce, 1123-1157. Origin of the quarrel between the Hohenstaufen (Waiblingen, Ghibellines) and the Welfs (Guelfs). The schism of popes Innocent II and Anaclete in 1130. Harmony between Lothair II, 1125-1138, and pope Innocent II. Conrad III (1138-1152), the first Hohenataufen emperor, on the second cru- sade in 1147. The political influence of St. Bernard of ClairVaux. Arnold of Brescia in Rome in 1147. 3. The emperor Frederick I (Barbarossa), of Hohenstaufen, 1152-1190. His remarkable personality. His exalted position as 212 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTH a German king. Striking advance in German civilization during his reign. His reliance on the Eoman law. Henry the Lion and the Slavs. 4. Frederick's imperial policy in Italy renewed the strife between empire and papacy. His Roncaglian diets in Italy. The astounding rise of Italian cities in Lombardy and Tuscany and their resistance to the encroachment of the emperor. Execution of Arnold of Brescia and the end of the commune in Rome in 1155. In that year Frederick was crowned emperor in St. Peter's by pope Hadrian IV (an Englishman). Strength of the papacy; its alliance with the Normans and its sympathy with the Italian cities. The Besanc.on episode in 1158. Destruction of Milan in 1158. Accession of pope Alexander III (Roland Bandinelli) in 1159. The founding of Alessandria. The Lombard League, 1167. Battle of Legnano, 1176. Peace of Venice, 1177. Peace of Con- stance, 1183. The treachery of Henry the Lion. 5. The last years of Frederick Barbarossa. The fateful mar- riage of his son Henry (Henry VI) to Constance, heiress of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in 1186. Frederick went on the third crusade and was drowned in the river Saleph in Asia Minor in 1190. The legend of Frederick Barbarossa (Kyffhaiiser). 6. The reign of Henry VI, 1190-1197. His difficulty in main- taining a hold on his kingdom of the Two Sicilies. His plans to conquer the whole orient. Capture and ransom of king Richard the Lion-Hearted. , 7. The renewed Guelf-Ghibelline struggle in Germany, 1198- 1215. Disputed election between Philip «of Swabia (a Hohen- staufen) and Otto IV of Brunswick (a Guelf), the son of Henry the Lion. The role of pope Innocent III as king-maker. In 1212 he put forth his ward, Frederick II, son of Henry VI, as emperor. Battle of Bouvines in 1214. 8. The political power of pope Innocent III, 1198-1216. He became pope at the age of 38 years. Educated at the universities of Bologna and Paris. The Liber censuum ecclesiae romanae, 1192. Innocent's political supremacy in Rome and in Italy. His power in Germany has been indicated above. The kings of the Two Sicilies, of Sweden, Denmark, Portugal, Aragon, and Poland became his vassals. He humbled king Philip Augustus of France. England was laid under an interdict in 1208 and in 1213 king John became the vassal of the pope. Innocent III condemned the Great Charter of 1215. His plans for a vast crusade. The Albigensian crusade. The great Christian victory of the Christians in Spain at Tolosa, 1212. The Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. POPES AND HOHENSTAUPEN 213 9. The death-struggle between the emperor Frederick II (Stupor mundi), the last great Hohenstaufen, and the papacy. His peculiar character and his education in the Norman kingdom of Sicily. His colony of Saracen soldiers at Lucera in Italy. Excom- munication of Frederick II by pope Gregory IX (Cardinal Ugo- lino) in 1227. Frederick's crusade, 1228-1229. Acquisition of Jerusalem by treaty with El-Kamil, the sultan of Egypt in 1229. Frederick 's trouble with the Lombard towns, supported by the papacy. Renewed excommunication of the emperor in 1239. Cap- ture of a general council, 1241. Deposition of Frederick II at the council of Lyons in 1245, in the pontificate of Innocent IV. Henry Baspe, landgrave of Thuringia, and after his death, Will- iam, count of Holland, were set up as anti-kings. Death of Fred- erick II in 1250 near Lucera. 10. The last of the Hohenstaufen. Conrad IV, 1250-1254, son of Frederick II. In 1254 Conrad died leaving an infant son, Conradin. Manfred, illegitimate son of Frederick II, became king of the Two Sicilies in 1258. In 1266 pope Clement IV made Charles of Anjou, brother of king Louis IX, king of Sicily. Man- fred was killed in the battle of Grandella in 1267 and the boy Conradin, the last Hohenstaufen, was beheaded in Naples in 1268. 11. The Great Interregnum in Germany, 1254-1273. The period of "fist-law" (Faustrecht). 12. Eastward expansion of Germany, especially in the times of the Hohenstaufen. Recent emphasis on the importance of this expansion of the German people, which had been obscured by the undue prominence given to the struggle between empire and papacy. (Compare with the recent appreciation of the importance of the "Westward Movement" in American history.) Possible avenues of German expansion. The pioneers: missionaries (espe- cially Cistercians), adventurous knights, traders, cultivators of the soil. The zone of the Elbe: margraves of Brandenburg, ruth- less extermination of the Slavs, Czechs of Bohemia. The zone of the Oder: Pomerania, Poland, and Silesia. The zone of the Vistula and Niemen: Lithuanians, Letts, and Prussians; Knights of the Sword (1200) and the Teutonic Knights, 1220. Herman of Salza, grand master of the order. The beginnings of the Hanseatic League. The nomad Tartars in Russia ca. 1240. Beginnings of Prussia and Austria. 13. Emperors, 1125-1272. Lothair IT, 1125-1138 Frederick I (Barbarossa), Conrad III, 1138-1152 1152-1190 214 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY Henry VI, 1190-1197 Otto IV, 1197-1212 ) . Philip II, 1197-1208 Jnval Frederick II, 1212-1250 [Henry Kaspe, 1246-1247; and William of Hol- land, 1247-1256] anti- kings. 14. Popes, 1124-1276. Honorius II, 1124-1130 Innocent II, 1130-1143 [Anacletus, 1130-1138, and Victor, 1138, anti-popes] Celestine II, 1143-1144 Lucius II, 1144-1145 Eugenius III, 1145-1153 Anastasius IV, 1153-1154 Hadrian IV, 1154-1159 Alexander III, 1159-1181 [Victor, 1159-1164; Paschal III, 1164-1168; Calixtus III, 1168-1178; and Lando, 1178-1180, anti- popes] Conrad IV, 1250-1254 The Great Interregnum, 1254-1273, during which Richard, Earl of Corn- wall, and Alfonso X, King of Castile; were non-resident rivals. Lucius III, 1181-1185 Urban III, 1185-1187 Gregory VIII, 1187 Clement III, 1187-1191 Celestine III, 1191-1198 Innocent III, 1198-1216 Honorius III, 1216-1227 Gregory IX, 1227-1241 Celestine IV, 1241 Innocent IV, 1243-1254 Alexander IV, 1254-1261 Urban IV, 1261-1264 Clement IV, 1265-1268 Gregory X, 1271-1276 B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general accounts. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, chs. ix-x. BRYCE, Holy Roman empire, chs. xi-xm. HENDERSON, A short his- tory of Germany, ch. iv. ADAMS, Civilisation, eh. x. Longer surveys. TOUT, Empire and papacy, chs. x-xiv, xvi, xxi. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generate, II, chs. in-iv. VILLARI, Mediaeval Italy, 197-286. HENDERSON, A history of Germany in the middle ages, chs. xv-xxviii. H. D. SEDGWICK, Italy in the thirteenth century, 2 vols., Boston, 1912, I, chs. vi, ix, x, xni, xxn-xxm. E. A. FREEMAN has two interesting essays on Frederick I and Frederick II in his Historical essays, first series, 257-322. The best summary in German is in Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte, edited by B. GEBHARDT, I, chs. ix-x. Short books in English on the subject. The best is U. BALZANI, The popes and the Hohenstaufen, London, 1888. The subject is approached from the standpoint of the papacy in D. J. MEDLEY, The church and the empire, 1003-1304, chs. vi-x, xv; and in BARRY, The papal monarchy, chs.'*xvi-xvin, xxi-xxii. xxn POPES AND HOHENSTAUFEN 215 Lombard communes. W. F. BUTLER, The Lombard communes, New York, 1906, chs. v-x, is an important study of the relations between the Hohenstaufeu and the Italian cities. See also the short sketch in H. FISHER, The medieval empire, II, ch. xm. Henry the Lion. A. L. POOLE, Henry the Lion, London, 1912. Innocent III. The great standard work on the pontificate of Innocent is A. LUCHAIRE, Innocent III, 6 vols., Paris, 1905-1908 (vol. I, Eome et I 'Italic, 1904, 2nd edition, 1905; II, La croisade des Albigeois, 1905, 2nd edition, 1906; III, La papaute et I'empire, 1906; IV, La question d'Orient, 1907; V, Les royautes vassales du Saint- Siege, 1908; VI, Le concile de Latran et la re forme de I'eglise, with an index of the six vols., 1908). C. PIERIE GORDON, Innocent the Great, New York, 1907, is a hastily written popular book. For a short sketch of the pontificate of Innocent III, see FLICK, Rise of the mediaeval church, ch. xxn. Frederick II. L. ALLSHORN, Stupor mundi: the life and times of Frederick II, London, 1912, is a recent biography for the general reader. T. L. KINGTON, History of Frederick II, 2 vols., London, 1862, is still the most complete biography in English. The most thorough examination of the life and times of Frederick II is in the introduction of J. L. A. HUILLARD-BREHOLLES, Historia diplo- matica Friderici Secundi, 12 vols., Paris, 1852-1861 (the introduc- tion is in the last volume). The capture of the council which was to meet in Home in 1241 is told by G. C. MACAULAY, "The cap- ture of a general council, 1241," in English historical review, VI (1891), 1-17. Eastward expansion of Germany. A remarkably pithy survey was written by the Nestor of French historians, E. LAVISSE, Polit- ii-nl History of Europe, 45-57. Other short accounts in English are H. FISHER, The medieval empire, II, 1-54; HENDERSON, A history of Germany in the middle ages, ch. xxvii; LODGE, The close of the in ill die ages, chs. v and xix, passim. A short sketch in German with a good bibliography is J. LOSERTH, Geschichte des spdteren Mittel- alters, 130-136. For more authoritative accounts in German see K. LAMPRECHT, Deutsche Geschichte, III, 330-420; E. MICHAEL, Geschichte des deutschen Volkes, I, 3rd edition, Freiburg, 1897, 86- 128; H. GERDES, Gcschii-htr x jtrimitifs de I'ordre de Saint-Dominique: le bienheureaux Jour- dain de Saxe, 4 vols., 1874-1876. AUGUSTA T. DRAKE, The spirit of the Dominican order, London, 1896. W. D. G. FLETCHER, The Black I<'riars of Oxford, Oxford, 1882. E. BARKER, The Dominican order and convocation: a study of the growth of representation in the church ditriiif/ the thirteenth century, Oxford, 1913. M. D. CHAPOTIN, Histoire dcs Dominicaines de la provinces de France: le nieclc des fondations, Paris, 1-898. M. D. SCHOMBURG, Die Dominikaner im Kr:bintum Bremen wdhrend des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts, mit einer rbenicht fiber die Auxbrcitun/i/< in the middle ages in England, London, 1891. 236 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PAETII A. H. THOMPSON, The historical growth of the English parish church, Cambridge, 1911. The Christian cult. Y. HIRN, The sacred shrine: a study of the poetry and art of the Christian church, London, 1912 (see the important bibliography, pp. 555-570). On the Feast of Fools see G. V. HEMMING, "Festum stultorum," in Nineteenth century, LVII (1905), 1000-1008. Eastern missions. C. E. BBAZLEY, Tlie dawn of modern geog- raphy, 3 vols., London, 1897-1906, especially II, ch. v, III, chs. n-ui. L. BREHIER, L'eglise et I'orient au moyen age, 211-214, 268-286, is a short introductory sketch. Inquisition, The standard work on the medieval inquisition is by H. C. LEA, History of the inquisition of the middle ages, 3 vols., Philadelphia, 1888. E. VACANDARD, The inquisition, translated from the 2nd French edition, by B. L. CONWAY, New York, 1908, is a recent short sketch by a Eoman catholic. Original sources. KOBINSON, Readings, I, 346-387. Transla- tions and reprints, II, no. 4, ' ' Medieval sermon stories ' ' ; III, no. 6, "Pre-reformation period." G. G. COULTON, A medieval garner, passim. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 46-47, 94-95, 97. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general works on the medieval church are listed above, nos. 394-498. See also the periodicals for church history, nos. 176-180 above, and especially the encyclopaedias, nos. 104-144 above, which are indispensable in studying this outline. The pope and the papal curia. E. L. POOLE, Lectures on the history of the papal chancery down to the time of Innocent III, Cambridge University Press, 1915. P. M. BAUMGARTEN, Aus Eanzlei und Kammer: Erorterungen zur Jcurialen Hof- und Verwaltungs- geschichte im XII, XIV, und XV Jahrhundert, Freiberg, 1907. E. ZOEPFFEL, Die PapstwdMen und die mit ihnen im nachsten Zusam- menhange stehenden Ceremonien in ihrer EntwicTcelung vom 11 his 14 Jahrhundert; nebst einer Beilage: die Doppelwahl des Jahres 1130, Gb'ttingen, 1871. E. JUNGFER, Die Unterschiede zwischen der Papstwahl und den Bischofswahlen nach dem gemeinen Kirchen- recht, Borna, 1909 (dissertation, Breslau). F. EOCQUAIN, La cour de Rome et I' esprit de reforme avant Luther, vol. I, La theocratic, Paris, 1893. Cardinals. J. MAUBACH, Die Kardindle und ihre Politik um die Mitte des XIII Jahrhunderts, Bonn, 1902 (dissertation). D. SAG- MULLER, Tliatigkeit und Stellung der Cardindle bis Papst Bonifaz VIII, Freiburg, 1896. THE MEDIEVAL CHURCH 237 Papal legates. H. ZIMMERMANN, Die pdpstliche Legation in der ersten Halfte des IS Jahrhunderts, 1198-1241, Paderborn, 1913. K. RUESS, Die rechtliche Stellung der pd})stlichen Legaten bis Boni- faz VIII, Paderborn, 1912 (GSrresgesellschaft ; Sektion fiir Rechts- und Sozialwissenschaft, 13). J. BACHMANN, Die pdpstlichen Legaten in Deutschland und Skandinavien (11X5-1159), Berlin, 1913 (His- torische Studien, 115). Papal Provisions. The situation in Germany may be studied in the following books: H. BAIER, PdpstlicJie Provisionen fur niedere Pfriinden bis zum Jahre 1304, Miinster, 1911 ; H. KRABBO, Die Beset- zung der deutschen Bist timer unter der Regierung Friedrichs II, part I (to 1227), Berlin, 1901 (Historische Studien, 25); W. FUCHS, Die Besetzung der deutschen Bistiimer unter Papst Gregor IX (1287- 1841) und bis zum Regierungsan'tritt Papst Innocenz IV (1843), Berlin, 1911; P. ALDINGER, Die Neubesetzung der deutschen Bistiimer unter Papst Innocenz IV, 1843-1854, Leipzig, 1901. For England the same conditions are described by A. L. SMITH, Church and state, in the middle ages, Oxford, 1913 (Ford lectures, 1905) ; and F. A. GASQUET, Henry the Third and the church: a study of his ecclesiasti- cal policy and of the relations between England and Rome, London, 1905. U. STUTZ, Geschichte des kirchlichen Benefizialwesens bis auf Alexander III, part I, Berlin, 1895. The bishop and his diocese. EDITH K. LYLE, Tlie office of an English bishop in tlie first half of the fourteenth century, Philadelphia, 1903 (dissertation). J. KRIEO, Der Kampf der Bischofe gegen die Archidiakone im Bistum Wiirzburg unter Benutzung ungedruckter Urkunden und Akten dargestellt, Stuttgart, 1914 ( Kirehengeschicht- liche Abhandlungen, 82). J. MULLER, Die bischoflichen Diozesan- behorden, Stuttgart, 1905. A. POSCHL, Bischofsgut und Mensa epis- copalis, 2 vols., Bonn, 1908-1909. J. B. SAGMULLER, Die Bischofswahl bei Gratien, Cologne, 1908. P. IMBART DE LA TOUR, Lcs flections episcopales dans I'eglise de France du IX* ail XIIe siede (814- 1150), Paris, 1891. NIORTET, Maurice de 'Sully (1160-1196) : etude sur I 'administration episcopale pendant la deuxieme moitiS du XIIe stfde, Paris, 1890. A. GREA, "Essai historique sur les archidiacres, " in Bibliotheque de I'Ecole des ohartes, XII (1851), 39-67, 215-247. Parish life. OLGA DOBIACHE-ROJDESTVENSKY, La vie paroissiale en France au XIII8 siede d'apres les actes cpiscopaux, Paris, 1911. G. A. PREVOST, L'cglise et les campagnes au moyen age, Paris, 1892. A. JESSOPP, Before the great pillage, London, 1901. Church councils. The great authority on the councils is H KKKI.K, KonzUiengcschichte, no. 469 above. A. N. BLATCHFORD, Church coun- cils and their decrees, London, 1909. J. VON DOLLINOER, The popes and the council. 238 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Financial system of the church. M. TANGL, "Das Taxenwesen der papstlichen Kanzlei vom 13ten bis zur Mitte des 15ten Jahrhunderts, ' ' in Mittheilungen dcs Instituts fur osterreichischc Geschichtsforschung, XIII, 1-106. W. E. LUNT, "Papal taxation in England in the reign of Edward I," in English historical review, XXX (1915), 398-417; and "The first levy of papal annates," American historical review, XVIII (1912), 48-64. P. VIARD, His- toire de la dime ecclesiastique dans le royaume de France aux Xlle et Xllle siecles, Paris, 1912. W. EASTERBY, The history of the law of tithes in England, Cambridge, 1888. A. GOTTLOB, Die papst- lichen Kreuzzugssteuern des ISten Jahrhunderts: ihre rechtliche Grundlage, politische Geschichte und technisclw Verwaltung, Heiligen- stadt, 1892. G. SCHNEIDER, Die finanziellen Beziehungen des Floren- tiner Bankiers zur Kirche von 1285-1804, Leipzig, 1899 (Staats- und soziahvissenschaftliche Forschungen, 17). Ecclesiastical jurisdiction. E. GOLLER, Die pdpstliche Poniten- tiarie von ihrem Vrsprung bis zu ihrer Umgestaltung unter Pius V, vols. I and II, Rome, 1907-11. H. C. LEA, Formulary of the Papal Penitentiary in the thirteenth century, Philadelphia, 1892. See also his article, "The taxes of the Papal Penitentiary," in English his- torical review, VIII (1893), 424-438. L. BEAUCHET, "Origine de la jurisdiction ecclesiastique et son developpement en France jusqu'au XIP siecle, " in Nouvelle revue historique de droit franc.aise et etrangere, VII (1883), 387-477, 503-536. P. FOURNIER, Les official- ites au moyen age, Paris, 1880. Preaching. L 'abbe BOURGAIN, La chaire franc,aise au XIIe siecle, d 'aprcs le manuscrits, Paris, 1879. A. LECOY DE LA MARCHE, La chaire fran^aise au mcyen age, specialement au XHIe siecle: d'apres les manuscrits contemporains, Paris, 1868, 2nd edition, 1886. F. R. ALBERT, Dif Geschichte der Predigt in Deutschland bis Luther, 3 parts, Giitersloh, 1892-96. A. LINSENMAYER, Geschichte der Predigt in Deutschland von Karl dem Grossen bis zum Au^gang des 14 Jahr- hunderts, Munich, 1886. R. CRUEL, Geschichte der deutschen Predigt im Mittelalter, Detmold, 1879. Pilgrim life. S. HEATH, Pilgrim life in the middle ages, Boston, 1912. J. J. JUSSERAND, Les Anglais au mcyen age: la vie nomade et les rcutc.s d'Angleterre au XIVs siede, Paris, 1884, translated by L. T. Smith, English wayfaring life in the middle ages, 8th edition, London, 1905, part III, "Religious wayfarers." J. JORGENSEX. Pelerinages franciscains, translated from the Danish by T. DE WYZEWA, Paris, 1910. A. MULLER, Das heUige Deutschland: Geschichte und Beschreibung samtlicher im deutschen Beiche be- stehender Wallfahrtsorte, 2nd edition, 2 vols., Cologne, 1897. THE MEDIEVAL CHURCH 239 Life and morals of the secular clergy. H. C. LEA, An historical sketch of sacerdotal celibacy. E. E. SPERRY, An outline of the history of clerical celibacy in western Europe to the council of Trent, New York, 1905 (dissertation). S. SCHELER, Sitten und BUdung der framosischen Geistlichkeit nach den Briefen Steplians von Tournai [died 1203], Berlin, 1915 (Historisehe Studien, 130). Christian cult. A. J. DORNER, Die Entstehung der christlichen Gldubi'HKlelin'it, Munich, 1906. M. HEBERT, L'evolution de la foi catholique, Paris, 1905. F. E. VON HURTER, Tableau des institutions et des moeurs de I 'eglise au moyen age, translated from the German by J. COHEN, 3 vols., Paris, 1843. On confession the standard work in English is H. C. LEA, A his- tory of auricular confessicn. G. GROMER, Die Laienbeichte im Mit- telaltcr, Munich, 1909. A. M. KOENIGER, Die Beioht nach Casarius von Heisterbach, Munich, 1906. F. GANDERT, Das Buss- und Beicht- wesen gegen Mitte des 13 Jahrhunderts, Leipzig, 1894. H. J. SCHMITZ, Die Bussbitcher und das kanonische Bussverfqhren (nach QucUen), 2 vols., Dusseldorf, 1898. T. F. MACKEN, The canonisation of saints, London, 1910. H. P. BRE\VSTER, Saints and festivals of the Christian church, New York [1904]. See also KELLNER, Heortologie, no. 258 above. C. J. Cox, The sanctuaries and sanctuary seekers in mediaeval England, Lon- don, 1911. F. BOND, Dedications and patron saints of English churches, Oxford University Press, 1915. D. H. KERLER, Die Patron- ate der HeQigen, Ulm, 1905. M. BENZERATH, Die Kirchenpatrone der alien Diozcse Lausanne im Mittelaltcr, Freiburg, 1914. S. BEISSEL, Geschiehte der Verehrung Marias in Deutschland wdhrend des Mittelalters, Freiburg, 1909. G. HERZOG, La sainte Vierge dans I'histmre, Paris, 1908. A. FRANZ, Die Messe im deutsohen Mittelalter, Freiburg, 1902. P. J. WAGNER, Geschiehte der Messe [to 1600], Leipzig, 1913 (Kleine H.-imlbiiclier der Musikgesehichte, XI, 1). A. FRANZ, Die kirchlichen 'HL-lii.ni'ii im Mittelalter, 2 vols., Freiburg, 1909. A. MEYER, Das tl'iiliiKirlitsfest: seine Entstehung und Enturicklung, Tubingen, 1913. Social work of the church. F. SCHAUB, Die katholische Caritas nnil di-rt n fi't/iK'r, Freiburg, 1909. L. LALLEMAND, Histoire de la clniril,', :{ vols., Paris, 1902-1906. G. UHLHORN, Die christliche Li< lt>stiilif/l.-,-il, 3 vols., Stuttgart, 1882-1890, 2nd edition, 1895. E. v. MOEU.ER, Die Elendcnbriiderschaften: ein Beitrag zur Gc- scliirlili- /I',- Fninilinfiirsiirgc im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1906. J. (SKKVKN. /'" .•infiiiiiie der Begincn, Munster, 1912 (Vorreformatische Forschungen, 8). 240 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Missions. Bibliotheca bio-bibliografia della Terra Santa e dell' Oriente Francescano, compiled by G. GOLUBOVICH, Quaracehi, 1906- 1913. P. SCHLAGER, Mongolenfahrten der Fransiskaner, Trier, 1911. K. P. MARCELLIN DE CIVEZZA, Histoire universelle des missions fran- ciscaines, translated from the Italian by E. P. BERNARDIN, Paris, 1898. BROTJ, " L 'evangelisation de 1'Inde au moyen age," in Etudes des P. P. dc la Compagnie de Jesus, LXXXVII (1901). EUBEL, "Die wahrend des XIV Jahrhunderts im Missionsgebiet der Domini- kaner und Franziskaner errichteten Bisthiimer, " in Festschrift zum Jubttdum des deutsclien Campo Santo in Bom, Freiburg, 1897. P. H. KULB, Geschichte der Missionsreisen nach der Mongolei wahrend des 13 und 14 Jahrhunderts, Kegensburg, 1860. H. MATROD, Le voyage de Fr. Guillaume de Rubrouck, Couvin, 1909; and his Notes sur le voyage de Fr. Jean de Plan-Carpin (1245-1247), Paris, 1912. F. M. SCHMIDT, "tiber Eubrucks Reise von 1253 bis 1255," in Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft fur Erdkunde zu Berlin, XX (1885), 161-253. L. TINTI, Vita... del beato Odorico, Eome, 1901. F. ZARNKE, "Der Priester Johannes," in Abhandlungen der phUologischen-historischen Klasse der Tconiglichen sdchsichen GesellsoJiaft der Wissenschaften, Leipzig, VII (1879), 627-1030; VIII (1883), 1-186. W. T. A. BARBER, Raymond Lull, the illuminated doctor: a study in mediaeval missions, London, 1903. S. M. ZWEMER, Baymund Lull, first missionary to the Moslems, New York, 1902. J. H. PROBST, Caractere et origines des idees du bienheureux Kaymond Lulle, Toulouse, 1912. M. ANDRE, Le bienheureux Raymond Lulle, 3rd edition, Paris, 1900. J. A. GINDRAUX, Histoire du Christianisme dans le monde paien : les missions en Asie, Geneva, 1909. H. R. A. HENRION, Histoire generale des missions catholiques depuis le XIIIs siecle, 2 vols., Paris, 1844—47. H. HAHN, Geschichte der "katholischen Missionen, 5 vols., Cologne, 1857-73. T. SMITH, Mediaeval missions. G. F. MACLEAR, A history of Christian missions during the middle ages. The ency- clopedia of missions: descriptive, historical, biographical, statistical, 2nd edition, New York and London, 1904. Original sources. The best pictures of the life of the church in the thirteenth century are furnished by bishops who recorded their experiences gained in visitations in their dioceses. The most complete account is by the archbishop of Rouen, EUDE RIGAUD, Begistrum visitationum archiepiscopi Bothomagensis [1248-1269], edited by T. BONNIN, Rouen, 1852, analyzed by L. DELISLE, in Biblio- theque de I'ecole des chartes, VIII (1846), 479-499. Next in im- portance is Le livre de Guillaume le Maire, eveque d' Angers, 1291 (part of no. 965 above, Melanges historiques, II), analyzed in MEDIEVAL FRANCE 241 Lavisse, Histoire de France, III, part II, 355-361. Similar informa- tion from England may be gleaned from the letters of ROBERT GROSSETESTE, bishop of Lincoln, 1235-1254, Eoberti Grosseteste epis- copi Lineolnicnsis Epistolae, edited by H. R. LUARD, London, 1861 (Rolls series, no. 25). For sources on the missionary work in Asia see Cathay and the way thither: being a collection of medieval notices of China, edited by H. YULE, 2 vols., London, 1866, new edition, revised by H. CORDIER, 3 vols., London, 1913-15 (Hakluyt society, series 2, vols. XXX, XXX VII-XXX VIII) ; Texts and versions of John de Piano Carpini and William de Eubruquis [Latin and English texts], edited by C. R. BEAZLEY, London, 1903 (Hakluyt society, extra series) ; and The journey of William Eubruk to eastern parts of the world, 1%5S- 1855, as narrated by himself, with two accounts of the earlier jour- ney of John of Plan de Carpine, translated and edited, with introduc- tory notices, by W. W. ROCKHILL, London, 1900 (Hakluyt society). The accounts of Rubruquis and Pordenone are also translated in an appendix to the Travels of Sir JOHN MANDEVILLE, edited by POLLARD, New York, 1900, which in itself is worthless. Enchiridion symbolorum ct dcfinitionum et dcclarationum de rebus fidei et morum, edited by H. DENZINGER, Freiburg, 1908. Liturgische Bibliotliclc : Sammlung gottesdienstlicher Biicher aus dem deutschen Mittelalter, edited by A. SCHONFELDER, vols. I and II, Bitualbiicher, Paderborn, 1904-1906. For large collections of the sources of church history see nos. 953-954 above. Bibliographies. See the general bibliographies for church his- tory, nos. 49-55 above. XXV. THE POLITICAL HISTORY 6F FRANCE, 1108-1328 A. OUTLINE 1. The undisputed leadership of France in western Europe dur- ing this period. The He de France. The importance of Paris. Contrast between French and German political history. The strength and importance of the Capetian line of kings. Their difficulties: feudalism, lack of geographical unity, diversity of peoples, languages, and laws. » 2. The real beginning of the French monarchy is the reign of Louis VI (le Gros, the Fat), 1108-1137. He had been ntade king designate in 1100. His feudal wars. His popularity due largely to his liberal economic policy. A protector of the church. His relations with England. Etienne de Garlande. Suger, abbot of Saint-Denis, the famous minister of Louis VI. 242 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII 3. Retrogression under Louis VII (1137-1180). Weak char- acter of the king. The disastrous second crusade. Louis and St. Bernard of Clairvaux. The divorce of Louis VII from Eleanor of Aquitaine in 1152, and the extension of the Angevin (Norman) empire due to the marriage of Eleanor with Henry (later Henry II) of England. 4. Rapid advance under Philip II, Augustus, 1180-1223. His supremacy over the great feudal lords. Dismemberment of the Norman empire; wars with Henry II, Richard I, and John; fall of Chateau-Gaillard and the loss of Normandy by John in 1204. The coalition of 1214 and the battle of Bouvines. Philip and pope Innocent III. Beginnings of the Albigensian crusade. Cre- ation of central machinery of government; baillis and senecliaux, improvement of finances, justice, and the army. The communes, industry and commerce. The great wall of Philip Augustus around Paris. The real beginnings of a university of Paris in this reign. The short reign of Louis VIII, 1223-1226, witnessed no great changes. Continuance of the Albigensian wars. Appanages. 5. The minority of Louis IX, 1226-1234. Regency of his mother, Blanche of Castille. Failure of a serious feudal reaction. The migration of the university of Paris in 1229. 6. France at the height of her medieval glory under Saint Louis (Louis IX), 1226-1270. His character and popularity. His foreign policy. Development of central machinery of government. Enqueteurs. Beginnings of the differentiation of the curia regis into a grand consett, a parlement, and a ohambre des comptes. The king's interest in justice. His relations with the mendicants. His charitable institutions in Paris. His friends, Joinville and Robert de Sorbonne. The Sainte Chapelle. The disastrous crusades of Louis in Egypt, 1248-1254, and Tunis, 1270. Death of St. Louis in Carthage, 1270. 7. Philip III (le Hardi, the Bold), 1270-1285. The county of Toulouse was annexed to the French crown. His relations with the Spanish kingdoms, especially after the Sicilian Vespers in 1282. 8. Consolidation of the French absolute monarchy under Philip IV (le Bel, the Fair), 1285-1314. Foreign relations with Flanders, England, and the empire. Reliance on the Roman law. Relations "with pope Boniface VIII. The papal bulls Clericis laicos and Unam sanctum. The burning question of taxation. Financial and other administrative reforms. Meeting of the Estates General in 1302 and other internal reforms. The beginning of the ' ' Babylon- MEDIEVAL FRANCE 243 ish Captivity ' ' "of the papacy. Anagni. The suppression of the Templars, 1309-1314. 9. Louis X, 1314-1316, Philip V, 1316-1322, Charles IV, 1316- 1328. Charles was the last male descendant of Philip IV and with his death the direct line of Capetians came to an end. The ante- cedents of the Hundred Years' War with England. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR BEADING Short general accounts. G. B. ADAMS, The growth of the French nation, 73-107, together with the same author's Civilization during the middle ages, eh. xm. MACKINNON, Growth of the French mon- archy, ch. i. See also the first pages in C. V. LANGLOIS, The historic role of France among the nations. Longer general accounts. LAVISSE and BAMBAUD, Histoire gene- rale II, ch. vn, III, ch. i. MASSON, The story of mediaeval France, chs. m-viii. TOUT, Empire and papacy, chs. xn, xvn, together with LODGE, The close of the middle ages, ch. in. KITCHIN, History of France, 4th edition, I, 255-413. MACDONALD, A history of France, I, 112-218. J. LOSERTII, GcschicJite des spdteren Mittelalters, 44- 52, 149-159, 217-246. Standard work. LAVI#SE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 311- 331, and both parts of vol. III. The He de France. M. BLOCK, L'lle-de-France (les pays autour de Paris), Paris, 1913 (vol. IX of Les regions de la France), assembles articles which appeared in the Eevue de synthese his- torique. Philip Augustus. W. H. HUTTON, Philip Augustus, London, 1896 (Foreign statesmen). A. LUCHAIRE, La societe francaise au temps de PhUippe-Auguste, 2nd edition, Paris, 1909, authorized translation by E. B. KREHBIEL, Social France at the time of Philip Augustus, New York, 1912. Saint Louis. F. PERRY, Saint Louis (Louis IX of France), the moxt Christian king, New York, 1901 (Heroes of the nations), is a very satisfactory biography. Sec also MUNRO and SELLERY, Medi- eral civilization, new edition, 366-375; 491-523 (the latter pages being a translation from LAVISSE, Histoire de France, III, part II, 18-40). Templars. The best general account on the suppression of the Templars in I.'i09 is H. C. LEA, History of the inquisition, III, 238- 334. For other literature see under the outline "Crusades" above. Original sources. Translations of JOINVILLE'S famous Life of St. Louis have been indicated above in the outline on the crusades. Extracts from it may be read in BOBINSON, Beading*, I, 198-221; and OGG, Source book, 311-324. 244 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 69, 70-71, 76. For excellent detailed maps see A. LONGNON, Atlas historique de la France. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general histories of France are listed above, nos. 508-548. Louis VL A. LUCHAIRE, Louis VI le Gros: annales de sa vie et de son regne, 1081-1137, avec une introduction historique, Paris, 1890. J. W. THOMPSON, The development of the French monarchy under Louis VI le Gros, Chicago, 1895. Louis VII. A. LUCHAIRE, Etudes sur les actes de Louis VII, Paris, 1885. E. HIRSCH, Studien zur Geschichte Konig Ludwigs VII von Frankreich (1119-1160), Leipzig, 1892. O. CARTELLIERI, Abt Suger von Saint-Denis, 1081-1115, Berlin, 1898 (Historische Studien, 11). A. HUGUENIN, Suger et la monarchic frangaise au XII« siecle (1108-1152), Paris, 1857. A. LUCHAIRE, Histoire des institutions monarchiques de la France sous les premiers Capetiens, 987-1180. E. VACANDARD, "Le divorce de Louis le Jeune [Louis VII]," in Bevue des questions historiques, XLVII (1890), 408-432. E. VACAN- DARD, ' ' Saint Bernard et la royaute f ranc.aise, ' ' in Bevue des. ques- tions historiques, XLIX (1891), 353-409,. E. DUVERNOY, Le Due de Lorraine, Mathieu I«r, 1139-1176, Paris, 1904. In his Catalogue des actes des dues de Lorraine de 1048 a 1139 et de 1176 a 1220, Nancy, 1915, the author has supplemented and completed the work begun in the Appendix of the earlier work. Louis VIII. C. PETIT-DUTAILLIS, Etude sur la vie et le regne de Louis VIII (1187-1226), Paris, 1894, no. 101 of no. 888 above. Philip Augustus. A. CARTELLIERI, Philipp II Augustus, Konig von Frankreich, vols. I-III, Leipzig, 1899-1910, is the standard work on this monarch; his, Philipp II August und der Zusam/men- bruch des angevinischen Seiches, Leipzig, 1913, is a short sketch of sixteen pages. F. M. POWICKE, The loss of Normandy (1180-1204). W. WALKER, On the increase of royal power in France under Philip Augustus, Leipzig, 1888 (dissertation). L. DELISLE, Catalogue des actes de Philippe Auguste, avec une introduction sur les sources, les caracteres et I'vmportance historique de ces documents, Paris, 1856. L. L. BORRELLI DE SERRES, La reunion des provinces septentrionales a la couronne par Philippe Auguste: Amienois, Artois, Vermandois, Valois, Paris, 1899. E. DAVIDSOHN, Philipp II August von Frank- reich und Ingeltorg, Stuttgart, 1888 (dissertation). P. SCHEFFER- BOICHORST, DeutscMand und Philipp II August von Frankreich 1180-1214, 1868 (Forschungen zur deutschen Geschichte, 8). C. BEMONT, De la condemnation de Jean-Sans-Terre par la cour des pairs de France en 1202, Paris, 1886. MEDIEVAL FRANCE 245 For the battle of Bouvines see E. ANDOUIN, Essai sur I'armee royale au temps de Philippe-Auguste, Paris, 1913; C. BALLHAUSEN, Die Sclilacht bei Bouvines £7 VII 1914, Jena, 1907; A. HORTZ- SCHANSKY, Die Schlacht an der Briicke von Bouvines, 1883 (disser- tation, Halle) ; and H. MALO, Un grand feudataire, Benaud de Dam- martin, et la coalition de Bouvines: contribution a I 'etude du regne de Philippe- Auguste, Paris, 1898. Saint Louis. C. V. LANGLOIS, /Saint Louis, Paris, 1886. A. LECOY DE LA MARCHE, France sous St. Louis et sous Philippe le Hardi, Paris, 1894. L. S. LE NAIN DE TILLEMONT, Vie de Saint Louis, 6 vols., Paris, 1847-1851. H. WALLON, Saint Louis et son temps, 2 vols., 4th edition, Paris, 1895. M. SEPET, Saint Louis, 7th edition, Paris, 1905 (Les saints), translated by G. TYRRELL, London, 1899. WINIFRED F. KNOX, The court of a saint, London [1909]. E. BERGER, Les dernieres annees de Saint Louis, Paris, 1902. See also his Saint Louis et Innocent IV, Paris, 1893 ; and his Histoire de Blanche de CastUle, reine de France, Paris, 1895. J. S. DENIEL, Histoire de Blanche de Castille, Tours, 1908. M. GAVRILOVITCH, Etude sur le traite de Paris de 1259, entre Louis IX, roi de France, et Henri HI, roi d'Angleterre, Paris, 1899. E. BOUTARIC, Saint Louis et Alphonse de Poitiers, Paris, 1870. A. MOLINIER, "Etude sur I'administration de Louis IX et d 'Alphonse de Poitiers (1226-71)" in Histoire gencrale de Languedoc, VII, 462 S. C. E. NORTON, St. Louis and Joinville, Boston, 1864. Philip III. C. V. LANGLOIS, Le regne de PhUippe III le Hardi, Paris, 1887. L. LECLERE, Les rapports de la papaute et de la France sous Philippe III, 1X70-1X83, Paris, 1889. Philip the Fair. E. BOUTARIC, La France sous Philippe le Bel, Paris, 1861. F. KERN, Die Anfdnge der framosisohen Ausdehnungs- politik bis zum Jahr 1S08, Tubingen, 1910; and his Grundlagen der framosischen Ausdehnungspolitik, Leipzig, 1910. JOLLY, Philippe le Bel: ses dcssins, ses actes, son influence, Paris, 1889. E. RENAN, Politique religieuse du regne de Philippe le Bel, Paris, 1899. F. FUNK-BRENTANO, Les origines de la guerre de cent ans: Philippe le Bel en Flandre, Paris, 1897. P. FOURNIER, Le royaume d' Aries, Paris, 1892. B. HOLTZMANN, Wtihclm von Nogaret: Rat und Gross- siegclbewahrcr Philipps des Sohonen von Frankreioh, Freiburg, 1898 (dissertation). Finances in the time of Philip the Fair. L. L. BORRELLI DE SERRES, Rcchcrchcs sur divers services publics du XIII' au XVII* siecles, 7 vols., Paris, 1895-1909. See also his Les variations mone- taires sous Philippe le Bel et les sources de leur histoire, Paris, 1902. A. VUTTRY, Etudes sur le regime financier de la France avant la 246 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PAETII revolution de 1789, 2 vols., Paris, 1877-1883. L. LAZARD, Essai sur la condition des Juifs dans le domaine royal au XIIIe siecle, Paris, 1887. For the preceding centuries see M. PROU, Esquisse de la poli- tique monetaire des rois de France du Xc au XIIC siecle, Paris, 1901. Estates General. G. PICOT, Histoire des etats generaux, 6 vols., 2nd edition, Paris, 1889. M. ARTONNE, Le mouvement de 1314, et les chartes provinciates de 1315, Paris, 1913. G. PICOT, documents rela- tifs aux etats generaux et assemblies reunis sous Philippe le Bel, Paris, 1901. H. HERVIEU, Eecherches sur les premiers etats generaux et les assemblies representatives pendant la premiere moitie du XIVe siecle, Paris, 1879. The Parlement of Paris. F. AUBERT, Histoire du Parlement de Paris de I'origine a Francois ler} 1250-1515, 2 vols., Paris, 1894. E. MAUGIS, Histoire du Parlement de Paris, de I'avenement des rois Valois a la mart d'Henri IV, vols. I and II, Paris, 1913-1914. C. V. LANGLOIS, "Les origines du Parlement de Paris," in Eevue his- torique, XLII (1890), 74-114. F. AUBERT, Le Parlement de Paris de Philippe le Bel a Charles VII, 1314-1422, Paris, 1890. E. PERROT, Les cos royaux: origine et developpement de la theorie aux XIIIe et XIVe sieoles, Paris, 1910. Philip V. P. LEHUGEUR, Histoire de Philippe le Long, Paris, 1896. Original sources. The large collections of sources for the his- tory of France are listed above, nos. 965-977. Much material of value is in the Bolls Series, no. 995 above. MOLINIER, no. 21 above, is the best guide for original sources on French history. Special mention may be made of the Oeuvres completes de Suger, edited by LECOY DE LA MARCHE, Paris, 1867 ; and the separate edition of his book on Louis the Fat, Gesta Ludovici regis cognomento Grossi, ou Vie de Louis le Gros, edited by A. MOLINIER, Paris, 1887. Ada imperil Angliae et Franciae ab. a. 1267 ad a. 1313, edited by F. KERN, Tiibingen, 1910. EtabHssements de Saint Louis, edited by P. VIOLLET, 4 vols., Paris, 1881-1886, part of no. 966 above. H. F. DELABORDE, "La texte primitif des Enseignements de Saint- Louis a son fils," in Bibliotheque de I'Ecole des chartes, LXXIII (1912), 73-100, 237-262. Bibliographies. See the general bibliographies for the history of France, nos. 21-27 above. There are excellent bibliographical notes for this period in the footnotes of LAVISSE, Histoire de France, vol. III. For the Angevin (Norman) Empire, see GROSS, no. 36 above. ECONOMIC CONDITIONS 247 XXVI. MEDIEVAL ECONOMIC CONDITIONS A. OUTLINE 1. Importance of economic history. Until recently, economic history was unduly neglected; now it has gained such prominence that there is some danger of giving it too much emphasis. 2. Prominent features of medieval economic life. Predominance of rural life. Importance of corporations. Comparatively stable conditions. The barter system. 3. Rural life. The manor. The lord of the manor and his free and servile tenants. The duties which tenants owed their lord. Gradual emancipation of the servile population. Chief features of the agricultural system: the demesne land, open fields, the strip system, the three-field system. Crude methods of agri- culture. Difficulty of keeping animals during the winter. Hous- ing and labor conditions, and the amusements of the masses. Peasants' revolts; the Jacquerie in France, 1358, and the Peasants' Revolt in England in 1381. 4. Urban life. Origin of medieval towns; their relations with feudal lords. Enfranchisement of towns. Town charters. Com- munes, boroughs. Differences of town life in different countries. The inhabitants of towns and their occupations. Aliens, especially Jews. Regulation of manufacture and trade. Merchant gilds and craft gilds. Social and religious gilds. Mystery plays. City walls, streets, churches, town halls, and markets. Remarkable growth and improvement of cities in the thirteenth century. The wealthy class in cities. Towns which have preserved their medi- eval character, such as Bruges and Niirnberg. 5. Sufferings from cold, famine, and pestilences. The Black Death of 1348-1349. 6. Money and banking in the middle ages. Disadvantages of the barter system. Relatively poor system of coinage. Wide- spread privileges of coinage and prevalence of debasement of coin. Italian standard coins, banks, and bills of exchange. Money- lending Jews and Lombards. Medieval ideas about interest. 7. Commerce. Hindrances to commerce in the middle ages. Just price. Forestalling. Sudden increase of business in the twelfth century. The chief Asiatic and European routes. The importance of the Mediterranean and the Baltic and North Seas. Luxuries from the east and raw materials from the north. Mar- kets and fairs. Commercial associations and leagues, especially the Hanseatic League. Importance of the Italian cities. Inter- 248 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII municipal trade. Captains of industry and trade. Jews. In- fluence of the rise of the Ottoman Turks on commerce. 8. The extension of geographical knowledge, due to commerce and other causes, such as missionary endeavor. Marco Polo. The compass. Medieval geographical knowledge and cartography (the portolani). B. SPECIAL KECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general accounts. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, ch. xv. ADAMS, Civilization, ch. xn. LUCHAIRE, Social France, translated by KREHBIEL, ch. xni. See the pictures in nos. 187, 188, and 207 above. For particular terms, PALGRAVE'S Dictionary, no. 115 above, is helpful. Longer general accounts. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire gen- erate, II, chs. i, viii, and ix. These three chapters can also be read in English. The first, written by C. SEIGNOBOS, was translated by E. W. Dow, The feudal regime, New York, Holt, 1906. Chapters viii and ix, written by A. GIRY and A. REVILLE, were translated by F. G. BATES and P. E. TITSWORTH, under the titles, Emancipation of mediaeval towns; and, Medieval commerce and industry, both published by Holt in 1908. W. CUNNINGHAM, Western civilization in its economic aspects: medieval and modern, Cambridge, 1900, book IV. H. F. HELMOLT, History of the world, VII, 1-62. LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 332-357, III, part I, 390-414. LUCHAIRE, Manuel des institutions franqaises, part III, "Les institutions populaires. " E. MICHAEL, Culturzustdnde des deutschen Volkes wdhrend des drei- zehnten Jahrhunderts, I, 1-85, 129-204. Medieval commerce. E. P. CHEYNEY, European background to American history, New York, 1904 (The American nation series), chs. i-m. C. DAY, A history of commerce, New York, 1907, part II. A still more elementary account than DAY is H. DE B. GIBBINS, The history of commerce in Europe, London, 1891, 2nd edition, 1896, 27-92. The following are interesting special studies. L. HUTCHINSON, "Oriental trade and the rise of the Lombard communes," Quarterly Journal of economics, XVI (1901-1902), 413-432. H. C. LEA, "Ecclesiastical treatment of usury," in Tale review, II (1893- 1894), 356-385. ALICE LAW, "The English nouveaux-riches in the fourteenth century," in Eoyal historical society, Transactions, new series, IX (1895), 49-73; and her "Notes on English medieval shipping," in Economic review, VIII (1898), 349-385. On medieval ships and shipping see also LA RONCIERE, Histoire de la marine XXVI ECONOMIC CONDITIONS 249 francaise, I, 244-298; and ENLAKT, Manuel d'archeologie, II, 568- 620. Hanseatic League. Short accounts are LODGE, Close of the middle ages, ch. xvni; HENDERSON, Short history of Germany, 181- 202; HELMOLT, History of the world, VII, 10-62; and the article by E. F. GAY in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. The following are two short books on the subject: HELEN ZIMMER, The Hansa towns, New York, 1889; and D. SCHAFER, Die deutsche Hanse, Leipzig, 1903, 2nd edition, revised, 1915, part 19 of no. 326 above. The Black Death. F. A. GASQUET, The Black Death of 1348 and 1S49, London, 1908, is a 2nd edition of his Great Pestilence of 1348-49, London, 1893. J. F. PALMER, "Pestilences: their influence in the destiny of nations, as shown in the history of the plague," Royal historical society, new series, I (1884), 242-259. Geographical discovery. C. R. BEAZLEY, "Marco Polo and the European expansion of the middle ages," in Atlantic monthly, CIV (1909), 493-501, will serve as an introduction to his The dawn of modern geography, II, ch. vi, III, chs. iv-v. S. HUGE, Gesoliiohte des Zeitalters der Entdeckungen, 35-81. J. B. BROWN, "The last great dreamer of the crusades," in Nineteenth century, X (1881), 701-722. Original sources. Short selections may be found in ROBINSON, Readings, I, eh. xviii; THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 545- 612; OGG, Source book, ch. xx; and Translations and reprints, III, no. 2, "Statistical documents of the middle ages," and III, no. 5, ' ' English manorial documents. ' ' On geographic discovery the most important source is The book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian, concerning the kingdoms and mar- vels of the east, translated and edited by Sir H. YULE, 2 vols., Lon- don, 1871, 3rd edition, revised by H. CORDIER, London, 1903. There is a translation of MARCO POLO'S book in Everyman's library. A rivi-nt Crrman edition of the work is Die Reisen des Venezianers MAUCO POLO im IS Jahrhundcrt, bearbeitet von H. LEMCKE, Gross- borstel, 1907. Next in importance is a book which has been men- tioned before, Cathay and tlu- way thither, also edited by H. YULE. Book of the knowledge of all the kingdoms, lands, and lordships that arc in the world, and the arms and devices of each land and lord- .ilii/i, nlitod by Sir C. M \ICKII A.M. London, 1912 (Hakluyt society, 2nd series, XXIX) is an account by a fourteenth century Spanish Franciscan. CHAN Ju-KuA, his work on th^ Chinese and Arab trade in the Jtth and ISth centuries, entitled Chufanchi, translated from ihr Chinese and annotated by F. HIRTH and W. W. ROCKHILL, Leip- zig, 1912. 250 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII For a contemporary account of the Black Death read BOCCACCIO'S introduction to his Decameron, the essentials of which are printed in Source book of the renaissance, edited by M. WHITCOMB, revised edition, 21-24. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 76, 98-99, 102-103, 104, 107-110. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General Books. The general histories of civilization, nos. 729- 738, 751, and 762-781, are especially valuable. Almost all the books on the Jews, nos. 850-884 above, lay stress on their place in economic history, but see especially nos. 857-861. In addition, read H. C. LEA, Inquisition in Spain, I, 81-144. General economic history. M. KOVALEWSKY, Die okonomische Entwicklung Europas bis sum Beginn der kapitalistischen Wirtschafts- form, translated into German from the Eussian by L. MOTZKIN and others, vols. I-VII, Berlin, 1901-14. G. D'AVENEL, Histoire eco- nomique de la propriete, des salaires, des denrees, et de tous lea prix en general, depuis I 'an '1200 jusqu'en I 'an 1800, 6 vols., Paris, 1894-1912, abridged and altered under the titles, Paysans et ouvriers depuis sept cents ans, Paris, 1899; Les riches depuis sept cents ans : revenus et benefices, appointments et honoraires, Paris, 1909 ; and La fortune privee a travers sept siecles, 3rd edition, Paris, 1895. J. STRIEDER, Studien zur Gesohichte kapitalistischer Organisations- formen: Monopole, Kartette und Aktiengesellschaften im Mittelalter und zu Beginn der Neuzcit, Munich, 1914. H. BIKEL, Die Wirt- schaftsverhdltnisse des Klosters St. Gallen von der Grilndung bis zum Ende des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts, Freiburg-i-B., 1914. W. T. ASH- LEY, Surveys, historic and economic, London and New York, 1900, deals with the middle ages in the first chapters. Economic history of France. E. LEVASSEUR, Histoire des classes ouvneres et de I'industrie en France avant 1789, 2 vols., Paris, 1859, 2nd edition, 1900. AGNES M. WERGELAND, History of the working classes in France : a review of Levasseur 's ' ' Histoire des classes ouvrieres et de I'industrie en France avant 1789," Chicago, 1916. Economic history of Germany. K. T. v. INAMA-STERNEGG, Deutsclie Wirthschaftsgcsohichte, 3 vols. in 4, Leipzig, 1879-1901, vol. 1 in 2nd edition, 1909. K. LAMPRECHT, Deutsch.es Wirtschafts- leben im Mittelalter, 3 vols. in 4, Leipzig, 1885-1886. R. KOTZSCHKE, Deutsche Wirtschaftsgeschichte bis zum 17 Jahrhundert, Leipzig, 1908, part 2, 1, of no. 331 above. Economic History of England. W. J. ASHLEY, An introduction to English economic history and theory, 2 vols., London, 1888-1893, 3rd edition of vol. I, 1894. J. E. T. ROGERS, A history of agriculture ECONOMIC CONDITIONS 251 and prices in England, 1259-1793, 7 vols., Oxford, 1866-1902; his Six centuries of work and wages: the history of English labour, 2 vols., London, 1884, llth edition in 1 vol., 1912, is based on the above. See also his The economic interpretation of history, London, 1888, 7th edition, 1909. F. SEEBOHM, The English village com- munity: an essay on economic history, London, 1883, 4th edition, 1890. E. LIPSON, The economic history of England, I, The middle ages, New York, 1915. E. P. CHEYNEY, An introduction to the industrial and social history of England, New York, 1901. L. F. SALZMANN, English industries of the middle ages, London, 1913. See also no. 735 above. Agricultural conditions and life of the peasants. L. DELISLE, Etudes sur la condition de la classe agricole et sur I 'etat de I 'agri- culture en Normandie pendant Ic moyen age, Paris, 1851. H. SEE, Les classes rurales et le regime domanial en France au moyen age, Paris, 1901. J. M. RICHARD, "Thierri d'Hirec.on, agriculteur arte- sian," in Bibhotheque de I'Ecole des chartes, LIII (1892), 383-416, 571-604. A. THIERRY, Histoire du tiers etat, Paris, 1850, translated by F. B. WELLS, The formation and progress of the tiers etat, or third estate in France, London, 1859. M. FOURNIER, "Les affran- chissements du V* au XIII* siecle, ' ' in Revue historique, XXI (1883), 1-58. J. BRAND, Observations on popular antiquities, chiefly illiifitrating the origin of our vulgar customs, etc., revised by H. ELLIS, 2 vols., London, 1813, reprinted in 1841—42 and again in 1849, in 3 vols., with additions, new editions by W. C. HAZLITT, 3 vols., London, 1870; 2 vols., 1905. Popular insurrections. G. DBS MAREZ, Les luttes sociales en Flandre au moyen age, Brussells, 1900. L. MlROT, Les insurrections urbaines au debut du regne de Charles VI (1S80-8S), Paris, 1905. G. v. D. ROPP, Sozialpolitische Bewegungen im Bauernstande vor dem Bauernkricge, Marburg, 1899. Medieval towns. See the following three series: Mediaeval towns, London, Dent, 1898 ff; Historic towns, edited by E. A. FREEMAN and W. HUNT, 9 vols., London, 1887-1893 ; and Ancient cities, edited by B. G. A. WINDLE, 8 vols., London, 1903-1908. For London see also tho profusely illustrated books by Sir W. BESANT, Early London, prehistoric, Roman, Saxon, and Norman, London, 1908; and Medi- aeval London, 2 vols., vol. I, Historical and social, vol. II, Ecclesi- astical, London, 1906. J. M. VINCENT, Municipal problems in iiifdiinral Switzerland, Baltimore, 1905 (Johns Hopkins Univcrsiiy studies, series XXIII, nos. 11-12). H. PIRENNE, "L'origine des constitutions urbaines au moyen age," in Revue historique, LIII (1893), 52-83, LVII (1895), 57-98, 293-327. 252 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PAETII French cities. A. LUCHAIRE, Les communes francaises d I'epoque des CapStiens directs, Paris, 1890, new edition by L. HALPHEN, 1911. G. ESPINAS, La vie urbaine de Douai au moyen-age, 4 vols., Paris, 1913 (vols. III-IV contain "pieces justificatives"). GENEVIEVE ACLOQUE, Les corporations, I'industrie, et le commerce d Chartres du Xle siecle d la Bevolution, Paris, 1917. G. BOURGIN, La commune de Soissons, et le groupe communal soissonnais, Paris, 1908, part 167 of no. 888 above. A. GIRY, Les etablissements de Rouen, 2 vols., Paris, 1883-1885, parts 55 and 59 of no. 888 above. F. B. MARSH, English rule in Gascony, 1199-1259, with special reference to the towns, Ann Arbor, 1912 (University of Michigan studies). MARY BATESON, "The laws of Breteuil, " in English historical review, XV (1900), 73-78, 302-18, 496-523, 754-7; XVI (1901), 92-110, 332^5. For a detailed bibliography on medieval Paris see outline XIII in part III below. German cities. K. HEGEL, Stddte und Gttden der germanischen Volker im Mittclalter, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1891 ; and his, Die Ent- stehung des deutschen Stddtewesens, Leipzig, 1898. G. VON BELOW, Dos dlteste deutsche Stddtewesen und Burgertum, Bielefeld and Leip- zig, 1898, part of no. 326 above; and his Der "Ursprung der deutsohen Stadtverfassung, Diisseldorf, 1892. E. SOHIT, Die Entstehung des deutschen Stddtewesens, Leipzig, 1890. G. L. v. MAURER, Gesohichte der Stddteverfassung in Deutschland, 4 vols., Erlangen, 1869-1871. F. W. BARTHOLD, Geschichte der deutschen Stddte und des deutschen Biirgertums, 4 vols., Leipzig, 1850-1854. B. HEIL, Die deutschen Stddte und Burger im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1903 (Aus Natur und Geisteswelt, 43). The following are some interesting special studies on individual cities: W. KING, Chronicles of three free cities, Hamburg, Bremen, Liibeck, London, 1914. W. KEISNER, Die EinwohnersalU deutscher Stddte in friiheren Jahrhunderten, mit besonderer Beriicksichtigung Liibecks, Jena, 1903. H. KEUSSEN, Topographic der Stadt Koln vm Mittelalter, nebst Karten und Beigaben, 2 vols., Bonn, 1910. W. BEHAGHEL, Die gewerbliche Stellung der Frau im mittelalterlichen Koln, Berlin and Leipzig, 1910. K. BUCHER, Die Berufe der Stadt Frankfurt am Main im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1914. I. KRACATJER, Geschichte der Frankfurter Juden im Mittelalter, aus der inneren] Geschichte der Juden Frankfurts im 14 Jahrhundert (Judengasse, Handel und sonstige Berufe), Frankfurt, 1913. See also his important source book, Urkundenbuch zur Geschichte der Juden in Frankfurt- am-Main von 1150-1400, vol. I, Frankfurt, 1914. G. SCHMOLLER, Strasburgs Blilte, Strasburg, 1875, eulogizes the remarkable growth of this city in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. P. SANDER, Die XXVI ECONOMIC CONDITIONS 253 Reichsstddtische Haushaltung Niirnbergs, auf Grund ihres Zustandes von 1431-1440 dargestellt, Leipzig, 1902. See also the literature on the ' ' Eastward expansion of Ger- many, ' ' under outline XXII above. Italian cities. F. SCHEVILL, Siena: the story of a mediaeval commune, New York, 1909. For other literature on Italian cities see outline XXII above and outline XXXII below. Gilds. C. GROSS, The gild merchant: a contribution to British municipal history, 2 vols., Oxford, 1890. E. R. A. SELIGMAN, Two chapters on the mediaeval guilds of England, Baltimore, 1887 (Amer- ican economic association monographs, vol. II, no. 5). A. H. JOHN- SON, The history of the worshipful company of drapers of London: preceded by an introduction on London and her gilds up to the close of the XVth century, 2 vols., Oxford, 1914. G. UNWIN, The gilds and companies of London, London, 1908. A. F. JACK, An introduction to tlie history of life insurance, London and New York, 1912, "The gild-system," 15-149. R. EBERSTADT, Der Ursprung des Zunftwesens und die dlteren Handwerkerverbande des Mittelalters, Leipzig, 1900; see also his Das franzosische Gewerberecht in Frankreich vom XIIIten Jahrhundert bis 1581, Leipzig, 1899 (in Staats- und Sozialwissen- schaftliche Forschungen, XVII, 2). A. DOREN, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der KaufmannsgUden im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1893 (Forschungen, edited by Schmoller, 12). M. SAINT-LEON, Histoire des corporations des metiers, Paris, 1897, 2nd edition, 1909. Mystery plays. E. K. CHAMBERS, The mediaeval stage, 2 vols., Oxford, 1903. S. TUNISON, Dramatic traditions of the dark ages, Chicago, 1907. D. C. STUART, Stage decoration in France in tJie middle ages, Columbia University Press, 1910. G. COHEN, Histoire de la mise en scene dans le tlieatre religieux fran^ais du moyen age, Paris, 1906, translated into German in an enlarged and improved edition by C. BAUER, Geschichte der Inszenierung im geistlichen Sohauspiele des Mittelalters in Frankreich, Leipzig, 1907; see also his ' ' Le theatre a Paris et aux environs a la fin du XIV* siecle, ' ' in Romania, XXXVIII (1909), 587-595. M. HERMANN, Forschungen zur deutsohen Theatergeschichte des Mittelalters und der Renaissance, Berlin, 1914. K. YOUNG, "Observations on the medieval passion play," in Publications of the modern language association, Baltimore, XXV (1910), 309-354. F. J. MONE, Schauspiele des Mittelalters, Carlsruhe, 1846. Epidemics and famines. J. F. K. HECKER, Der schwarze Tod im viereehntcn Jahrhundert, Berlin, 1832, new edition by A. HIRSCH, with the title, Die grossen Volkskranklteiten des Mittelalters, 1865, translated by B. C. BABINGTON, The epidemics of the middle ages, 254 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII London, 1844, 3rd edition, 1859. See also his, The Black Death and the dancing mania, translated by B. G. BABINGTON, New York [1888] (Cassell's national library). R. CRAWFURD, Plague and pestilence in literature and art, Oxford University Press, 1914, has interesting illustrations. G. STICKER, Abhandlungen aus der SeuchengesohioJitc und Seuchenlehre, vol. I, Die Pest, erster Theil: Die GeschicMe der Pest, Giesen, 1908; zweiter Theil: Die Pest als Seuohe und als Plage, 1910. C. CREIGHTON, A history of epidemics in Britain [A.D. 664- 1866], 2 vols., Cambridge, 1891-94. E. BASCOME, A history of epi- demic pestilences from the earliest ages, 1495 years before the birth of Our Savior to 1848, London, 1851. K. LECHNER, Das grosse Sterben in DeutscMand in der Jahren 1348 bis 1351 und die folgenden Pestepidemien bis zum Schlusse des 14 Jahrhunderts, Innsbruck, 1884; see also his "Die grosse Geisselfahrt des Jahres 1349," in Historischcs Jahrbuch, V (1884), 437-462. E. HOENIGER, Der schwarzc Tod in Deutschland, Berlin, 1882. W. SEELMANN, Die Totentanze des Mittelalters, Norden, 1893 (extract from Jahrbuch des Vereins fur niederdeutsche Sprachforschung) . F. CURSCHMANN, Hungersnote des Mittelalters (8-13 Jahrhundert), Leipzig, 1900 (Leipziger Studien, 6, 1). Money and banking. W. W. CARLILE, Evolution of modern money, London, 1901. W. A. SHAW, The history of currency, 1252 to 1894, New York, 1896. J. SCHOENHOF, History of money and prices: an inquiry into their relations from the 13th century to the present time, 2nd edition, New York, 1897. A. DEL MAR, History of -monetary systems, London, 1895 ; see also his, Money and civil- ization, London, 1886. J. LUBBOCK (Lord Avebury), Short history of coins and currency, New York, 1902. A. DIEUDONNE, "Histoire monetaire du denier parisis jusqu'a Saint Louis," in Memoires de la Societe nationale des antiquaires de France, 1911, pp. 111-147; see also his, ' ' La monnaie royale depuis la ref ornie de Charles V, " in Bibliotheque de I'ecole des cJiartes, LXXII (1911), 473-499, LXXIII (1912), 263-282. F. SCHATJB, Der Kampf gegen den Zinswucher, ungerechten -Preis und unlauteren Handel i/m Mittelalter, Freiburg, 1905. R. J. WHITWELL, "Italian bankers and the English crown," in Eoyal historical society, Transactions, new series, XVII (1903), 173-233. O. MELTZING, Das Bankhaus der Medici und seine Vor- Idufer, Jena, 1907. S. L. PERUZZI, Storia del commercio e dei banchieri di Firenze, 1200-1345, Florence, 1868. A. v. KOSTANECKI, Das offentliche Kreditwesen im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1889 (Schmollers Staats- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Forschungen, 9, i). See also nos. 292-298 above. XXVI ECONOMIC CONDITIONS 255 General history of commerce. O. NOEL, Histoire du commerce du mondf depuis les temps les plus reculcs, 3 vols., Paris, 1891-1906. G. LUZZATTO, Storia del commercio, vol. I, Dall' antichitd al rinasci- meiito, Florence, 1914. A. SEGRE, Manuale di storia del commercio, vol. I, Dalle origini alia rivoluzione francese, Turin, 1913. A. SCHAUBE, Handelsgeschichte der romanischen Volker des Mittelmerr- gebifts bis zum Ende der Kreuzziige, Munich, 1906. M. WEBER, Zur (ii.^fhicJite der Handelsgesellschaften im Mittelalter nach siidev.ro- paischen Quellen, Stuttgart, 1889. H. PIRENNE, "Villes marches et. marchauds au moyen age," in Revue historique, LXVII (1898), 59- 70. K. JIRECEK, "Die Bedeutung von Ragusa in die Handels- geschichte des Mittelalters, ' ' in Sitzungsberiohte der kgl. Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Wicn, 1899. F. LUDWIG, Untcrsuchungen iiber die Beise- und Marschgesclvwindigkeit im XII und XIII Jahrhundert, Berlin, 1897 (dissertation). B. HAGENDORN, Die Entwicklung der wichtigsten Schiffstypen bis ins 19 Jahrhundert, Berlin, 1914. Levant trade. W. HEYD, Geschichte des Levantehandels im Mittelalter, 2 vols., Stuttgart, 1879, translated into French, with additions by the author, by F. RAYNAUD, Histoire du commerce du Levant au mcyen age, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1885-1886. See the review of HEYD'S important book by F. HIRSCH, "Die Eroffnung des inneren Asiens fiir den europaischen Handelsverkehr im 13 und 14 Jahr- hundert," in Historische Zeitschrift, XLIV (1880), 385-408; and A. H. LYBYER, ' ' The Ottoman Turks and the routes of oriental trade," in English historical review, XXX (1915), 577-588, who argues that the success of the Turks was not the cause of the discovery of new trade-routes in the fifteenth century. Commerce in France. E. LEVASSEUR, Histoire du commerce de la France, 2 vols., Paris, 1911-1912. H. PIGEONNEAU, Histoire du <-<»n m> /•<•>• de la France, 2 vols., Paris, 1887-1889. Memoires et docu- ments pour serrir d I'histoire du commerce et de I'industrie en France, edited by J. HAYEM, vols. I-IV, Paris, 1911-1916. C. PITON, Les Lt.inhards <•„ France et a Paris, 2 vols., Paris, 1891-92. H. D. IMBART DE LA TOUR, La liberte commerciale en France aux XIIe et .V///p siedes, Paris, 1890. C. D. DE FREVILLE DE LORME, Memoire sur le commerce maritime de Rouen, Rouen, 1857. P. M \\TKI.I.IKK, Histoire de la communtautf des marchands frequcntant la ririi /mi/ill it de Brif, sur la nature, I'etenduc et les regies du com- w > rre qui s'y fnimiit mis XII' XIV<> siccles, 2 vols., Paris, 1865- l^titi (Memoires, Acad6mie koiiomif und Statistik, Jena, 1863 ff. 260 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII XXVII. THE LIFE OF THE NOBLES IN THE MIDDLE AGES A. OUTLINE 1. Essential characteristics of nobility and aristocracy. Chief classes in the middle ages: (1) clergy (some noble, others not), (2) lay nobles, (3) common people (rise of the rich burghers within this class). 2. Origin of a distinct class of nobles in the middle ages. Im- portance of cavalry service or knight's service (cdballarius — clievalerio — chivalry — Bitter) . 3. Priviliges and insignia of nobility. Degrees of nobility. The study of genealogy. Almanacli de Gotlia. The crusades and the origin of heraldry. Orders of knighthood. 4. Sanctification by the church of many of the customs and practices of the nobles. Peace movements in the middle ages. For the "Peace of God" and "Truce of God" see pp. 161-163. 5. The education of the nobles. Stress on athletics, the use of arms, the practice of courtesy, and the "gay sciences." Pages and squires. The lettered nobility. 6. Position of women in feudal society. Their free, athletic, and often warlike life. Women and chivalry. 7. Life of the nobles in times of peace. Their luxuries and amusements. Importation of spices, rugs, hangings, silks, and other luxuries from the east. Furniture and dress. Their amusements. Jousts and tournaments, feasting, hunting (falconry), minstrelsy and games, especially chess, jongleurs and jesters. Knight-errantry. Attitude of nobles toward business and learning. 8. Homes of the nobles. Manor houses and fortified houses in the towns. Strong wooden towers and palisades in the open country. The gradual evolution of the stone castle, the stone wall and the moat in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Donjons. Keeps. Wonderful castles such as Chateau Gaillard. 9. Feudal warfare. Importance of defence; the armored man and the fortified house. Arms, armor, and siegecraft. Influence of the crusades on medieval warfare. Changes brought about by the rise of the common foot-soldier and the use of gunpowder. 10. The decline of chivalry. The influence of the rise of cen- tralized monarchies, the gradual disappearance of serfdom, the rise of a rich merchant and comfortable artisan class in the cities, and of a distinct intellectual class in the universities. Ridicule and satire directed against the nobles, especially in the rising vernacular languages. xxv" LIFE OP NOBLES 261 B. SPECIAL BECOMMENDATIONS TOR BEADING Brief general accounts. SEIGNOBOS, The feudal regime, 27-38, 64-65. D. C. MUNRO, A history of the middle ages, eh. xiu. BEMONT and MONOD, Medieval Europe, 257-267. HENDERSON, A short history of Germany, I, ch. v. See also the articles "Knighthood and chivalry," ' ' Castle, ' ' and ' ' Fortification and siegecraf t, ' ' in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Longer general accounts. A. LUCHAIRE, Social France, translated by E. B. KREHBIEL, chs. vm-xii. .E. L. CUTTS, Scenes and characters of the middle ages, 311H160. LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 14-22, IV, part II, 152-176. Chivalry. The standard works on chivalry are: L. GAUTIER, La chevalcrie, 3rd edition, Paris, 1895, translated by H. FRITH, Chivalry, London, 1891; F. W. CORNISH, Chivalry, New York, 1901; and A. SCHULTZ, Das hofische Leben sur Zcit der Minnesinger, 2 vols., 2nd edition, Leipzig, 1889. TAYLOR, The mediaeval mind, 2nd edition, I, 537-603, attempts to describe the spirit of chivalry. See also MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 240-247. Feudal warfare. C. W. C. OMAN, A history of the art of war, especially book VI. H. DELBRUCK, Geschichte der Kriegskunst, vol. III, especially 235 ff. E. VIOLLET-LE-DUC, Annals of a fortress, translated from the French by B. BUCKWALL, Boston, 1875. Several books listed in this bibliography contain illustrations; see in addi- tion, nos. 187, 188, 200, 202, below. Also see "Development of the castle in England and Wales, ' ' in History teachers ' magazine, III (1912), 191-200. Original sources. Studies in European history, edited by F. M. FLING, II, no. 4, "Chivalry and the mode of warfare." The best picture of chivalry during the Hundred Years ' War is in FROISSART 's Chronicles. JOINVILLE, Chronicle of the crusade of St. Lewis, reveals the spirit of crusading knights. See in general the literature under "Crusades," outline XXI above, and under "Medieval French literature," outline XXIV in part III below, for the life of nobles iii the middle ages. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. Histories of civilization, nos. '729-738, 749-755, 762-781 above, are useful. See also the books on genealogy and heraldry, nos. 268-291 above. Origin and nature of medieval nobility. P. GUILHIERMOZ, L'origine de la noblesse en France au moyen age, Paris, 1902. O. HENNE-AM-RHYN, Geschichte des Kittertums, Leipzig, 1893. K. H. ROTH VON SCHRECKENSTEIN, Die Kittcrwurde und der Ritterstand, 262 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Freiburg, 1886. W. VEDEL, Mittelalterliche Kulturideale, I, Helden- leben, Leipzig, 1910 (Aus Natur und Geisteswelt, 292). A. SCHULTE, Der Adel und die deutsclie Kirchc im Mitt el alt er : Studien zur Social-, Eechts- und Kirohengeschichte, Stuttgart, 1910 (Kirchenrechtliche Abhandluugen, edited by U. STUTZ, 63-64). N. PAULUS, "Die Wertung der weltliehen Beruf e im Mittelalter, ' ' in Historiches . Jahr- buch, XXXII (1911), 725-755. Medieval warfare. G. T. DENISON, A history of cavalry from the earliest times: with lessons for the future, London, 1877, 2nd edition, 1913, pp. 97-184. G. KOHLER, Die Entwicklung des Kriegs- wesens und der Kriegfiihrung in der Eitterzeit von der Mitte des 11 Jahrhunderts bis zu den Hussitenkriegen, 3 vols., Breslau, 1886- 90. M. JAHNS, Geschichtc der Kriegswisscnschaften vornehmlicJi in Deutschland, 3 vols., Munich, 1889-91 ; and his Handbuch einer Geschichte des Kriegswesens von der Urzeit sur Renaissance, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1880. In L'armee a travers les ages: conferences faites en 1898 d I'Ecole speciale militaire de Saint-Cyr, 2nd edition, Paris, 1899, see the articles by C. V. LANGLOIS, ' ' Le service militaire en vertu de 1 'obligation feodale"; and "Le service militaire solde"; and E. GEBHART, "Les armees mercenaires de 1 'Italic, du 14e siecle a 1527." O. v. DUNGERN, Der Heerenstand im Mittelalter, Papiermuhle, 1908. H. DELPECH, Le tactique au XIIIe siede, 2 vols., Paris, 1886, gives particular attention to the battles of Bouvines and Muret. E. BOUTARIC, Les institutions mHitaires de la France avant les armees permanentes, Paris, 1863. H. BELLOC, Warfare in England, London, 1912 (Home university library). C. FOULKES, Armour and weapons, Oxford, 1909. E. PAYNE-GALLWEY, The crossbow, London, 1903, appendix, 1907. J. SCHWIETERING, Zur Geschichte von Speer und Schwert im 12 Jahrhundert, Hamburg, 1912. Medieval castles. The following are some works pertaining especially to France. C. ENLART, Manuel d'archeologie fran$aise, vol. II, "Architecture civile et militaire." E. E. ViOLLET-LE-Duc, L' architecture militaire au moyen age, Paris, 1854, translated by M. MACDERMOTT, Military architecture, 2nd edition, Oxford, 1879. See also his Cite de Carcassonne (Aude), Paris, 1888. A. DEVILLE, His- toire du Chdteau-Gaillard, Rouen, 1829 ; see also his Histoire du chateau d' Argues, Eouen, 1839. M. F. MANSFIELD, Castles and chateaux of old Burgundy, Boston, 1909. For England there are several good books with excellent illustra- tions. A. H. THOMPSON, Military architecture in England during the middle ages, London, 1912. A. HARVEY, The castles and watted towns of England, London, 1911 (The antiquary's books). ELLA S. ARMI- TAGE, The early Norman castles of tlie British Isles, New York, 1912. LIFE OF NOBLES 263 H. A. EVANS, Castles of England and Wales, London, 1912. G. T. CLARK, Mediaeval military architecture in England, 2 vols., London, 1884. E. B. D'AuvERGNE, The castles of England, London [1907]. J. D. MACKENZIE, The castles of England, London, 1897. For Germany the following works of O. PIPER are authoritative, Burge nkunde : Forschungen iiber gesammtes Bauwesen und Geschichte der Burgen innerhalb des deutschen Sprachgebietes, Munich, 1895, 3rd edition, revised, 1914; Osterreichische Burgen, 1902; and Abriss der Burgenkunde, 2nd edition, Munich and Leipzig, 1904 (Sammlung Goschen). P. SALVISBERG, Die deutsche Kriegsarchitektur von der Urzeit bis auf die Renaissance, Stuttgart, 1887. H. ZELLER-WERD- MULLER, Mittelalterliche Burganlagen der Ostschweiz, Leipzig, 1893 (extract from Mittheilungen der antiquarischen Gesellschaft in Zurich). Origin of firearms. Lieutenant-Colonel H. W. L. HIME, The origin of artillery, New York, 1915, is a revised edition of a book published in 1904 under the title, Gunpowder and amunition. Here as in his essay, "Roger Bacon and gunpowder," pp. 321-335 in Roger Bacon essays, Oxford, 1914, he gives Bacon credit for the invention of gunpowder; but see L. THORNDIKE, "Roger Bacon and gunpowder," in Science, XLII (1915), 799-800. T. F. TOUT, "Fire- arms in England in the fourteenth century, ' ' in English historical review, XXVI (1911), 666-702. F. R. SCHNEIDER, Die Artillerie des Mittelalters, Berlin, 1910. E. O. v. LIPPMANN, Zur Geschichte des Schiesspulvers und der alteren Feuerwaffen, Stuttgart, 1899. J. F. v. REITZENSTEIN, "Die Sage von der Erfindung des Schiesspulvers und der deutsche Ursprung des abendlandischen Geschiitzwesens, ' ' Allgemeinc Militdrzeitung, 1896, no. 36. L. LACABANE, "De la poudre & canon et de son introduction en France," in Bibliotheque de I'ecole de chartes, 2nd series, I (1844), 28-57. Chivalry. LA CURNE DE SAINTE-PALAYE, Memoires sur I'ancienne chevalerie: avec une introduction et des notes historiques par C. NODIER, new edition, 2 vols., Paris, 1826. P. LACROIX, L'ancienne France: chevalerie et les croisades, feodalite, blason, ordres mUi- fitin-x, Paris, 1886. S. LUCE, Histoire de Du Guesclin et de son tpoque, 2nd edition, Paris, 1882. KURD'S Letters on chivalry and romance, edited by EDITH J. MOKLEY, London, 1911 (the text of the letters reprinted from the first edition, 1762). Women of chivalry. T. KRABBES, Die Frau im altfranzonisehen K(iHn-e/ios, Marburg, 1884. K. WKINHOLD, Die deutschcn Frauen in dem Mittelalter, 2 vols., Vienna, 1851, 3rd edition, 1897. E. L. LINTON, "The women of chivalry," Fortnightly review, XLVIII (1887), 559-579. E. WECHSSLER, " Frauendienst und Vassalitat," 264 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PABTII in Zeitschrift fur franzosische Sprache und Literatur, XXIV (1902), 159-190. Romances of chivalry. J. ASHTON, Eomances of chivalry, New York, 1887. J. B. BURY, Eomances of chivalry on Greek soil, Oxford, 1911 (Eomanes lecture for 1911). Sports and pastimes of the nobles, J. J. JUSSERAND, Les sports et jeux d' exercise dans I'ancienne France, Paris, 1901. J. STRUTT, Glig-gamena Angel-fteod: the sports and pastimes of the people of England, London, 1801, another edition, 1810, often reprinted, new edition, enlarged by J. C. Cox [1903]. H. J. E. MURRAY, A history of chess, Oxford University Press, 1914, is a most excellent book. F. NIEDNER, Das deutsche Turnier im 12 und 13 JahrJiundert, Berlin, 1881. Life of nobles in the middle ages. C. V. LANGLOIS, La societe frangaise au XIIIs siede d'apres dix romans d'aventure, Paris, 1904; and his La vie en France au may en age, d'apres quelques moralist es du temps, Paris, 1908. E. M. TAPPAN, In feudal times: social life in the middle ages, London, 1913. H. OSCHINSKY, Der Eitter unter- wegs und die Pfiege der Gastfreundschaft im alten Frankreich, Halle, 1900 (dissertation). G. EAYNAUD, "La societe et la vie en France au moyen age," in Journal des savants, new series, 7th year, 1909, pp. 214-223. N. DE PAUW, La vie intime en Flandre au moyen age, d'apres des documents inedits, Brussels, 1913 (extract from Bulletin de la Commission royale d'histoire de Belgique, LXXXII, 1913). L. GARREAU, L'etat social de la France au temps des croisades, Paris, 1899. J. FALKE, Die ritterliche Gesellschaft im Zeitalter des Frauen- cultus, new edition, Berlin [186-?]. L. DELISLE, De I'instruction litteraire de la noblesse frangaise au moyen age, Paris, 1855 (extract of 8 pp. from Journal de 1 'instruction publique, XXIV, no. 46, June, 1855, p. 322). T. WRIGHT, A history of domestic manners and sentiments in England, London, 1862, new edition, The homes of other days, a history of domestic manners, etc., London, 1871. E. E. VIOLLET— LE-Duc, Dicticnnaire du mobttier, 2nd edition, Paris, 1868- 1875. C. E. M. LANGLOIS, La vie en France au moyen age, 1" serie: la vie seigneuriale au XIIIs swde, Paris, 1912 (Enseignement par les projections lumineuses). W. MUNCH, Gedanken uber Furstener- ziehung aus alter und neuer Zeit, Munich, 1909. Bibliography. C. V. LANGLOIS, "Les travaux sur 1'histoire de la societe f ranc.aise au moyen age, d 'aprSs les sources litteraires, ' ' in Eevue historique, LXIII (1897), 241-265. MEDIEVAL CULTURE 265 XXVIII. CULTURE IN THE TWELFTH AND THIRTEENTH CENTURIES A. OUTLINE 1. France was the center of culture during these two centuries. The great importance of this era in the history of the culture of western Europe has been overshadowed by the subsequent intense interest in ancient Greek and Roman literature and art. 2. Sudden increase in learning and education towards the be- ginning of the twelfth century. 3. Rise of a spirit of inquiry, based on logic (dialectic). Abel- ard and Bernard of Clairvaux. 4. The "New Aristotle." Systematization of scholastic theol- ogy and philosophy. Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas. 5. Rise and decline of interest in the ancient classics. The schools of Chartres. John of Salisbury. The schools of Orleans. John Garland of Paris. The Rattle of the seven arts. 6. The ars dictaminis, the "business course" in medieval uni- versities. Boncompagno. 7. Revival of Roman law. Irnerius at Bologna. The systematic study of canon law. The Decrctum of Gratian, ca. 1140-1150. The Corpus iuris canonici. 8. Rise and decline of interest in the natural sciences, including medicine. Robert Grosseteste and Roger Bacon. 9. Rise of medieval universities, especially Bologna, Paris, and Oxford. Studies and life of medieval students. 10. The literature of this period: (1) Latin (Goliardic litera- ture, sermon stories, etc.) ; (2) Vernacular literature. 11. The art of the period, especially Gothic architecture. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING General accounts. EMERTON, Mediaeval Europe, ch. XIII, is a short survey in English. Much more satisfactory are: LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, II, ch. x; and LAVISSE, Histoire de Fran,;-. II, part II, 384-411; III, part I, 323-345; part II, 380-429. Portions of the latter, along with other material translated into English, will be found in MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilisation, riil.-irirr.l rdition, 277-357, 458^490, 524-546. TAYLOR, Mediaeval mind, is devoted in large part to the period covered by this outline. SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, I, is valuable as a work for reference. 266 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PAETII Medieval universities. For medieval universities, H. EASHDALL, The universities of Europe in the middle ages, 2 vols., in 3, Oxford, 1895, is the standard work; read especially I, ehs. I and II, and II, ch. xiv. A. S. BAIT, "Life in the mediaeval university, Cambridge, 1912, is drawn very largely from this last chapter of EASHDALL. For student life, see also C. H. HASKINS, "Life of medieval students as seen in their letters," American historical review, III (1897-98), 203-229, and ' ' The University of Paris in the sermons of the thir- teenth century," ibid, X (1904), 1-27; likewise Translations and reprints, II, no. 3, "The medieval student." Many additional trans- lations from documents are printed with introductions in A. O. NORTON, Readings in the history of education: mediaeval universities, Harvard University Press, 1909. A readable chapter on the life in the university of Paris in the thirteenth century is in A. LUCHAIRE, La societe frangaise au temps de Philippe- Auguste, translated by E. B. KREHBIEL, ch. in. J. McCABE, Peter Abelard, New York, 1901, is an interesting biography. Medieval art. For a very brief sketch of the art of the period, read S. EEINACH, Apollo: an illustrated manual of the history of art, New York, 1907, chs. xii-xm. W. E. LETHABY, Medieval art, London, 1904, new and revised edition, 1912, is a general popular book. C. ENLART, Manuel d'arclieologie franfaise, is a standard book on the medieval art of France. Original sources. Short extracts, in English translation, of the literature of the period are gathered in G. G. COULTON, A medieval garner, London, 1910. Excellent translations of some medieval students' songs are in J. A. SYMONDS, Wine, women, and song, London, 1907. Probably the most interesting old French tale of the twelfth century is Aucassin and Nicolette, of which the best transla- tion is by A. LANG, London and New York, 1899 (often reprinted). It is announced that L. THORNDIKE will edit and translate selec- tions from Gerbert, Abelard, Eoger Bacon, and the Scholastics, under the title, Medieval thought and culture, in no. 949 above. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY For detailed bibliographies on all the subjects touched upon in the above outline, see part III, Medieval Culture, period II, 1100- 1300, below. CHURCH AND COUNCILS 267 . THE CHURCH FROM ABOUT 1300 TO ABOUT 1450 A. OUTLINE 1. Importance of this period in the constitutional history of the church and in the history of medieval political thought. 2. The relations of pope Boniface VIII, 1294-1303, with the rising monarchical states, especially England under Edward I and France under Philip IV, the Fair. Importance of the question of finances. The Papal Jubilee, 1300. The papal bulls, Clericis laicos, issued in 1296, Ausculta fili, 1301, and Unam sanctam, 1302. Action of the Estates General of France in 1302. The scene at Anagni, where Boniface VIII, 86 years of age, was insulted by Nogaret and Sciarra Colonna, 1303. 3. The "Babylonish Captivity" of the papacy, 1305-1377. Election of pope Clement V, archbishop of Bordeaux, 1305-1314, a creature of king Philip IV of France. Removal of the papacy to Avignon. The suppression of the Templars, 1312. Evils of the ' ' Babylonish Captivity. ' ' The Flagellants. Conflict of the Avignon popes with the empire and their peculiar position at the outbreak of the Hundred Years' War (see the next two outlines). The Stat- utes of Provisors and Praemunire in England, 1351, 1353. 4. Return of the papacy to Rome. Temporary stay of pope Urban V in Rome, 1367-1370. St. Catherine of Sienna, 1347-1380. The return of pope Gregory XI to Rome in 1377 where he died in 1378. 5. The great western schism, 1378-1418. Double election in 1378 : pope Urban VI at Rome, in April, and pope Clement VII at Fondi in September, elected by cardinals with French sympathies. Political as well as religious division of Europe during the schism. 6. The conciliar movement. Proposals to heal the schism and reform the church. The part played by the university of Paris. Jean Gerson, Pierre d 'Ailly, and Conrad of Gelnhausen. The con- stitutional crisis in the history of the church. 7. The council of Pisa, 1409. Attempted deposition of the two ii\:il popes and the election of a new pope, Alexander V (succeeded by John XXIII in 1410). Now there were three rival popes. 8. The council of Constance, 1414-1418, was summoned by the emperor Sigismund and pope John XXIII. Division of the council into "nations." Its chief work: (1) it healed the schism by disposing of the three rival popes, John XXIII, Gregory XII, and Benedict XIII, and by electing Martin V; (2) it tried to stem tin- tide of heresy, which had set in strong since the time of Wiclif, 268 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PART II especially in Bohemia, by burning John Huss and Jerome of Prague, which resulted in the Hussite wars, 1419 ff (John Ziska, Utraquists, Taborites) ; (3) it made futile efforts to reform the church in "head and members." The decree Sacrosancta, 1415. The decree Frequens, 1417. 9. The council of Basle, 1431-1449. Conflict between the coun- cil and pope Eugenius IV (1431-1447), who summoned a rival council at Ferrara (later Florence), 1438-1439, which brought about an ineffective union between the Greek and Latin churches. Deposition of Eugenius IV by the council of Basle in 1439 and the election of an anti-pope, Felix V. Cardinal Cesarini, Nicholas Cusa, and Aeneas Sylvius at the council of Basle. Its dissolution, 1449. 10. Failure of the conciliar movement. Sporadic efforts to em- phasize the idea of national churches by the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges, 1438, and the Pragmatic Sanction of Mainz, 1439. The Concordat of Vienna, 1448. The bull Execrabilis, issued by pope Pius II, in 1460. The reaction in favor of the papacy dur- ing the second half of the fifteenth century. 11. Popes, 1276-1503. Innocent V, 1276 Hadrian V, 1276 John XX or XXI, 1276-1277 Nicholas III, 1277-1280 Martin IV, 1281-1285 Honorius IV, 1285-1287 Nicholas IV, 1288-1292 (vacancy, 1292-1294) Celestine V, 1294 Boniface VIII, 1294-1303 Benedict XI, 1303-1304 Clement V, 1305-1314 (vacancy, 1314-1316) John XXII, 1316-1334 (Nicholas V, anti-pope, 1328- 1330) Benedict XII, 1334-1342 Clement VI, 1342-1352 Innocent VI, 1352-1362 Urban V, 1362-1370 Gregory XI, 1370-1378 Urban VI, 1378-1389 (Clement VII, anti-pope, 1378-1394) Boniface IX, 1389-1404 (Benedict XI II, anti-pope, 1394-1415) Innocent VII, 1404-1406 Gregory XII, 1406-1409 Alexander V, 1409-1410 John XXIII, 1410-1415 (Gregory XII, rival pope to 1415) (vacancy, 1415-1417) Martin V, 1417-1431 Eugenius IV, 1431-1447 (Felix V, anti-pope, 1439- 1449) Nicholas V, 1447-1455 Calixtus III, 1455-1458 Pius II, 1458-1464 Paul II, 1464-1471 Sixtus IV, 1471-1484 Innocent VIII, 1484-1492 Alexander VI, 1492-1503 CHURCH AND COUNCILS 269 B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general accounts. ADAMS, Civilization, 392-415. HENDER- SON, Short history of Germany, I, ch. ix, 203-227. W. BARRY, The papacy and modern times: a political sketch, 1803-1870, New York, 1911 (Home university library), 1-78. R. L. POOLE, Wycliffe and movements for reform, London, 1889, chs. vn-XH. Longer general accounts. H. BRUCE, The age of scJiism: being an outline of the history of the church from A D. 1304 to A D. 1503, London, 1907 (The church universal), ehs. l-vin. LODGE, Close of the middle ages, chs. n, ix, x, xi. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, III, ch. vi, and ch. xni for the Hussite wars. P. VAN DYKE, The age of the renascence: an outline sketch of the history of the papacy from the return from Avignon to the sack of Some (1377- 1527), New York, 1897 (Ten epochs of church history), chs. I-XI. LAVISSE, Histoire de France, III, part II, 127-200, IV, part II, 260- 274. J. LOSERTJI, Gcschichte des spdteren M-ittelalters, 206-243, 309-312, 385-529 (contains excellent bibliographies). Standard surveys of the period. M. CREIGHTON, A history of tlie papacy during the period of the reformation, 5 vols., London, 1882- 1894, new edition, A history of the papacy from the great schism to the sack of Rome, 6 vols., London, 1897, vols. I-II. L. PASTOR, Cfnt-liii-lite der Papste seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters, vols. I-V (to 1549), Leipzig, 1884-1910, translated by F. I. ANTROBUS and R. F. KERR, The history of the popes from the close of the middle ages, vols. I-XII, St. Louis, 1898-1912, vols. I-II (1305-1458), is the work of a Roman catholic. The standard work on the councils of this period is HEFELE, Conciliengesdiichte, VI, 266-1042, and all of vol. VII. GREGOROVIUS, Rome in the middle ages, VI, and VII, pa it I, 1-185. Council of Constance. J. H. WYLIE, The council of Constance to the death of John Hus, London, 1900, is an interesting popular book. E. J. KJTTS, Pope John XXII and Master John Hus of Bohemia, London, 1910, is another general history of the council to the death of John Huss. A very stimulating short study of the conciliar idea is by J. N. FIGGIS, Studies of political thought from Gerson to Grotius, 1414-1685, Cambridge University Press, 1907 (The Birk- beek lectujjes, 1900), essay -n, "The conciliar movement and the papalist reaction." See also W. A. DUNNING, A history of political thtori,*: (inciint fiinl nn ,li, ml. New York, 1902, ch. x. John Huss. LEA, History of the inquisition, II, 427-567, is a well-known and an interesting account of this martyr. The follow- ing biographies have appeared recently. D. S. SCHAFF, John Huss: 270 GENERAL .MEDIEVAL HISTORY PART n Ms Ufe, teachings, and death, after five hundred years, New York, 1915. Count LUTZOW, The life and times of Master John Hus, Lon- don, 1909. W. N. SCHWARZE, John Hus, the martyr of Bohemia: a study of the dawn of protestantism, New York, 1915. Original sources. The papal bulls, Cleriois laicos and Unam sanctam, and various other materials, are translated in THATCHER and McNEAL, Source book, 309-332; ROBINSON, Readings, I, 488-515 (contains the decree Sacrosancta and the decree Frequens) ; HENDER- SON, Historical documents, 432-439, 349-350 (Jubilee of 1300) ; OGG, Source book, 383-397 (includes the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges) ; Translations and reprints, III, no. 6, ' ' The pre-reformation period, " 19-33; II, no. 5, "England in the time of Wy cliff e," 5-9 (Statutes of Provisors and Praemunire). The important work of JAN Hus, De ecclesia: the church, has been translated, with introduction and notes, by D. S. SCHAFF, New York, 1915. The account of POGGIO, who witnessed the trial and death of Jerome, is translated in A literary source-book of the renais- sance, by M. WHITCOMB, 2nd edition, Philadelphia, 1903, 44-51. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 81, has a map showing the division of Europe during the great schism, 1378-1417. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general histories of the church, nos. 394- 498 above, are most useful, although many histories of the Empire, of France, Germany, and Italy, nos. 499-621 above, are of almost equal value. See also the encyclopaedias for the history of the church, nos. 104-114 above. For the Hussite movement the gen- eral histories of Bohemia, nos. 699-703 above, should be consulted. Church reform in the later middle ages. J. GUIRAUD, L'eglise romaine et les origines de la renaissance, 3rd edition, Paris, 1904, begins with the pontificate of Boniface VIII. F. THUDICHUM, Papst- tum und Reformation im Mittelalter, 1143-1517, Leipzig, 1903. G. FICKER, Das ausgehende Mittelalter und sein Verhdltniss zur EC for- mation, Leipzig, 1903. F. ROCQUAIN, La cour de Rome et I 'esprit de reforme avant Lutlier, vols. I-III, Paris, 1893-97. J. HALLER, Papsttum und Kirchenreform : vier Kapitel zur Geschichte des aus- gehenden Mittelalters, vol. I, Berlin, 1903. L. CELIER, "L'idee de reforme a la cour pontifieale du concile de Bale au concile de Latran, ' ' in Revue des questions historiques, LXXXVI (1909), 418-435. Vorreformationsgeschiclitliche Forschungen, edited by H. FINKE, Miinster, 1900 ff. Boniface VIII and Europe. H. FINKE, Aus den Tagen Bonifaz VIII: Funde und Forschungen, Miinster, 1902 (Vorreformationsge- CHURCH AND COUNCILS 271 schichtliche Forschungen, 2). J. DEL LUNGO, Da Bonifazio VIII ad Arrigo VII, Milan, 1899. L. TOSTI, Storia di Bonifazio VIII, 2nd edition, Cassino, 1886. K. WENCK, "War Bonifaz VIII ein Ketzer?" in Historische Zeitschrift, XCIV (1905), 1-66. E. SCHOLZ, "Zur Beurteilung Bonifaz' VIII und seines sittlich-religiosen Char- akters," Histcrische Vierteljahrschrift, IX (1906), 470-515. W. DRUMANN, Geschichte Bcnifacius VIII, 2 vols., Konigsberg, 1852. P. DUPUY, Histcire du different d'entre le pape Boniface VIII et Philippe le Bel rcy de France, Paris, 1655, contains the most im- portant documents from French archives. L. MOHLER, Die Kardindle Jacob und Peter Calcnna: ein Beitrag . zur Geschichte des Zeitalters Bonifaz VIII, Paderborn, 1914 (Quellen und Forschungen aus dem Gebiete der Geschichte, XVII). R. SCHOLZ, Die Publizistik zur Zeit PhUipps dcs Sclwnen und Bonifaz' VIII, Stuttgart, 1903 (Kirchen- rechtliche Abhandlungen, 6-8). F. EHRMANN, Die Bulle "Unam sanctam ' ' des Papstes Bonifacius VIII nach ihrem authentischen Wortlant crklart, Munich, 1896. J. BERCHTOLD, Die Bulle Unam sanctam: ihre wahre Bedeutung und Tragweite fur Stoat und Kirche, Munich, 1887. For a short contemporary account of the scene at Anagni see KERVYN DE LETTENHOVE, "Une relation ine'dite de 1'attentat d'Anagni," in Revue des questions historiques, XI (1872), 511-520. The subject is treated in detail by R. HoLtZMANN, Wilhelm von Nogaret, Eat und Grossiegelbewahrer PhiUpps des Schonen von Frankreich, Freiburg, 1898 (dissertation). See also C. V. LANGLOIS, Les papiers de Guillaume de Nogaret et de Guillaume de Plaisians au Tresor des Chartes, Paris, 1908. "Babylonish Captivity" of the papacy. G. MOLLAT, Les popes d' Avignon (1305-78), Paris, 1912. T. OKEY, The story of Avignon, New York, 1911 (Mediaeval towns). M. SOUCHON, Die Papstu- nifilertirdcng, 2 vols. in one, Miinater, 1907 (Vorreformations- geschichtliche Forschungen, edited by H. FlNKE, IV-V). A. EITEL, Der Kirclicnstaat unter Klemcns V [1305-1314], Berlin, 1906 (part 1 of AKli.-iiiilhmgrn zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte). K. JACOB, Studicn iiber Papst Bcncdikt XII (13S4-4X), Berlin, 1910. C. BOUVIER, Vv-nnc au temps du conctie, 1S1l-13lg, Paris, 1912. K. Mi NT/, "L 'argent et le luxe a la cour pontifical)- ale de Paris) ; see also his older work, Eticnne Marcel ct le gouvernement de la bourgeoisie au quatorzieme siecle (1356-58), Paris, 1860, and his La democratic en France au moyen age, histoire des tendances demo- cratiqucs dans les populations urbaines au XIV* et au XV* siecle, 2 vols., Paris, 1875. L. LAZARD, Un bourgeois de Paris: Etienne Marcel, Paris, 1890. J. TESSIER, La mort d'Etienne Marcel, Paris, 1886. 8. LUCE, Histoire de la Jacquerie, d'aprcs des documents in- . '-'ml edition, Paris, 1894. N. VALOIS, Le conseil du rot aux .\!\'(-, XVe et XV1« sicclcs, Paris, 1888. A. DESJARDINS, Les Etats i-nux, 1350-1614, Paris, 1873. See also the literature on the K-tates General and the Parlement, outline XXV above. The Black Prince and Bertrand du Ouesclin. J. MOISANT, L< 1' '•< .Yi.iY • n Aquiiaine, 1355-70, Paris, 1894. A. DEUIDOUK, Hit- ti.irt- de Du Guw'in, Paris, 1880. D. F. JAMISON, The life and times cf Bertrand du Guf satin: a history of the fourteenth century, London, 1864. S. LUCE, La jcuncssc de Bertrand du Gucsdin, Paris, 1876. M. BOUDET, La Jacquerie des Inching (1S6S-1S84), Paris, 1895. 282 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Charles V, 1364-1380. E. DELACHENAL, Histoire de Charles V, vols. I, II, Paris, 1909. M. PROU, Etude sur les relations politiques d'Urbain V avec les rois dc France Jean II et Charles V, Paris, 1888, part 76 of no. 888 above. E. LAVISSE, "Etude sur le pouvoir royal au temps de Charles V," in Revue historique, XXVI (1884), 233-80. Intermediate period, 1380-1415. N. VALOIS, La France et le grand schisme, is the best general history of France during this period. L. JARRY, La vie politique de Louis de France, due d' 'Orleans (1372-1408), Paris, 1889. L. MIROT, "Une tentative d 'invasion en Angleterre pendant la guerre de cent ans, 1385-86," in Revue des etudes historiques. 1915. A. COVILLE, Les Cabochiens et I'ordonnance de 1413, Paris, 1888. Charles VII, 1422-1461. G. DU FRESNE DE BEAUCOURT, Histoire de diaries VII et de son epoque, 6 vols., Paris., 1881-91. A. VALLET DE VIRIVILLE, Histoire de Charles VII et son epoque, 3 vols., Paris, 1862-65. E. GLASSON, Le parlement de Paris: son role politique depuis le regne de Charles VII jusqu'd la Revolution, 2 vols., Paris, 1901. A. LEROUX, Nouvelles recherches critiques sur les relations politiques de la France avec rAllcmagne de 1378 a 1461, Paris, 1882. A. TUETEY, Les Ecorcheurs sous Charles VII, 2 vols., Paris, 1874. H. PRUTZ, Jacques Coeur von Bourges: Geschichte eincs patriotisohen Kaufmanns aus dem 15 Jahrhundert, Berlin, 1911 (Historische Studien, 93). P. CLEMENT, Jacques Coeur et Charles VII, ou la France au XVe siecle, 2 vols., Paris, 1853, 4th edition, 1874. E. COSNEAU, Le connetable de Richemont (Arthur de Bretagne, 1393— 1458), Paris, 1886. J. QUICHERAT, Rodrique de Villandrano, I'un des combattants pour I 'independance frangaise au quinzieme siecle, Paris, 1879. P. CHAMPION, Francois Villon, sa vie et son temps, 2 vols., Paris, 1913, throws interesting sidelights on life in Paris in the fifteenth century. Joan of Arc. The bibliography by P. LANERY D'ARC, Le livre d'or de Jeanne d'Arc: bibliographic raisonnee et ana'ytique des nuvrages relatifs d Jeanne d'Arc, Paris, 1894, has 2102 numbers. U. CHEVALIER, Repertoire: bio-bibliographie, II, 2513-2546, fur- nished a long alphabetical list which brought the bibliography up to the year 1907. Only specialists can use such stupendous lists with profit. Helpful criticism of the more recent literature is furnished by M. SEPET, "Jeanne d'Arc et ses plus recents historiens, " in Re- vue des questions historiques, LXXXVIII (1910), 107-134, who -writes from the Eoman catholic point of view. The following are some of the most important works by Roman catholics. P. H. DUNAND, Etudes critiques, 5 vols., Paris, 1903-09 ; and his Histoire complete de Jeanne d'Arc, 3 vols., Paris, 1898-1899. HUNDRED YEARS' WAR 283 J. B. J. AYROLES, La vraie Jeanne d'Arc, 5 vo\s, and two supplements, Paris, 1890-1902 (one of the supplements treats L'universitS de Paris au temps de Jeanne d'Arc, et la cause de sa haine contre la liberatrice) . H. DEBOUT, La Jeanne d'Arc, grande histoire illustrte, 2 vols., Paris, 1905-06. H. WALLON, Jeanne d'Arc, Paris, 1860, 7th edition, Paris, 1901, is also illustrated beautifully. J. QUICHERAT, Aperfus nouveaux sur I'histoire de Jeanne d'Arc, Paris, 1850. Following is a selection of a few of the more popular or more recent biographies. L. PETIT DE JULLEVILLE, La venerable Jeanne d'Arc, Paris, 1900 (Les Saints), translated into English, London, 1907. M. SEPET, Jeanne d'Arc, Tours, 1885, often reprinted; and his La bienheureuse Jeanne d'Arc: son vrai caractere, Paris, 1909. A. MARTY, L'histoire de Jeanne d'Arc d'apres les documents orig- inaux et les oeuvres d'art du XVe au XIXe siecle, Paris, 1907, has an introduction by M. SEPET. F. DE BICHEMONT, Jeanne d'Arc d'apres les documents contemporains, Paris, 1913. 8. LUCE, Jeanne d'Arc d Domremy, Paris, 1886, 2nd edition, 1887. J. FABRE, Jeanne d'Arc liberatrice de la France, Paris, 1884. A. FABRE, Etude sur Jeanne d'Arc, Paris, 1912. Mrs. MARGARET OLIPHANT, Jeanne d'Arc: her life and death, London, 1896 (Heroes of the nations). B. GOWER, Jean of Arc, London, 1893. J. MICHELET, Jeanne d'Arc, 141%-SZ, Paris, 1890, is practically a reprint from his Histoire de France, vol. V. A. M. TONNA-BARTHET, Los dos prccesos de la Ven^le Juana dc Arco, Barcelona, 1904. Lady CHARLOTTE BLENNERHASSETT, Die Jungfrau vcn Orleans, Bielefeld, 1906 ( Frauenleben, vol. IX). B. MAHKEXHCLTZ, Jeanne Dare in Geschichte, Legende, Dichtung, auf Grund ncurrcr F^rschung, Leipzig, 1890. K. II ASK. Die Jungfrau von Orleans, Leipzig, 1893. On the military career of Joan of Arc see the following: P. MAKIN, Jeanne d'Arc: tacticien et stratcgiste, 4 vols., Paris, 1889- 90. H. BARANDE, Orleans et Jeanne d'Arc: etude critique et strate- gique du siege d'OrUans, Paris, 1910. F. CANONGE, Jeanne d'Arc guerriere, Paris, 1908. L. JARRY, Compte de I'arme'e anglalse au nege d'Orifans, Paris, 1892. BOUCHER DE MOLANDON and A. DE BEAUCORPS, L'armt'c anglaise vaincue par Jeanne d'Arc, Orleans, 1892. P. CHAMPION, Gutilaume de Flavy, capitaine de Compiegne: contribution d I'huttoirc de Jeanne d'Arc, Paris, 1906. A. SOREL, Ld /'rise de Jeanne d'Arc devant Compiegne, Paris, 1889. Some special studies on Joan of Arc. C1* C. DE MALEYSSIE, Les lilina fit- Jilumne d'Arc et la pretenduc abjuration de Saint-Omn. with a preface by G. HANOTAUX, Paris, 1911. IRENE M. BOPE, "The Iftt.-rs of Jeanne d'Arc: an epitome," in Dublin review, CLVI (1915), 57-72. E. PRUTZ, "Die Briefe Jeanne d'Arcs," in Sitzungs- 284 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII berichte of the Munich Academy, 1914, I; see also his "Die falsehe Jungfrau von Orleans (1436-57)," ibid., 1911; and "Studien zur Geschiehte der Jungfrau von Orleans, ' ' ibid , 1913, 2. H. DENIFLE, and E. CHATELAIN, "Le proces de Jeanne d'Arc et 1 'universitS de Paris," in Memoires de la Scciete de I'histoire de Paris, XXIV (1897), 1-32. G. GOYATJ, Jeanne d'Arc devant I'opinion allemande, Paris, 1907. M. SEPET, "Observations critiques sur I'histoire de Jeanne d'Arc, la relation officielle du proces de condamnation et la diplomatic de 1 'Angleterre, " in Eevue des questions historiques, XCVI (1914), 420-439. P. A. PIDOUX, Un precurseur de la bien- heureuse Jehanne d'Arc, le bienheureux Jehan de Gand: sa vie et son culte, Lille, 1912. A. BOULE, Jeans sans Peur et Jeanne d'Arc: cu, derniere periode de la guerre de cent ans, 2 vols., Paris, 1901. A. SARRAZIN, Jeanne d'Arc et la Normandie au XIV6 siecle, Paris, 1896; see also his Pierre Cauchon, Paris, 1901. E. BERGOT, Jeanne d'Arc et I'histoire mcdernc, Paris, 1914. Louis XI, 1461-1483. P. F. WILLERT, The reign of Louis XI, London, 1876 (Historical handbooks). A. DESJARDINS, Louis XI, sa politique exterieure, ses rapports avec I'ltalie, Paris, 1874. M. THIBAULT, La jeunesse de Louis XI (1423-44), Paris, 1906. E. BEY, Louis XI et les etats pontificaux de France au XVe siecle, d'apres des documents inedits, Grenoble, 1899. H. SEE, Louis XI et les vttles, Paris, 1891. J. COMBET, Louis XI et le saint-siege (1461-1483), Paris, 1903. A. GANDILHON, Contribution a I'histoire de la vie privee et la cour de Louis XI (1423-1481), Bourges, 1906. Burgundy and Charles the Bold. E. PETIT, Dues de Bourgogne de la maison Valois, d'apres des documents inedits, vol. I, Philippe le Hardi, part I, 1363-1380, Paris, 1909, continues his great work, Histoire des dues de Bourgogne de la race capetienne, O. CARTELLIERI, Geschichte der Herzoge von Burgund, 1363-1477, vol. I, Philipp der Kiihne, Leipzig, 1910. A. G. P. B. DE BARANTE, Histoire des dues de Bourgogne, 1364-1477, 13 vols., Paris, 1824 ff., 8th edition, 1858. J. F. KIRK, History of Charles the Bold, 3 vols., London, 1863-1868. P. FREDERICQ, Le role politique et social des dues de Bourgogne dans les Pays-Bas, Ghent, 1875. E. TOUTEY, Charles le Temeraire et la ligue de Constance, Paris, 1902. Charles VIII, 1483-1498. H. F. DELABORDE, L' 'expedition de Charles VIII, Paris, 1888. E. HERBST, Der Zug Karl's VIII nach Italien im Urtett der italienisclien Zeitgenossen, Berlin, 1911 (part 28 of Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte). Original sources. Practically all the essential contemporary sources may be found in the large collections on French history, nos. 965-979 above. Much may also be found in the Eolls Series, xxxi GERMANY IN LATER MIDDLE AGES 285 no. 995 above, such as nos. 22 and 32, Letters and papers illustrative of the wars of the English in France during the reign of Henry VI, king of England, 2 vols., London, 1861-4; and Narratives of the expulsion of tlie English from Normandy, 1449-50, London, 1863, both edited by J. STEVENSON. The treaties of the war are printed in RYMER, Foedera, no 996 above, but we have a better collection by E. COSNEAU, Les grandes traites de la guerre de cent ans, Paris, 1889, vol. 7 of no. 968 above. Almost everything of importance concerning Joan of Arc is in Proces de condamnation et de rehabilitation de Jeanne d'Aro... suiris de tcus les documents historiques qu'on a pu reunir et accom- IKKjncs de notes, edited by J. QUICHERAT, 5 vols., Paris, 1841-1849, part 12 of no. 966 above. The extracts from it, translated into • English by MURRAY, have been mentioned above. Similar trans- lations of extracts into French have been made by J. FABRE, Proces de condemnation de Jeanne d'Arc, d'apres les textes authcntiques des proces-verbaux offisicls, traduction avec eclaircissements, Paris, 1884, and his Proces de rehabilitation de Jeanne d'Arc, raconte et traduit d'apres les textes latins officiels, 2 vols., Paris, 1888, new edition, Paris, 1913. Bibliographies. MOLINIER, Les sources de I'histoire de France, IV-V, dissects the original sources for this period in great detail. The best practical guide for both sources and secondary works is LAVISSE, Histoire de France, IV (bibliographies in footnotes). For the general bibliographies on France, see nos. 21-27 above, and for Belgium, no. 45 above, which is particularly useful for this period. XXXI. GERMANY FROM THE GREAT INTERREGNUM TO MAXIMILIAN I, 1273-1493 A. OUTLINE 1. Contrast between decentralization in Germany and central- ization in France during this period. Persistence of the bond between Germany and Italy based on the idea of universal empire. Importance of the great feudal princes in Germany. The great houses of Ascania, Welf, Wittelsbach, Wettin, and the rising houses of Luxemburg, Ilapsburg, and Hohenzollern. The impor- tant fcclfsinst icnl princes, especially the archbishop of Mainz, Cologne, and Trier (Troves). The independent imperial cities such as Liilwck, Bremen, and Rostock in the north, and Nurnberg and Augsburg in the south. 286 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII 2. The new empire after the Great Interregnum. Rudolf, count of Hapsburg, elected emperor in 1273 chiefly with the aid of his cousin, Frederick III of Hohenzollern, Burggraf of Niirnberg. The Habichtsburg in Switzerland. Rudolf's German policy. War with Ottokar of Bohemia. His failure to have his son succeed him. Adolf of Nassau, 1292-1298, intervened between Rudolf and his son, Albert I, 1298-1308. 3. Henry VII of Luxemburg, 1308-1313, and the sporadic re- vival of old imperial claims in Italy. John of Luxemburg, king of Bohemia in 1310. Henry VII descent into Italy where he died in Siena, 1313. Dante's De monarchia. 4. Origin of the Swiss Confederacy. The league of 1291 be- tween the cantons Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden. Recognized by Henry VII in 1309. The legend of William Tell and the imperial bailiff Gessler. Victory of the Swiss confederates at Morgarten in 1315 over Leopold of Austria. Gradual expulsion of Austria from Switzerland. Battle of Sempach, 1386. Practical inde- pendence of Switzerland, which was finally recognized in the Peace of Westphalia, 1648. 5. Disputed election in 1314 and civil war between Louis of Bavaria and Frederick of Austria, son of Albert. The trouble with the pope at Avignon, John XXII. Louis was crowned emperor in Rome, by the anti-pope Nicholas V. The war of pamphlets. Marsiglio of Padua's Defensor pads and the writings of other supporters of Louis against the papacy such as William of Ockam, John of Jandun, and Michael Cesena, the general of the Franciscan order. The Declaration of Rense, 1338. 6. The development of the electoral college. Gradual emerg- ence of the seven electors, three ecclesiastical lords: (1) Arch- bishop of Mainz, (2) Archbishop of Trier, (3) Archbishop of Cologne; and four lay princes: (4) King of Bohemia, (5) Count Palatine of the Rhine, (6) Duke of Saxony, and the (7) Margrave of Brandenburg. 7. Charles IV of Bohemia, 1347-1378, and the Golden Bull of 1356. The establishment of the university of Prague in 1348. The Black Death in Germany. The Flagellants. 8. Decline of imperial power in the period of the great western schism and the conciliar movement. The emperor Sigismund, 1410- 1437, at the council of Constance. The Hussite wars, 1419-1436. 9. Private leagues strove to preserve order. The Hanseatic League and the Swiss Confederation have been treated elsewhere. League of Rhenish cities. The Swabian League of cities. Asso- ciations of lesser nobles. GERMANY IN LATER MIDDLE AGES 287 10. The Hapsburgs in the fifteenth century, beginning with Albert II in 1438. Frederick III, 1440-1493, and his advisor, Aeneas Sylvius Piccolomini (pope Pius II). Marriage of Fred- eri"k 's son, archduke Maximilian, with Mary, the daughter and heiress of Charles the Bold, duke of Burgundy, who died in 1477. The Turkish menace. Futile efforts at constitutional reform. 11. German civilization in the fifteenth century. Conditions which prepared for the protestant revolt in the sixteenth century. 12. German emperors, 1273-1519. Rudolf I (of Hapsburg), 1273-1292. Adolf (of Nassau), 1292-1298. Albert I (of Hapsburg), 1298-1308. Henry VII (of Luxemburg), 1308-1314. Louis IV (of Bavaria), 1314-1347. (Frederick of Austria, rival.) Charles IV (of Luxemburg), 1347-1378. (Giinther of Schwarzburg, rival.) Wenzel (of Luxemburg), 1378-1400. Rupert (of the Palatinate), 1400-1410. Sigismund (of Luxemburg), 1410-1438. (Jobst of Moravia, rival.) Albert II (of Hapsburg), 1438-1440. Frederick III (of Hapsburg), 1440-1493. Maximilian I (of Hapsburg), 1493-1519. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOE READING Brief general accounts. BRYCE, Holy Roman empire, chs. xin-xv, xvn. HKNDKHSON, A short history of Germany, I, chs. Vl-x. There are a few stimulating pages in E. LAVISSE, Political history of Europe, 45-57. Longer general accounts. LODGE, The close of the middle ages, chs. i, v-vn, xvn. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire gentrale, III, rh. xii. LOSKKTII. Geschichte de* spdtercn Mittelalters, 177-203, 246-324, 416-452, 643-670. GEBHARDT, Handbuch dcr deutschen Geschichte, I, chs. Xll-xiv. W. STUBBS, Germany in the later middle ti'iex, IgOO-lSOO. Marsiglio of Padua. R. L. POOLE, Illustrations of the history of medieval th( u/ilit. rh. ix, "The opposition to the temporal claims of the p:ip:iry. " W. A. DUNNING, A history of political theories, ch. ix, "Theories during the n Jahren 1S91-1SOS, vol. I, Berlin, 1913 (in Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 42). D. SCARPETTA, Giovanna I di Napoli, Naples, 1903. W. ST. CLAIR BADDELEY, Queen Johana I of Naples, Sicily, and Jerusalem, London, 1892; and his Robert the Wise and his heirs 1278-1352, London, 1897. A. D. MESSER, Le codice aragonese, etude gcnirale, publication du manuscrit de Paris: contribution d I'histoire dcs Aragonais de Naples, Paris, 1912 (in UiMiotheque du XV* siocle, vol. XVII). M. SCHIPA, Contese sociali iiii/iulctane nel medio evo, Naples, 1908. P. DURRIEU, Les archives (mill-vines de Naples: etude sur les rcgistres du roi Charles 7«r (1S65- 1985), 2 vols., Paris, 1886-1887, parts 46, 51 of no. 887 above. L. CADIER, Essai sur I 'administration du royaume de Naples sous Charles I«r et Charles II d'Anjou, Paris, 1891, part 59 of no. 887 above. \V. F.SRAEL, Konig Sobert von Neapel und Kaiser Heinrich VII, Hers- feld, 1903. D. J. AMETLLER Y VINYAS, Alfonso V de Aragon en Italia y la crisis rclii/iosa del siglo 15, vol. I, Gerona, 1903. F. SCADUTO, Stato e chicsa nclle due Sicilie dai Normanni ai tempi nostri, 302 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Palermo, 1886. S. V. Bozzo, Note storiche siciliane del secolo XIV, Palermo, 1882. Other states of Italy. E. G. GARDNER, The story of Siena and San Gemignano, London, 1902. E. HUTTON, Siena and southern Tuscany, New York, 1910. ELLA NOYES, The story of Ferrara, Lon- don, 1904 (Mediaeval towns). M. ALLEN, A history of Verona, New York, 1910. ALETHEA WIEL, The story of Verona, 2nd edition, London, 1904. C. CIPOLLO, Compendia di storia politica di Verona, 1900. Mrs. JANET A. Ross and NELLY BRICHSEN, The story of Pisa, London, 1909 (Mediaeval towns). KATHERINE JAMES, The city of contrasts: a story of old Perugia, London, 1915. MARGARET SYMONDS and LINA D. GORDON, The story of Perugia, London, 1900 (Mediaeval towns). VICINI, / podesta di Modena, part I (1156-1336), Eome, 1914. E. HUTTON, Sigismundo Pandolfo Malatesta, lord of Eimini: a story of a XV century Italian despot, New York, 1906. JULIA CARTWRIGHT, Isabella D'Este, Marchioness of Mantua, 1474-1539, New York, 1903. H. SPANGENBERG, Can Grande della Scala, 2 vols., Berlin, 1892-1895. J. DENNISTOUN, Memoirs of the dukes of Urbino, illustrating the arms, arts, and literature of Italy, 1440-1639, 3 vols., London, 1853-1854, new edition, 1909. ALETHEA WIEL, The romance of the house of Savoy 1003-1519, 2 vols., New York, 1898. Corsica. A. AMBROSI, Histoire des Corses et de leur civilisation, Bastia, 1914. L. CAIRO, The history of Corsica, London, 1899. Original sources. The large collections of sources for Italian history are listed above, nos. 988-994 above; see also vols. XII- XIV of no. 986 above. For Italy, the special collections for indi- vidual states are especially important, but no attempt can be made here to list even the most important ones. For details, see the special bibliographies listed below. The letters of COLA DI EIENZO have been edited and studied anew by K. and P. PIUR, Briefwechsel des Cola di Eienzo, Berlin, 1912 (vol. II of no. 750 above). Epistolario di Cola di Eienzo, edited by A. GABRIELLI, Rome, 1890, is an older collection. For Venice, special mention may be made of Calendar of State Papers: Venetian, vol. I, 1202-1607, edited by R. BROWN, London, 1864. For SAVONAROLA, see Scelta di prediche e scritta di Fra Girolamo Savonarola con nuovi documenti intorno alia sua vita, edited by P. VILLARI and E. CASANOVA, Florence, 1898. Bibliographies. The general bibliographies for Italy are listed above, nos. 37-41. See also no. 19 above, 447-449 (a very con- venient summary of the most essential source material), and 479- 503. RENAISSANCE IN ITALY 303 Special bibliographies. PEDONE LAURIEL, Bibliografia del 6 c<-iitrnario del Vespro Siciliano, Palermo, 1882; see also C. CIPOLLA, "Les Vepres Siciliennes: compte-remlu des principales publications historiques parues a propos du septieme oentenaire c616bre a Palerme le 31 mars 1882," in Revue historique, XXI (1883), 135- 147. G. SORANZO, Bibliografia Veneziana, Venice, 1885 (see also the bibliography for ch. vm of the Cambridge modern history, I). L. S. OLSCHKI, Bibliotheca Savonarohana, Florence and Venice, about 1902 (see also the bibliography for ch. v of the Cambridge modern history, I). L. FONTANA, Bibliografia degli statuti dei comuni dell' Italia superiore, 3 vols., Turin, 1907. XXXTTT. THE REMARKABLE INTEREST IN ANCIENT CLASSICAL LITERATURE, ART, AND ARCHAEOLOGY IN ITALY DURING THE FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES A. OUTLINE 1. The meaning of "Renaissance" and "Revival of learning." As general historical terms these expressions are rapidly losing the definiteness and color which was given to them by such writers as Burckhardt, Voigt, and Symonds, however useful they may still be in the history of certain branches of literature and art in west- ern Europe. Humanism. Litterae humaniores. The "discovery of man" and the "discovery of the world." Controversies be- tween "ancients and moderns." "Battles of books." 2. Retrospect: interest in these subjects during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. For details see outline XVIII in part III below. 3. Dante, 1265-1321, and the ancient world. For details con- cerning the scholarship of Dante see outline XXVIII in part III below. 4. The place of Petrarch, 1304-1376, in the history of culture. Tin- growth of his interest in the Latin classics. Means by which h«> interested others in them. His slight knowledge of Greek. Hi- ^i-.-irch for manuscripts. The retreat at Vaucluse. His popu- larity as a poet. His famous Letttrn ami other writings, especially the Africa. The influence of the Latin revival on Italian. 5. The feverish search in i lieval libraries for the manuscripts of ancient classical belles lefties. I'oggio Braccioliui, 13SO- 1 -!."•!». :it the council of Constam-e and his subsequent travels. The col- 304 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII lection of Greek books by Aurispa (died 1459) and Filelfo, 1398- 1481. 6. Interest in ancient classical epigraphy and archaeology. Ciriaco, about 1391-1450, "the Schliemann of his time." Flavio Biondo, 1388-1463, and his four great works on the antiquities and history of Rome and Italy. 7. Interest in Greek. The share of Petrarch and Boccaccio, 1313-1375, in creating this interest. Greek scholars from Con- stantinople in Italy. Manuel Chrysoloras (about 1350-1415) in Florence 1396. Gemistos Plethon, about 1356-1450, and Bessarion, 1395 or 1403-1472, at the council of Ferrara-Florence, 1438-1439. Theodorus Gaza, about 1400-1475. Controversies over the merits of Plato and Aristotle. The fall of Constantinople in 1453 did little or nothing to encourage the study of Greek in the west. 8. Florence was the center of humanism. The monastery of Santo Spirito and Luigi de' Marsigli (died 1394). Coluccio Salu- tati, 1330-1406. The Medici as patrons of literature. Niccolo de' Niccoli, 1363-1437, Leonardo Bruni, 1369-1444, in the time of Cosimo de' Medici. The brilliant circle of Lorenzo de' Medici. The Platonic Academy of Florence. Ficino, 1433-1499. Pico della Mirandola, 1463-1494. Politian, 1454-1494. 9. Humanism in Rome. Its effect upon the papacy and on the Christian religion. Popularity of pagan ideas and rites. The humanist popes Nicolas V, 1447-1455, and Pius II (Eneas Sylvius), 1458-1464. The Academy of Rome and Pomponius Laetus, 1425- 1498. 10. The Academy of Naples in the time of Alfonso of Aragon, 1442-1458. Laurentius Valla, 1407-1457, and his criticism of the Donation of Constantine. His famous book On the elegancies of Latin language. Beccadelli, 1394-1471. Pontano, 1426-1503. San- nazaro, 1458-1530. 11. Aldus Manutius, 1449-1515, the printer of Greek texts in Venice. In 1500 he founded the New Academy of Hellenists in Venice. 12. Other centers of humanism. The Visconti and Sforza as patrons of letters in Milan. Cangrande della Scala of Verona. Federigo, count of Montefeltro, and his famous library at Urbino. The humanism of the fierce Sigismondo Malatesta of Rimini. 13. In the schools, humanism brought about a revolution the effects of which have lasted down to this day. Vittorino da Felt re, 1378-1446, in Mantua. Guarino da Verona, 1370-1460, in Ferrara. The De ordine docendi et studendi (1459) of "his son, Battista Guarino. Comparative lack of interest in humanism in universities. RENAISSANCE IN ITALY 305 14. Renaissance art contrasted with medieval art. The wonder- ful development of painting which culminated in the first half of the sixteenth century. Important painters: Cimabue, 1240-about 1302; Giotto, 1276-1336; Masaccio, 1402-1429; Fra Angelico, 1387- 1455; Filippo Lippi, 1406-1469; Botticelli, 1447-1510; Ghirlandajo, 1449-1498; Leonardo da Vinci, 1452-1519; Raphael, 1483-1520; Titian, 1477-1576; Correggio, 1494-1534. Important architects: Brunelleschi, 1377-1446; Leo Battista Alberti, 1404-1472; Bramante, about 1444-1514. Important sculptors: Orcagna, 1308-1368, Ghi- berti, 1378-1455; Donatello, 1386-1466; Luca della Robbia, 1400- 1482. The genius of Michael Angelo Buonarroti, 1475-1564. 15. The invention of printing, about 1450. The Gutenberg con- troversy. 16. The spread and influence of the Italian culture of this period. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general surveys. ADAMS, Civilization, ch. xv. LODGE, The close of the middle ages, ch. xxil. Longer accounts. P. VILLARI, The life and times of Niccolb Machiurtlli. I, 63-167. Cambridge modern history, I, chs. xvi-xvu. I,. \\ISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire gencrale, III, ch. xi. J. LOSERTH, I'usfhirhtr dix sjiiittrcn Mittdaltcrs, 613-643. Short books on the subject. J. A. SYMONDS, A short history of tin n •iHii.xtnince, abridged by A. PEARSON, New York, 1894. J. E. SANDYS, Harvard lectures on the revival of learning, Cambridge, 1905. EDITH SICHEL, The renaissance, New York, 1914 (Home uni- versity library). W. H. HUDSON, The story of the renaissance, New York, 1912. J. B. OLDHAM, The renaissance, New York, 1912 (Temple primers). Mrs. LILIAN F. FIELD, An introduction to the study of the renaissance, London, 1898. P. SCHAFF, The renaissance, New York, 1891 (also in vol. Ill of the Papers of the American 1 1/ of i-lnirch hixlnry) is scarcely more than a syllabus with copious references. J. E. SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, II, is a handy volume for reference. Meaning of "Renaissance." The easiest introduction to the present rontn>\ er-sy roiicerning the "Renaissance" may be got by reading in juxtaposition two articles in the /•,'»<• i/<7o/«;«// and A. A. HOPKINS, 4 vols., New York, 1902 (Temple classics) ; the first volume of a new English translation by G. DE VERB, to be com- plete in 10 vols., was published by the Medici society of London in 1911, in commemoration of Vasari 's fourth centenary. VIT- Krvirs (first century A.D.), The ten books on nn-liiti dnrc, translated by the late M. H. MORGAN, Harvard University Press, 1914, )i.ii,iitific(iti' of Julius II to that of Paul III, Boston and New York, 1906. Naples. W. GOETZ, Konig Robert von Neapel (1S09-1S4S) : seine Persohnlichkcit und sein Vcrhaltnis zum Humanismus, Tubingen, 1910. 312 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Laurentius Valla. L. BAROZZI and E. SABBADINI, Studi sul Panor- mita e sul Valla, Florence, 1891 (the portion on Laurentius Valla is by SABBADINI). G. MANCINI, Vita 'di Lorenzo Valla, Florence, 1891. M. v. WOLFF, Lorenzo Valla: sein Leben und seine Werlce, Leipzig, 1893. W. SCHWAHN, Lorenzo Valla: ein Bcitrag zur Ge- schichte des Humanism/us, Berlin, 1896 (dissertation, Rostock). Aldus Manutius. A. F. DIDOT, Aide Manuce et I'hellenisme a Venise, Paris, 1875. Religion and humanism. J. OWEN, The skeptics of the Italian renaissance, 2nd edition, London, 1893. E. WALSER, ' ' Christentum und Antike in der Auff assung der italienischen Friihrenaissance, ' ' in Archiv fur Kulturgeschichte, XI (1913), 273-288. C. DEJOB, La foi religieuse en Italic au XIV6 siecle, Paris, 1905. Education. E. SABBADINI, La scuola e gli studi di Guarini, Catania, 1896; see also his recent edition of the Letters of Guarino of Verona, vol. I, Venice, 1915. Renaissance art in general. E. MUNTZ, Histoire de I'art pendant la renaissance, 3 vols., Paris, 1889-95 (contains good bibliographies) ; see also his Les precurseurs de la renaissance, Paris, 1882; Les arts d la cour des papes pendant le XV6 et le XVIe siecte, 3 vols., Paris, 1878-1882, parts 4 and 9 of no. 887 above; La renaissance en Italic et en France d I'epoque de Charles VIII, Paris, 1885. A. VENTURI, Storia dell' arte italiana, vols. I-VII, Milan, 1901-1915 (vols. IV- VII treat the art of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries). A. PHILIPPI. Die Eunst der Renaissance in Italien, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1905. H. WOLFFLIN, Die Tdassische Kunst: Einfuhrung in die italienisclie Renaissance, Munich, 1901, translated by W. ARMSTRONG, The art of the Italian renaissance: a handbook for students and travellers, New York, 1903. Mrs. LUCY E. BAXTER, The renaissance of art in Italy: an illustrated sketch, New York, 1883, new edition, 1888. W. H. GOODYEAR, Renaissance and modern art, Meadville, Pennsylvania, 1894. Many books listed under outline XXVII in part III below, on medieval art, also treat renaissance art. Criticism of renaissance art. W. PATER, The renaissance: studies in art and poetry, London, 1873, newest edition, 1910. J. EUSKIN Mornings in Florence, New York, 1876; and his Modern painters, 4 vols., New York, 1858-1859; and his Stones of Venice, 3 vols., New York, 1860. H. TAINE, Philosophic de I 'art en Italic, Paris, 1866, 3rd edition, 1880. VIOLET PAGET (VERNON LEE, pseudonym), Euphorion: studies of the antique and the mediaeval in the renais- sance, 2nd edition, revised, London, 1885 ; and her Renaissance fancies and studies, 1895, 2nd edition, London, 1909. M. CARRIERS, Die Kunst RENAISSANCE IN ITALY 313 im Zu-sammfnhang der Culiurentwicklung, 3rd, revised, edition, 5 vols., Leipzig, 1877-86, vol. IV, Renaissance und Reformation. Renaissance painting. B. BERENSON, The Florentine painters of the renaissance, New York, 1896, 3rd edition, revised, 1909; and his The Venetian painters of the renaissance, New York, 1895, 3rd edi- tion, 1897; The north Italian painters of the renaissance, New York [1907]; and The central Italian painters of the renaissance, 2nd edition, revised, New York, 1909. J. A. CROWE and G. B. CAVAL- CASELLE, A history of painting in north Italy from the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, edited by T. BORENIUS, 3 vols., London, 1912; and their A new history of painting in Italy, 3 vols., London and New York, 1908-1909. A. WOLTMANN and K. WOERMANN, Geschichte der Malerei, Leipzig, 1879-1888, translated by CLARA BELL, History of painting, vol. II, The painting of the renaissance. B. MUTIIEH, The history of painting from the fourth to the early nineteenth a ictury, translated from German by G. KRIEHN, 2 vols., New York, 1907. Sir W. BAYLISS, Seven angels of the renascence: the story of art from Cimabue to Claude, London, 1905. JULIA ADY, The painters of Florence from the 13th to the 16th century, New York, 1901. M. G. ZIMMERMANN, Giotto und die Kuiist Italiens im Mittel- alter, vol. I, Leipzig, 1899. ALICE V. V. BROWN, A short history of Italian painting, London and New York, 1914. C. H. CAJTIN, How to study pictures by means of a series of comparisons of paintings and painters from Cimabue to Monet, New York, 1906. L. VENTURI, Le origini delta pittura veneziana, 1300-1500, Venice, 1907. M. BRYAN, Dictionary of painters and engravers: biographical and critical, I vols., London, 1903-1908. Renaissance architecture. W. J. ANDERSON, The architecture of tin- r< •iinissancc in Italy, 4th edition, London, 1909. G. SCOTT, The architecture of humanism, Boston, 1914. A. SCHUETZ, Die Renais- stincc in Italian: cine Sammlung der werthvollsten Monumente, 4 \ol-i., Hamburg, 1893-96. L. PALUSTRE, L 'architecture de la renais- Paris, 1892. R. KEDTENBACHER, Die Architectur der italten- I!< in i i nuance: Entwickelungsgeschichte und Formcnlehre der- , Frankfurt, 1886. Renaissance sculpture. LUCY J. FREEMAN, Italian sculpture of the renaissance, New York, 1901. G. 8. DA VIES, Renascence: the sculptured tombs of the fifteenth century in Rome, London, 1910. D. A. E. L. BALCARRES, The evolution of Italian sculpture, London, 1909. W. BODE, Florentine sculptors of the renaissance, New York, 1909. W. BODE, Die italicnisclien Bildhaucr- der Renaissance, Ber- lin, 1887. 314 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PAKTII Leonardo da Vinci. O. SIREN, Leonardo da Vinci: the artist and the man, Yale University Press, 1915. P. DUHEM, Etudes sur Leonardo de Vinci, ccux qu'il a lus et ceux qui I'ont lu, 2 vols., Paris, 1906-09. E. MUNTZ, Leonardo Da Vinci, 2 vols., London, 1898. Michael Angelo. E. KOLLAND, Michaelangelo, translated from the French by F. STREET, New York, 1915, another translation by F. LEES, The life of Michael Angelo, London, 1912. H. THODE, Michelangelo und das Ende der Renaissance, 3 vols., in 4, Berlin, 1902-1912. H. F. GRIMM, Life of MicJiael Angelo, translated by BUNNETT, new edition, 2 vols., Boston, 1896. Individual biographies of other artists may be found in such series as: Great artists series; Great masters in painting and sculpture, edited by G. C. WILLIAM- SON ; Masters in art, Boston, Bates, 1900 ff . ; and Kiinstlermono- graphien, edited by H. KNACKFUSS, Bielefeld, 1899 ff., translated as Monograplis on artists. Original sources. Das Zeitalter der Renaissance: ausgewdhlte Quellen zur Geschiohte der italienisclien Kultur, edited by MARIE HERZFELD, Jena, 1911 ff. Die Renaissance in Brief en von Dichtern, Kiinstlern, Staatsmanner, Gelehrten und Frauen, edited by L. SCHMIDT, vol. I, Leipzig, 1908, is an uncritical collection for the general public. VESPASIANO DA BISTICCI [died 1498] Vite di uomini Ulustri del secolo XV, Florence, 1849, new edition in 3 vols., Bologna, 1892. F. PETRARCH, Epistolae de rebus famttiaribus et variae, 3 vols., edited by G. FRACASSETTI, 3 vols., Florence, 1859-1863. These famous letters were also translated into Italian by the same editor, with notes, Lettere di Francesco Petrarca delle cose familiari libri venti- quattro, lettere varie libro unico, 5 vols., Florence, 1892; and Lettere senile, 2 vols., Florence, 1892. The most serviceable edition of the famous work of LAURENTIUS VALLA on the Donation of Constantine, De falso credita et ementita Donatione Conslantini, with a French translation, is by A. BONNEAU, La donation de Constantin, Paris, 1879. For a general survey of this question of historical criticism, see C. B. COLEMAN, Constantine the Great and Christianity, New York, 1914, who will publish an English translation of Valla's work on the Donation in no. 949 above. Thoughts on art and life by LEONARDO DA VINCI, translated by M. BARING, Boston, 1906. Epistolario di COLUCCIO SALUTATI, edited by F. NOVATI, vols. I-III, Eome, 1891-1896, vols. XV-XVII of no. 990 above. Briefwechsel des ENEAS SILVIUS PICCOLOMINI, edited by E. WOLKAN, Vienna, 1909. AusgewaMte Schriften von GIOVANNI CHRISTIAN SPAIN 315 Pico DELLA MIRANDOLA, edited, with an introduction, by A. LIEBERT, Jena and Leipzig, 1905. Large collections of sources for the history of Italy in general are listed above, nos. 988-994. Bibliographies. There are general bibliographies in VOIGT, Die Wiederbelebung, II, 511-525, which is especially valuable for original sources; SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, II, xv-xix; and Cambridge modern history, I, 779-783. E. CALVI, Bibliografia an- iilitica Petrarchese, 1877-1904, Rome, 1904, is a very valuable critical bibliography on Petrarch. Now see also the Catalogue of the Petrarch collection bequeathed by Willard Fiske to the Cornell uni- ii-raity library, compiled by MARY FOWLER, Oxford University Press, 1916. XXXIV. CHRISTIAN SPAIN IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES A. OUTLINE 1. The protracted crusade against the Moors was the chief factor which molded the life of Christian Spain in the middle ages. Its effect upon political and social institutions and upon the character of the people. 2. The nuclei of Christian states in northern Spain: (1) Asturias (capital Oviedo), with Cantabria, developed into Leon and Castile (Alfonso III, the Great, 866-910); (2) Navarre (Basques); (3) Aragon; (4) Barcelona (Spanish mark of Charlemagne) developed into the kingdom Catalonia; (5) Galicia (St. James of Compo- stella) gave rise to Portugal, but was itself won by Castile. 3. The breakup of the Ommiad Caliphate of Cordova. Death of the great minister and general Almansor in 1002. The division of the Caliphate into several small states between 1002 and 1031. 4. Union of Castile and Aragon under Ferdinand I of Castile, 1033-1065. The reconquest of Spain. In 1085 Alfonso VI, 1065- 1109, captured Toledo. His famous condottiere, Ruy Diaz, the Cid Campeador (died 1099). The Moors invited the Almoravides from Africa, who, under Yussuf, defeated Alfonso at the battle of Zallaca, 1086. Rivalry between the Almoravides and the Almo- hades during the twelfth century. 5. The rise of Aragon. Alfonso I, cl Batallador, 1104-1134, took Saragossa in 1118. Union of Aragon with Catalonia or Barcelona, thus giving Aragon access to the Mediterranean and wresting Catalonia from French influence. In 1283 Aragon took Valencia and soon developed a Mediterranean policy under James I, 1213- 1276, the first step being the conquest of the Balearic Islands. 316 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII 6. The papacy and the Eoman church in Spain. Influence of the crusades in drawing the attention of the papacy to Spain. The Cistercians in Spain. The Cistercian military monastic orders of Calatrava and Alcantara. The order of St. James (Santiago). •The great interest of pope Innocent III, 1198-1216, in Spain. In his pontificate was fought the decisive battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, 1212, which finally gave the Christians the upper hand in the peninsula. 7. The constitutional history of Spain. Importance of the burgher class in the struggle against the Moors. The cortes in the twelfth century. The hermandades, or brotherhoods of cities, and the nobles. The peculiar office of the jitsticia in Aragon. Strength of royalty in Spain. The Siete Partidas of Alfonso X of Castille. 8. The predominance of Castile under Saint Ferdinand III, 1214-1252 (a contemporary of Saint Louis IX of France). Final union between Leon and Castile in 1230. The winning of Anda- lusia. Capture of Cordova in 1236, of Seville in 1244, and of Xeres and Cadiz in 1250. The Moors were now confined to Granada, but there they were allowed to remain until 1492. The castles of Alhambra and Generalife. 9. After 1250 interest centers in the balance of power between the Christian states in the peninsula and in their relations with the states of Europe. 10. Castile, 1252-1469. Alfonso X, the Wise, 1252-1284, and Eichard of Cornwall became rival Holy Eoman emperors during the Great Interregnum. Anarchy after his death. Under Alfonso XI, the Moors laid siege to Tarifa in 1340, but they were badly defeated in the battle of Salado. Alfonso took Algeciras in 1344. The rivalry between Peter I, the Cruel, 1350-1369, and his half- brother Henry of Trastamara led to the battle between Du Guesclin and the Black Prince on Spanish soil, at Najara, in 1367. Castile had a very troublous century under the rule of the house of Trasta- mara, 1369-1468. Marriage of Isabella, with Ferdinand, the heir of Aragon, in 1469. 11. Aragon, 1276-1469. Peter III, 1276-1285, secured Sicily after the Sicilian Vespers, 1282. In the reign of James III, 1327- 1336, Sardinia was taken from Genoa and Pisa and annexed to Aragon. Alfonso V, 1416-1458, wrested Naples from the second house of Anjou. The union with Castile, 1469. 12. Union of Aragon and Castile under Ferdinand II, 1479- 1516, and Isabella, 1474-1504, "the Catholic kings," and the foundation of the kingdom of Spain. • The fall of Granada, the expulsion of the Jews, and the discovery of America in 1492. CHRISTIAN SPAIN 317 13. Spanish culture in the later middle ages, especially in Catalonia. Heresy and the inquisition. The Jews in Spain. 14. Portugal. Early growth of Portugal around Oporto (Porto Calle) and Coimbra, included in 1064. Establishment of the county of Portugal, 1095. In 1140 count Alfonso became king of Portugal and in 1147, with the help of German and Dutch adven- turers, took Lisbon from the Moors. Thus by 1250 Portugal had reached its present limits. Development of a navy in the twelfth century. Internal organization of Portugal under king Diniz (Dionysius, 1279-1325), "Denis the Laborer." Prince Henry the Navigator, 1394-1460, and the beginnings of Portugal's heroic age. In 1486 Vasco Da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope, and in 1598 he reached Calicut, India. In 1500 the Portuguese discovered Brazil. 15. Kings of Castile, 1214-1504. Saint Ferdinand III, 1214-1252. Alfonso X, 1252-1284. Sancho IV, 1284-1295. Ferdinand IV, 1295-1312. Alfonso XI, 1312-1350. Peter I (the Cruel), 1350-1369. Henry II, of Trastamara, 1369-1379. John I, 1379-1390. Henry III, 1390-1406. John II, 1406-1454. Henry IV. 1454-1474. Isabella, 1474-1504. 16. Kings of Aragon, 1213-1516. James I, 1213-1276. Peter III, 1276-1285. Alfonso III, 1285-1291. James II, 1291-1327. Alfonso IV, 1327-1336. Peter IV, 1336-1387. John I, 1387-1395. Martin, 1395-1410. Ferdinand I, 1412-1416. Alfonso V, 1416-1458. John II, 1458-1479. Fer.linan.l II, 1479-1516. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS F-OR READING Brief general accounts. HELMOLT, History of the world, IV, 510-540. TOUT, Empire and papacy, 464-477; together with LODGE, 318 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Close of the middle ages, 468-493. History of aU nations, X, 336- 357. CLARA C. PERKINS, Builders of Spain, 118-151. LEES, The central period of the middle ages, 239-244, together with ELEANOR C. LODGE, The end of the middle age, 240-254. LOSERTH, Geschichte des spateren Mittelalters, 52-57, 345-359, 693-707. Longer accounts. M. A. S. HUME, The Spanish people, 103-305. LAVISSE and BAMBAUD, Histoire generale, II, eh. xn, and III, eh. ix. H. E. WATTS, The Christian recovery of Spain: being the story of Spain from the Moorish conquest to the fall of Granada (711-1492 A.D.J, New York, 1893 (Story of the nations). Standard works. U. K. BURKE, A history of Spain, I, 133-141, 152-162, 178-388, and all of vol. II. ALTAMIRA, Historia de Espana, I, 351-646, and all of vol. II. The Cid. H. B. CLARK, The Cid Campeador and the waning of the crescent in the west, New York, 1897 (Heroes of the nations). J. ORMSBY, The poem of the Cid, London, 1879. The cortes. R. B. MERRIMAN, "The cortes of the Spanish king- doms in the later middle ages, ' ' in American historical review, XVI (1910-1911), 476-495, contains important bibliographical notes. James the First of Aragon, 1213-1270. F. D. SWIFT, The life and times of James the First tlte conqueror, king of Aragon, Valencia, and Majorca, Oxford, 1894. C. B. BEAZLEY, James 1 of Aragon, Oxford. 1890. Heresy and inquisition in Spain. H. C. LEA, A history of tin1 inquisition of Spain, 4 vols., New York, 1906-1907, I, 1-288; and his The Moriscos of Spain: their conversion and expulsion, Philadel- phia, 1901, chs. l-n; to which may be added his History of the inquisition of the middle ages, II, ch. in. Portugal and Spain in the age of discovery. E. P. CHEYNEY, European background, 60-103. Cambridge modern history, I ch. I. Portugal. H. M. STEPHENS, Portugal, New York, 1891 (Story of the nations), chs. i-vin, is the best account. V. DE BRAGAXTA CUNHA, Eight centuries of Portuguese monarchy: a political study, London, 1911, has a very slight sketch on medieval Portugal in ch. I, but he appends a long list of books, pp. 255-265. Henry the Navigator. E. G. BOURNE, Essays in historical criti- cism, New York, 1901, "Prince Henry the Navigator," 173-189, is a good short sketch. J. P. OLIVEIRA MARTINS, Os filhos de Dom Jodo I, Lisbon, 1891, translated from the 1901 edition by J. J. ABRAHAM and W. E. REYNOLDS, The golden age of Prince Henry the Navigator, London, 1914. C. R. BEAZLEY, Prince Henry the Navigator, London, 1895. CHRISTIAN SPAIN 319 Ferdinand and Isabella. Cambridge modern history, I, ch. xi, " The catholic kings, " will serve as a short introductory sketch. IRENE L. PLUNKET, Isabel of CasiUe and t)ie making of the Spanish natii.n, 1451-1504, New York, 1915. Mrs. JULIA (CARTWRIGHT) ADY, Isabella the Catholic, New York, 1914 (Heroes of the nations). C. HARE, A queen of queens and the making of Spain, London and New York, 1906. W. H. PRESCOTT, History of the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella tlie Catholic, 3 vols., London, 1838 (often reprinted). Original sources. The chronicle of James I, king of Aragon [1213-1276], translated, with an historical introduction, by P. DE GAYANOOS, London, 1883. The chronicle of the Cid, translated from the Spanish by R. SOUTHEY, London, 1883 (Morley's universal library), is "based partly upon an Arab contemporary original now lost ' ' — BURKE. Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 82-83. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general histories of Spain and Portugal are listed above, nos. 622-642. See the books on the church in Spain, nos. 467-468 above. See also nos. 813 and 103 above. For the publications of the Seal academia de la historia of Madrid, see no. 907 above. General and miscellaneous accounts. M. COLMEIRO, Reyes cris- titiiKis desde Alfonso VI hasta Alfonso XI en CastUla, Aragdn, \ai-arra y Portut/al (1072-131$), vol. I, Madrid, 1891, part of no. 622 above. .1. DE DIGS DE LA RADA Y DELOADO, La Espana cristiana (970-1072), Madrid, 1890, part of no. 622 above, is incomplete. L. DOLLFUS, />/•« KsiHianea au XI" siccte, Paris, 1903. A. SALCEDO Y Ruiz, Historia de Espana: resumen critico, Madrid [1914], is illus- trated profusely. A. PAZ Y MELIA, Espana dc la cdad media, Madrid, 1898. CONDE DE TORREANAZ, Los conscjos del rey durantc la edad media, 2 vols., Madrid, 1884-1892. E. E. HALE and SUSAN HALE, Spain, New York, 1886 (Story of the nations), is far below the level of other works in this series. DEL CASTILLO, Gran diccionario geo- grdfico, estadistico y histdrico dc Espana, Barcelona, 1890 ff. G. CARO, "Aus der spanischcn Gewhiohte im Mittelalter, " in Historische ri,rt,-lj,ilir.«i-l,rift, XVI (1913), 161-180. H. FlNKE, ' ' Das Auf- bliilirn ill r Qeschichtaforwhung in Spanien," in Historische Zeit- xrln-ift, CXIII (1914), 70-82, sees ho|>eful signs of improvement in the study and writing of history in Spain. The Cid. WII.I.KMAKKS. Le Cid: m>n hixloire, ses Icyendet, Mt imitm. Brussels, 1873. R. P. A. DOZY, Le Cid d'aprcs de nouveaux ilnrii im nts, new edition, Loyden, 1860. 320 GENERAL MEDIEVAL. HISTORY PART n Castile. J. CATALINA Y GARCIA, Castitta y Leon durante los rein- ados de Pedro I, Enrique II, Juan I, y Enrique III, vols. I-II, Madrid, 1891-1901, part of no. 622 above. G. DAUMET, Etude sur I'alliance de la France ct de la Castiile au 14-15° siecles, Paris, 1898, contains important original sources. C. FERNANDEZ DURO, La marina de Castilla, Madrid, 1894, part of no. 622 above. J. LAURENTIE, Saint Ferdinand III (1198?-1252), Paris, 1910 (Les saints). W. HERRMANN, Alfons X von Castilien als romischer Konig, Berlin [1897] (dissertation). Peter I, the Cruel, 1350-1369, has attracted considerable atten- tion and some attempts have been made to vindicate him, e.g., J. GUICHOT, D. Pedro Primero de Castilla: cnsayo de vindicacion critico-historica de su reinado, Seville, 1878. FERNANDEZ GUERRA, El rey D. Pedro de Castilla, Madrid, 1868. P. MERIMEE, Histoire de Don Pedre Ier roi de Castiile, Paris, 1848, new edition, 1865. A. FERRER DEL Rfo, Examen historico-critico del reinado de Don Pedro de Castilla, Madrid, 1851. Aragon and Catalonia. V. BALAGUER, Historia de Cataluna y de la corona de Aragon, 2nd edition, 11 vols., Madrid, 1885-1887. J. EIBERA, Origen del Justicia Mayor de Aragon, Saragossa, 1897. E. DE HINOJOSA, El regimen senorial y la cuestion agraria en Cataluna durante la edad media, Madrid, 1905 (Biblioteca de derecho). J. BALARI Y JOVANY, Origenes histdricos de Cataluna, Barcelona, 1899. L. KLUPFEL, Die dussere Politik Alfonsos III von Aragonien (1285- 1391), Berlin and Leipzig, 1911-12 (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 35) ; and his Verwaltungsgeschichte des Konig - reiclis Aragon zu Ende des 13 Jahrhunderts, Stuttgart, 1915 (post- humous work, edited by H. E. ROHDE). K. SCHWARZ, Aragonisclie Hofordnungen im IS und 14 Jahrhundert, Berlin and Leipzig, 1914. G. DESDEVISES DU DEZERT, Don Carlos d' Aragon, Prince de Viane: etude sur I'Espagne du nord au XV« siecle, Paris, 1889. E. L. MIRON, The queens of Aragon: their li-ves and times [1035-1468 A.D.], London [1913]. Navarre. J. DE JAURGAIN, La Vasconie: etude historique et critique sur les origincs du rcyaume de Navarre, etc., vols. I-II, Pau, 1898-1902. Cortes of Spain. M. DANVILA, Estudios e investigaciones his- torico-criticos acerca . de las cartes y parlamentos del antiguo reino de Valencia, Madrid, 1906 (ALTAMIRA says it must be used •with caution). V. DE LA FTJENTE, Estudios criticos sobre la historia y el derecho de Aragon, 3 vols., Madrid, 1884-1886, is especially impor- tant for the early cortes in Aragon. J. COROLEU and D. J. PELLA Y CHRISTIAN SPAIN 321 FORGAS, Las Cortes catalanas, Barcelona, 1876, contains important original sources. Henuandad.es. J. PUYOL Y ALONSO, Las hcrmandades dc CastUla y Leon, Madrid, 1913. K. HAEBLER, "t)ber die alteren Hermandades in Kastilion," in Historische Zeitschrift, LIU (1885), 385-401, and his "Die kastilischen Hermandades zur Zeit Heinrich's IV (1454- 1474)," ibid., LVI (1886), 40-50. A. SACRISTAN Y MARTINEZ, Muni- cipalidades de Cast ilia y Leon, Madrid, 1878. Spanish church. M. MEN£NDEZ PELAYO, Historia de los hetero- doxos espaiioles, 3 vols., Madrid, 1880-1881, new edition, 1912ff. M. VAN HENCKELUM, Spiritualist ische Stromungen an den Hofen von Aragon und Anjou wahrend der Hohe des Armustsstreites, Berlin, 1912, is a study on the spiritual Franciscans. Q. MORALEDA, El rito mozarabe, su antigiiedad, vicisitudes, costumbres mozdrabes, Toledo, 1904. K. J. v. HEFELE, Der Cardinal Ximenes, Tubingen, 1851, trans- lated into English, The life of cardinal Ximenez, London, 1860, there is also a French translation, Le cardinal Ximenez, Paris, 1856. Jews in Spain. J. AMADOR DE LOS Rfos, Historia social, politico y religiosa de los judios de Espana y Portugal, 3 vols., Madrid, 1875-1876. M. KAYSEBLINO, Geschichte der Juden in Spanien und Portugal, 2 vols., Berlin, 1861-1867. See also the general histories of the Jews, nos. 850-884 above, especially 876 and 878. Culture in Spain in the later middle ages. R. P. A. DOZY, Hi i-lterches sur I'histoirc et la litterature de I'Espagne pendant le mi .1/1/1 Age, 2 vols., 3rd edition, Leyden, 1881. J. P. OLIVEIRA MAR- TINS, Hintoria de la civilizacidn iberica, Madrid, 1894. Estado de In cultura espaiiola y principalmente catalana en el siglo XV, by various authors, Barcelona, 1893. H. FlNKE, "Die Beziehungen der aragonesischen Konige zur Literatur, Wissenschaft, und Kunst im 13 und 14 Jahrhundert, " in Archiv fur Kulturgcschichte, VIII (1910), 20-42. L. COMENGE, La mcdicina en el reinado de Alfonso V de Aragdn, Barcelona, 1903. M. MENENDEZ Y PELAYO, Antologia de poetas liricos cantcllanos, Madrid, 1890, contains introductions which constitute a general history of learning and society in Spain in tin- later middle ages. See also no. 813 above. Portugal. C. R. PEPPER, Le Portugal: scs originea, son histoirc, Paris, 1879. F. KoRTH, "Per Antril NirderdeutBcher Kreuzfahrer an den Kainpfeii der I'ortugiesen gegen die Mauren, " in Mittcilun- gen des 1 us' Huts fiir ostcrreichische Gcschichtsforschung, VIII, Brgftncongsband, I, 1909. Prince Henry the Navigator. M. BARRADAS, 0 Infante Dom Henrique, Lisdon, 1894. A. ALVES, Dom Henrique o Infante, Oporto, 322 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII 1894. E. H. MAJOR, Life of Prince Henry of Portugal surnamcd the Navigator, London, 1868, condensed edition, 1874. Expulsion of the Moors. F. CODERA, Decadencia y desaparicion de los Almoravides en Espana, Saragossa, 1899 (Coleccion de estudios arabes, 3) ; and his Estudios crlticos de historia drabe espanola, Sara- gossa, 1903. D. L. EQUILAZ YANGUAS, Resena historica de la con- quista del reino de Granada, 2nd edition, Granada, 1894. M. GASPAR, Granada en poder de los Reyes Catolicos, Granada, 1912. V. BALA- GUER, Las guerras de Granada, Madrid, 1898. Ferdinand and Isabella. V. BALAGUER, Los reyes catolicos, vols. I and II, Madrid, 1891-1898, part of no. 622 above. P. BOISSONADE, Histoire de la reunion de la Navarre a la Castille, 1479-1521, Paris, 1893. D. F. BUANO-PRIETO, Anexion del reino de Navarra en tiempo del Rey Catolico, Madrid, 1899. J. H. MARIEJOL, L'Espagne sous Ferdinand et Isabelle: le gouvcrnement, les institutions, les moeurs, Paris [1892]. G. SELA, PoUtica international de los Reyes Cato- licos, Madrid, 1905. K. HAULER, Geschichte Spaniens unter den Habsburgern, vol. I, Hamburg, 1907, part of no. 332 above. Original sources. General collections of sources for the history of Spain and Portugal are listed above, nos. 997-1001. Acta Aragonen- sia: Quellen zur deutschen, ilalienischen, franzosischen, spanischen, zur KircJien- und Kulturgeschichte, aus der diplomatischen Korre- spondenz Jaymes II, 1291-1327, edited by H. FINKE, Berlin, 1908, is a well-edited collection of documents from the time of Dante which bear some resemblances to the famous Venetian Relations. Documents per I'historia de le cultura catalana mig-eval, edited by A. EuBi6 Y LLUCH for the Institut d'Estudis Catalans, vol. I, Bar- celona, 1908, throws much new light on the important Catalan culture of the middle ages. See H. FINKE, "Die katalanische Eenaissance, " in Internationale Wochenschrift (1910), 209 ff. See also the article oil Catalan language and literature in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Primera cronica general : Estoria de Espana que mando componer Alfonso el Sabio y se continuaba bajo Sancho IV en 1289, edited by E. MENENDEZ PIDAL, vol. I, text, Madrid, 1906. Codigos de Espana: coleccion completa desde el Fuero Juzgo hasta la novisima recopila- cion, edited by M. MARTINEZ ALCUBILLA, 2 vols., Madrid, 1885-1886, is especially valuable for the study of Eoman law in Spain since Visigothic days. Fuentes para la historia de CastUla, edited by L. SERRANO, vol. I, Valladolid, 1906, contains archive material, 1068- 1500. Histoire de I'Afrique et de I'Espagne intitulee Al Baguano 'I Mogrib [of IBNAL IDHARI], translated and annotated by E. FAGNAN, Algiers, 1901. GOMES EANNES DE AZURARA, Chronicle of the discovery and conquest of Guinea, 2 vols., 1896-1899 (Hakluyt society), is an important source for early Portuguese explorations. EASTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE 323 Bibliographies. For general bibliographies see no. 42 above. Owing to the lack of adequate bibliographies for the history of Spain, additional information about books must be sought in the bibliographical notes in BURKE and in lists such as those in the Cambridge modern history, I, 749-753 ; LOSERTH, Geschichte des spdteren Mittelalters, 52, 345, 693; HUME, Tlie Spanish people, 517- 524; and LAVISSE and BAMBAUD, Histoire generate, II, 719-720, III, 504-506. See also the reports in the Jahresberichte der Geschichts- wissenschaft, no. 13 above. The bibliographies on Mohammedan Spain, outline IX above and outline X in part III below, contain references to some books which are important for Christian Spain. XXXV. EASTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES A. OUTLINE 1. The crusades widened the sphere of action of Latin Christen- dom which began to develop world interests and policies in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The chief factors with which it had to deal in the later middle ages were the Slavs belonging to the Greek church, the Asiatic nomads, the Byzantine Greeks, and the Mohammedan Ottoman Turks in the east and the Moors in Spain and northern Africa. 2. The invasion of Russia, Poland, and Hungary by Asiatic nomads in the thirteenth century. A new wave of ' ' Mongols, Tar- tars or Tatars ' ' from the steppes of Asia. Rise of these nomads in Asia under Temujin, 1162-1227, better known as Jenghiz Khan (Genghis Khan), or great Khan, which title he obtained in 1206. He penetrated beyond the great wall of China. His son turned westward and defeated the Russian princes in 1223. His grandson, Batu, took Kiev in 1240, and devastated Hungary and Poland most frightfully. Some bands of nomads came into the neighborhood of Vienna. Batu's realm was called the realm of the "Golden 1 1 in de" (from ordu, the camp of the leader, Avho had a "golden" tent). Most of the nomads returned to Asia, but southern Russia remained in thoir clutch until 1480, when Ivan III, the Great, overthrew thorn and united the Russian monarchy. Isolation of Russia from both the Latin West and tin- Greek East, due to this invasion. Growth of Moscow. 3. The greatness of Poland. Conflict between the Teutonic Order and Poland. Dominance of the order during the grand- 324 GENERAL, MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTU mastership of Winzig of Kniprode, 1351-1382. End of the rule of the Piasts in Poland, 1370. Union of Poland and Lithuania under the house of Jagello, 1386-1572. Now there arose a strong anti- German movement in Poland, similar to that in Bohemia (Huss- ites). Defeat of the Teutonic Order by Poland at the battle of Tannenberg, 1410. Peace of Thorn, 1411. The treaty of Thorn, 1466, marked the triumph of Poland over the Teutonic Order. Under Casimir IV, Jagello, 1477-1492, Poland reached the height of her glory. His younger son Ladislas was elected king of Bohemia in 1471 and king of Hungary in 1490. Fatal weakness of the Polish constitution, due to the excessive power of the great nobles. 4. The rise and decline of Hungary. The Golden Bull of 1222, the "Magna Carta" of Hungary. Devastation of Hungary by the nomads, 1241-1242. End of the Arpad dynasty, 1301. Dominance of turbulent nobles. Regeneration under the house of Anjou (Charles I, 1310-1342, and Louis I, 1342-1382). The coming of the Ottoman Turks. Sigismund, of the house of Luxemburg, king of Hungary, 1387-1437. His successful warfare with the Turks, after his defeat by Bayezid at Nicopolis in 1396. John Hunyadi (ca. 1387-1456), the hero in the struggle against the Turks. The succession of his house to the throne in the person of his son Ma- thias I (Corvinus), 1458-1490, in whose reign Hungary reached the pinnacle of her power. Union of Hungary with Bohemia in 1490 under Ladislas II of the house of Jagello. Sudden decline of Hun- gary. 5. The Greek empire under the Palaeologi, 1261-1453. Restora- tion of the Byzantine rule with the accession of Michael Palae- ologus, 1261, a prince who had ruled Nicaea. Weakness of his empire. Its diminished territories. Inroads made upon them by the Latins of the west in the Balkan peninsula and the Aegean. The ' ' Grand Company of the Catalans. ' ' In 1333, Stephen Dushan, king of Serbia, 1331-1355, was on the point of taking Constan- tinople. Dependence of the empire on the west. Continuous nego- tiations with the papacy concerning the union of the two churches. Council of Ferrara — Florence, 1438-1439. The Turkish menace. The coming of the gipsies into Europe. 6. The Ottoman Turks in Europe. The rise of the Ottoman Turks or Osmanlis under Othman, 1307-1326. Nicaea was in their hands in 1330. The Janissaries. In 1354 the Turks took Gallipoli, their first foothold on European soil. In 1361 Murad I took Adria- nople. Emperor John V went to Rome to appeal to pope Urban V for help in 1369. Bayezid I, 1389-1403, actually besieged Con- stantinople when- he was diverted by the great nomad hero Timur, EASTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE 325 or Tamerlane, who defeated him and made him captive in the battle of Angora in 1402. 7. The fall of Constantinople, 1453. Weakness of the Palaeologi and gradual recovery of the Ottoman Turks. They were checked temporarily by the genius of the Hungarian John Hunyadi and by the guerilla warfare of the Albanians under their famous leader, Ireorge Castriot, or Scanderbeg (Iskender Bey, Prince Alexander, a complimentary name given him by the Turks in reference to Alex- ander the Great). Negotiations between the Greek and Latin churches due to .the pressure of the Turks. In 1453, Mohammed II <•: ;i ] -til red Constantinople. Importance of this event in the history of Europe. The "Eastern Question." The fall of Constantinople had little or nothing to do with the revival of the study of Greek in Italy. Did the advance of the Turks lead to the discovery of America and of a new route to India? Decline of the importance of the Mediterranean at the close of the fifteenth century. 8. Palaeologian dynasty in Constantinople, 1259-1453. Michael VIII, 1259-1282 (in Constantinople,, 1261ff.) Andronicus II (Elder), 1282-1328. Andronicus III (Younger), 1328-1341. John V, 1341-1391 (non-dynastic). John (Cantacuzenus), 1347-1355. Manuel II, 1391-1425. John VI, 1425-1448. Const an tine XI or XII (Dragases), 1448-1453. 9. Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Denmark was the leading state during this period. Its expansion and prosperity under Walde- mar I, the Great, 1137-1182, Knut VI, 1182-1202, and Waldemar II, the Conqueror, 1202-1241. Importance of Norway under Hakon IV, 1217-1262. The Speculum regale, "The king's mirror," written about 1250-1260, gives a splendid picture of civilization in the north. Conquest of Iceland (1260) and the submission of Green- land. Relations of the Teutonic Knights, the Sword Bearers, and tin- llansi-at ic League with the northern states. Waldemar III of Denmark, 1340-1375. Treaty of Stralsuml, 1370. The Union of Kalmar, 1397, which united the three Scandinavian kingdoms, and lasted formally till 1~>L'4, although actually it was dissolved with the election of Christian I of Oldenburg in 1448. Decline of the importance of the Baltic in the fifteenth century. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general surveys. IX>DGK. Tin dime of the middle atic*, 430- t". 1, 457^467, 494-514. ELEANOR IAMMJK. Tin • nd of the middle age, dis. XI, XIII. 326 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII Longer general accounts. LAVISSE and EAMBAUD, Histoirc gen- crale, II, chs. xiv, xvi; III, chs. xiv-xvin. HELMOLT, History of the u-orld, II, passim, III, 363-376, V, 106-147, 224-226, 243-268, 288- 302, 338-348, 355-359, 363-367, 380-387, 409-412, 415-424, 461-518, VI, 446-452, 466-471, 478-484. LOSERTH, Geschichte des spdteren Mittelalters, 57-67, 359-365, 563-567, 107-112, 575-581, 199-203, 369-375, 581-612. Europe and Asia. BEAZLEY, Dawn of modern geography, III, eh. n, "The great Asiatic travellers, 1260-1420." Russia and the nomad Mongols. A. RAMBAUD, History of Eussia, I, chs. x-xm; or V. O. KLUCHEVSKY, History of Eussia, I, chs. xn- XX, furnish a general survey of the history of Eussia during this period. J. CURTIN, The Mongols in Eussia, London, 1908, which is a companion volume to the same author's The Mongols: a history, with a foreword by T. ROOSEVELT, Boston, 1908. See also GIBBON, Decline and fall, ch. Lxrv. L. v. RANKE, Weltgeschichte, 9 vols., Leip- zig, 1883ff., VIII, 417-454, " tiberfluthung der asiatischen und osteuropaischen Welt durch die Mongolen." C. R. BEAZLEY, "Rus- sian expansion toward Asia and the Arctic in the middle ages (to 1500)," in American historical review, XIII (1907-1908), 731-741. Hungary. A. VAMBERY, The story of Hungary, chs. vn-xi. C. M. KNATCHBULL-HUGESSEN, The political evolution of the Hungarian nation, 2 vols., London, 1908. G. G. ZERFFI, ' ' Hungary under Mathias Hunyady, surnamed Corvinus, 1458-1490," in Eoyal historical society, new series, I (1884), 260-272. A confirmation of the Golden Bull of 1222, the "magna carta" of Hungary, is reproduced in facsimile in HELMOLT, History of the world, V, 380; compare this with the Articles of the Barons of Eng- land, the original draft of the Magna Carta, 1215, reproduced in fac- simile in Weltgeschichte, edited by J. v. PFLUGK-HARTTUNG, II, 208. E. HANTOS, The Magna carta of the English and Hungarian consti- tution, London, 1914. Balkans. W. MILLER, The Balkans, 35-61, 167-193, 272-298, 353- 382. N. FORBES, The Balkans, 41-46, 89-101, 175-181, 256-263, 319- 332. Serbia. W. MILLER, "The mediaeval Serbian empire," in Quarterly review, CCXXVI (1916), 488-507. Latins in the Levant. J. B. BURY, "The Lombards and Vene- tians in Euboia, 1205-1470," in Journal of Hellenic studies, VII (1886), 309-352, VIII (1887), 194-213, IX (1888), 91-117. W. MILLER, "The Genoese in Chios, 1346-1566," in English historical review, XXX (1915), 418-432. E. A. FREEMAN, "Mediaeval and modern Greece," in his Historical essays, third series, 303-378. H. F. TOZER, "The Franks in the Peloponnesus," in Journal of Hel- EASTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE 327 lenic studies, IV (1883), 165-236. J. T. BENT, "The lords of Chios," in K/iiilish historical review, IV (1889), 467-480. See also the literature under "The Byzantine empire and the crusades," in outline XXI above, especially MILLER, FINLEY. and ROOD. Byzantine Empire, 1261-1453. OMAN, Story of the Byzantine i mi>ire, 307-350. GIBBON, Decline and fall, chs. LXI-LXVIII. W. H. HUTTON, Constantinople, 119-153. W. NOBDEN, Das Papsttum und Hi/: an:: die Trennung der beiden Machte und das Problem ihrer ll'inli n; n inii/ung bis zum Untergange des byzantinischen Eeichs (1453), books III and IV, is the best authority on the attempts made in this period to unite the Greek and Latin churches. A. WACHTER, Der V erf all des Griechentums in Kleinasien im 14 Jahr- huiultrt, Leipzig, 1903. Ottoman Turks. S. POOLE, The story of Turkey, London, 1888 (Story of the nations), 1-139. Gipsies. See the article "Gipsies" in the Encyclopaedia lirititnnica; and HELMOLT, History of the world, V, 415-424. Fall of Constantinople, 1453. J. B. BURY, "The fall of Con- stantinople," in Yale review, new series, III (1913-1914), 56-77, is a good short summary. The standard work is E. PEARS, The ili st riii't on of the Greek empire and the story of the capture of Con- stiiiitin<>i>lc by the Turks, London and New York, 1903. H. VAST, • !.-• siege et la prise de Constantinople par les Turcs, " in Kevue liisti,!-ii,ni; XIII (1880), 1-40. Cambridge modern history, I, ch. Ill, .|"si lilies the Ottoman conquests after the fall of Constantinople. See also BURY 's Appendix to his edition of GIBBON, Decline and faH. Ottoman Turks and oriental trade routes. A. H. LYBYER, "The Ottoman Turks and the routes of oriental trade," in English Ins ti>ri,;il r, ,',,„•. \\X (1915), 577-588. See also W. HEYD, Ge»chichtc lIl'S I.I I'lll/tl Illllllll Is. Scandinavia. GJERSET, History of the Norwegian people, I, 410- 492, II, I In.; (in I, 448-451, there is a good description of the S/in iihnn n mill <>r l\uifi's mirror). BoYESON, The story of Norirnii. 400-480. L. M. LARSON, "Household of the Norwegian kings in the thirteenth century," in American historical review, XIII (1907- 1908), 459-479. Original sources. The chronicle of Novgorod, 1016-1471, trans- lated from the Russian by R. Mi< IIKII. and N. FORBES, London, 1914 (Camden third series, XXV). Mcilmiml researches from east- < rn .\sinlii- mmrci-s (13th to 17th century), 2 vols., with a map of middle Asia, edited by K. BKKTSCIINKIDKR. London, 1910 (the work u.-i-, roni|iletei| in 1H87, and incorporates the nuiterial in three or four of his older works). A history of the Moghuls of central Asia: 328 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII being the Tarikh-i-Eashidi of MIRZA MUHAMMAD HAIDAR, Dughlat, an English version by N. ELIAS, London, 1895. Life and acts of the great Tamerlane: narrative of the Castilian embassy to the court of Timur at Samarcand, by EOY GONSALES DE CLAVIJO, 1403-1406, tran- slated, with notes, by C. E. MARKHAM, London, 1859 (Hakluyt Society). The Mulfuz al Timury: or Autobiographical memoirs of the Moghul emperor Timur, translated into English by C. STEWART, London, 1830. MATTHEW PARIS' English history from the year 1235 to 1273, translated from the Latin by J. A. GILES, 3 vols., London, 1852, vol. I, 467-473, "A shocking letter about the cruelty of the Tartars." "An eastern embassy to Europe, 1287-1288," tran- slated by N. McLEAN, in English historical review, XIV (1899), 299- 318. The fall of Constantinople, by THEODORA PHRANZA, translated by J. M. NEALE, and reprinted, London, 1913 (Everyman's library). The first nine books of the Danish history of SAXO GRAMMATICUS, translated and edited by O. ELTON and F. Y. POWELL, London, 1894 (The history was written about 1208). Maps. SHEPHERD, Atlas, 2-3, 77, 87, 88, 89, 92, 93, 102-103, 107- 110. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. The general works oo the Byzantine empire and on eastern and northern Europe generally are listed above, nos. 643-728. See also the periodicals for the history of the Byzantine empire, nos. 174-175 above, and the Encyclopaedia of Islam, no. 120 above. For histories of literature see nos. 800-802, and 814 above. Mongol nomads from Asia. L. CAHUN, Introduction a I'histoire de I'Asie: Turcs et Mongols, des origines d 1405, Paris, 1896. G. STRAKOSCH-GRASSMANN, Der Einfall der Mongolen in Mitteleuropa in den Jahren 1241 und 1242, Innsbruck, 1893. H. H. HOWORTH, History of the Mongols from the 9th to the 19th century, 2 vols., in 3, London, 1876-1880; and his The northern frontages of China, 4 vols., London, 1875-1877 (Journal of the royal Asiatic society of Great Britain, new series, VII-IX). N. ELIAS, A history of ilic Moghuls of central Asia, London, 1898. E. STUBE, "Tschinghizchan: seine Staatsbildung und seine Persohnlichkeit, " in Neue Jahr- biicher fur das klassische Altertum, 1908. O. WOLFF, Geschichte der Mongolen oder Tataren, Breslau, 1872. G. BACHFELD, Die Mongolen in Polen, Innsbruck, 1889. J. v. HAMMER-PURGSTALL, Geschichte der Goldenen Horde in Kiptschack, das ist: der Montjoh/i in Eussland, Budapest, 1840. M. DE GUIGNES, Histoire generale des Huns, des Turcs, des Mongols, 5 vols., Paris 1766. KOUNIK, Eenseig- nements sur les sources et recherches relatives a la premiere invasion des Tatars en Bussie, Petersburg, 1856 (in Melanges asiatiques). F. EASTERN AND NORTHERN EUROPE 329 P6TIS DE LA CROIX, Histoire du grand Genghizcan, Paris, 1710, tran- slated into English, The history of Genghizcan the Great, London, 1722. See also the literature on the early history of the Asiatic nomads, outline XI above. Hungary. J. ANDRASSY, The development of Hungarian consti- tutional liberty, translated by C. ARTHUR and ILNOA GINEVER, Lon- don, 1908, extends to 1619. G. BECHMANN, Der Kampf Konig Sigmunds gegen die werdende Weltmacht der Osmanen, 1S92-14S7, Gotha, 1902. L. KUPELWIESER, Die Kdmpfe Ungarns mit den Osmanen bis zur Schlacht bei Mohdcs, Vienna, 1895. W. FRAKN6i, Mathias Corvinus, Konig von Ungarn, 1458-1490, a German transla- tion, Freiburg, 1891. Serbia. Prince and Princess LAZAROVICH-HREBELIANOVICH, The . E. A. FREEMAN, The Ottoman power in Europe: its nature, its iirrnrtli. nml its tin-Inn. London, 1877. E. 8. CREASY, History of tin Ottoman Turku, m»w and n-visod edition, London, 1878. C. KI.II.T, Tnrl-iii in Europe, London, 1907, new edition, 1908. Sir M. SYKES, The caliphs' last heritage: a short history of the Turkish 330 GENERAL MEDIEVAL HISTORY PARTII empire, London, 1915. Journal of the Royal Asiatic society, London, 1834ff. A. DE LA JONQUIERE, Histoire de I'empire Ottoman depuis les origines jusqu'd nos jours, Paris, 1881, new edition, revised, 2 vols., Paris, 1914. H. GANEM, Les sultans Ottomans, 2 vols., in one, Paris, 1901-1902. T. G. DJUVABA, Cent projets de portage de la Turquie (1281-1913), Paris, 1914. Y. FEHMI, Histoire de la Turquie, with a preface by A. BAUMANN, Paris, 1909. T. LAVALLEE, Histoire de la Turquie, 2nd edition, vols. I and II, Paris, 1859. A. VAMBERY, Das Tiirkenvolk in seinen ethnologischen und ethnographischen Bezieh- ungen geschildert, Leipzig, 1885. Fall of Constantinople, 1453. C. MIJATOVICH, Constantine, the last emperor of the Greeks: or the conquest of Constantinople "by the Turks (A.D. 1453) after the latest historical researches, London, 1892. E. A. VLASTO, Les derniers jours de Constantinople, Paris, 1883. J. H. KRAUSE, Die Eroberungen von Konstantinopel im 13 und 15 Jahrhundert, Halle, 1870. A. D. MORDTMANN, Belagerung und Ero- berung von Konstantinopel durch die Tilrken im Jahre 1.453, Stutt- gart, 1858. Scandinavia. P. GIRGENSOHN, Die skandinavische Politik der Hanse 1375-1395, Upsala, 1899. H. DENICKE, Die Hansestadte, Ddnemark und Norwegen 1369-1376, Halle, 1880. M. OEHLER, Die Bezichungen Deutschlands zu Ddnemark von der Kolner Konfodera- tion bis sum Tode Karls IV, Halle, 1892. E. USINGER, Deutsch- Danische Geschichte 1189-1S27, Berlin, 1863. D. SCHAFER, Ddnische Annalen und Chroniken von der Mitte des XIII bis zum XV Jahr- hundert, Hannover, 1872; and his, Die Hansestadte und Konig Waldemar von Denmark: Hansische Geschichte bis 1376, Jena, 1879. P. ZORN, Stoat und Kirche in Norwegen bis zum Schluss des XIII Jahrhunderts, Munich, 1873. Original sources. The general collections of sources for the east and north of Europe in the middle ages are listed above, nos. 1002- 1011. See also no. 986 above. Documents inedits relativs a I'histoire de la Grece au moyen age, edited by C. N. SATHAS, first series, 9 vols., Paris, 1880-1890. Ada et diplomata graeca medii aevi sacri et profana, edited by F. MIK- LOSICH and J. MULLER, 6 vols., Vienna, 1860-1890. Urkunden zur Geschichte der veneto-byzantinischen Beziehungen, edited by G. L. TAFEL and G. M. THOMAS, Vienna, 1858, in Fontes rerum Au*1ri in/iire, 319-368. See also the bibliographies under out- lines XI, XVII, XXI, XXII (eastward expansion of Germany), XXIV (missions), XXVI (Levant trade and Hanseatic League) above. PART III MEDIEVAL CULTURE PERIOD I. 500-1100 I. THE TRANSITION FROM ANCIENT TO MEDIEVAL CULTURE A. OUTLINE 1. Meaning of "history of culture." How it differs from the German conception of Kulturgeschichte. Current notions about the culture of the middle ages. 2. The transformation of the ancient Graeco-Roman World into the Greek Christian East and the Latin Christian West. On the difficulty of finding definite lines of division in history see out- line I, part II above. Importance of dwelling long on the stability of the Roman empire and on its permanent contributions to civil- ization. Relative importance of the various factors which produced change from the fourth to the sixth century. Pagan and Chris- tian moralists of the time, especially the pagan AMMIANUS MAR- CELLINUS (ca. 320-ca. 395), and the Christians ST. JEROME (331- 420) and SALVIAN (died ca. 484), a presbyter of Marseilles, who wrote the De gubcrnatione Dei. Danger of resorting to sweeping explanations of the decline of the Roman empire. 3. The victory of the Latin language in the west. Its introduc- tion and spread in the provinces by soldiers, colons, slaves, officials, teachers, and priests. Difference between spoken and written Latin. The Vulgate of St. Jerome. The relation of Latin to the romanic languages. 4. The decline of the study of Greek in the west and of Latin in the east. Neither one nor the other of these interesting phe- nomena lias been investigated thoroughly. Gradual evolution of two clear-cut spheres of Christian culture, the Greek East and the Latin West. Waning interest in the Greek and the Latin ••lassie* and in learning in general about 500 A.D. The closing of the School of Athens in 529. 5. Tin* rliaii^iiig Roman civilization is illustrated best in south- ern Gaul, in the fourth and fifth centuries. Famous schools in Bordeaux, Toulouse, Narbonne, Poitiers, and Angouleme. (Imperial Treves). The program of studies. The study of oratory. Influ- ence of the Iiixtitiitts of Quintilian (ca. 35-95 A.D.). Increase 334 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII of formalism in education. State support of schools. Ausonius (ca. 310-ca. 393) and his circle. His acquaintance with the Latin classics. His famous poem entitled Mosella. The coming of the barbarians into this region. 6. Prominent Roman nobles in this time of change. Q. Aurelius Symmachus (ca. 345-ca. 405); praefect of Rome in 384-385, and consul in 391. His literary learning. Apollinaris Sidoriius (ca. 431-ca. 484), a provincial noble of Lyons, bishop of Clermont- Ferrand. His enthusiasm for classical learning in a land over- run by the Visigoths. 7. The conflict of religions. Conflict between Christianity and the worship of Isis, Mithraism (Taurobolium), Manichaeism, and Neo-platonism. Heresies within the church. Arianism and Donatism. The lingering death of paganism. Christian proscrip- tion of paganism. The edicts concerning paganism in the Theo- dosian Code, 438. The emperor Julian, "the Apostate," 361-363. The appeal of Symmachus in 384 for the restoration of the Altar of Victory in Rome. Pagan revivals, especially that after the sack of Rome in 410. 8. Christianity and Graeco-Roman culture. Attitude of the church fathers towards the ancient classics. The fundamental dif- ference of ideals in ancient classical and Christian life and litera- ture. The conversion of Ausonius' pupil Paulinus (353-431), who became bishop of Nola in 409. 9. The barbarians and Graeco-Roman culture. Comparatively small number of invading barbarians. Exaggerated notion of the destruction which they wrought. Their respect for the culture of the Graeco-Roman world. Evidence concerning the sack of Rome in 410 and 455. For the behavior of Theodoric and his Ostro- goths see outline II, part II, above. The Life of Saint Severinus (died ca. 482 in Noricum) by Eugippius. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general surveys. H. O. TAYLOR, The classical heritage of the middle ages, New York, 1901, 3rd edition, 1911, 1-43. J. B. BURY, Later Eoman empire, I, 1-36. Cambridge medieval history, I, 452-597. W. L. WESTERMANN, "The economic basis of the decline of ancient culture," in American historical review, XX (1915), 723-743. Longer general accounts. H. O. TAYLOR, The mediaeval miml, I, 1-123. M. GUIZOT, History of civilisation in Europe, lectures I- III. See also nos. 753 and 763 above. TRANSITION PERIOD 335 Standard book. By far the best treatment of the subject of this outline is S. DILL, Roman society in the last century of the iristtni i-mpire, London, 1898, second, revised, edition, 1899 (often reprinted). Latin language and literature. MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 3-17, "Victory of the Latin language," which is a translation of a portion of a chapter in LAVISSE, Histoire de France, I, part II, 385-423. SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, I, ch. xill. E. NORDEN, "Die lateinische Literatur im Cbergang vom Alterthum zum Mittelalter, " in Kultur der Gegenwart, 1905, 1:8, 374-411, 2nd edition (1907), 401-438, 3rd edition (1912), 483-522. M. ROGER, L'enseignement dcs lettres classiqucs d'Ausone d Alcuin, Paris, 1905, 1-88. D. COMPARETTI, Virgilio nel media evo, 2 vols., Leghorn, 1872, 2nd edition, Florence, 1896, translated from the first edition by E. F. M. BENECKE, Vergil in the middle ages, London, 1895, chs. iv-v. GRISAR, History of Borne, III, 239-249, "Vulgar Latin." The triumph of Christianity. Cambridge medieval history, I, ch. iv. E. EMERTON, "The religious environment of early Christian- ity," in Harvard theological review, III, (1910), 181-208. J. B. CARTER, '/'/« religious life of ancient Borne, Boston, 1911, 95-158. GIBBON. Dtdinc and fall, chs. xx-xxi, xxm, xxvin. Original sources. Short extracts in J. C. AVER, Source book for tiiii-nnt church history, 297—429. The life of Saint Severinus by EUOIPPIUS, translated by G. W. ROBINSON, Harvard University Press, 1914. The letters of Sidonius, translated by O. M. DALTON, Oxford University Press, 1914. Some of his letters are also trans- lated in TIoDGKiN, Italy and her invaders, IT, 314^-371. The more interesting writings of St. Jerome are translated in Nicene and post-Nicene fathers, 2nd series, vol VI. Extracts from the Insti- tiiti'x of QUINTILIAN may be read in English translation in P. MIINKOK. Sniircc book of the history of education for the Greek inn! Hum, in ]>i riod. New York, 1901, 445-509. Maps. Study SHEPHERD, Atlas, 38-39; 42-43. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See the bibliographies under outlines I and II nf part IF above. Many histories of the church, nos. 394-478 above, are useful. Intellectual history. J. H. ROBINSON, "Some reflections on intellectual history, " in his The new history, 101-131. General accounts. T. R. GLOVER, Life and letters in the fourth cfntiir>i. Cambridge, 1901. A. F. OZANAM, La civilisation au cin- 336 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PABTIH quicme siccle, vols. I and II of his Oeuvres completes, Paris, 1855, 5th edition, 1894, translated by A. C. GLYN, History of civilization in the fifth century, 2 vols., London, 1868. O. SEECK, Geschichte des Untergangs der antikcn Welt, vols. I-V, Berlin, 1895-1913 (see espe- cially V, 217-259, "Die letzte Erhebung des Heidentums"). Latin language and literature. W. S. TEUFFEL, Geschichte der romischen Literatur, 6th edition, 3 vols., Leipzig and Berlin, 1910- 1913, translated from the 5th German edition by G. C. W. WARR, 2 vols., London, 1900. M. SCHANZ, Geschichte der romischen Literatur bis zum Gesetzgebungswerk des Kaisers Justinian, 4 vols., Munich, 1890-1904 (in I. MULLER, Handbuch der klassischen Altertumswissen- schaft, VIII), 2nd edition, 1898-1914 (vol. IV extends from Con- 'stantine to Justinian, but is not complete in the latest edition). A. BAUMGARTNER, Geschichte der Weltliteratur, IV, 84-203, see also 229-241, "Die Erhaltung des Lateins als lebendige Sprache. " A. EBERT, Allgemeine Geschichte der Literatur des Mittelalters, I, book II. E. NORDEN, Die antike Eunstprosa, II, 573-656. F. CUMONT, "Pourquoi le latin fut le seule langue liturgique de 1 'Occident?" in Melanges Paul Fredericq, Brussels, 1904, 63ff. L. HAHN, "Zum Gebrauch der lateinischen Sprache in Konstantinopel, ' ' in Fest- gdbe fur Martin von Schanz, Wiirzburg, 1912, 173-183. F. A. BELIN, Histoire de la latinite de Constantinople, 2nd edition, Paris, 1894. L. VALENTIN, Saint Prosper d'Aquitaine: etude sur la litterature latine au 5e siecle en Gaule, Paris, 1900. H. GOELZER, Etude lexicographique et grammatical de la latinite de Saint Jerome, Paris, 1884; and his Le latin de S. Avit, -eveque de Vienne (450-526), Paris, 1909. A. DUBOIS, La latinite d'Ennodius, Paris, 1903. L. BERGMULLER, Bemer- kungen zur Latinitdt des Jordanes, Augsburg, 1903 (Programm). C. H. GRANDGENT, An introduction to vulgar Latin, Boston, 1907. F. G. MOHL, Introduction a la chronologic du latin vulgaire, Paris, 1899. Greek. K. KRUMBACHER, "Die griechische Literatur des Mittel- alters (324-1453A.D.)," in Kultur der Gegenwart, 1:8 (1905), 237- 285, 2nd edition (1907), 239-290 (see also pp. 200-238). SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, I, chs. xx-xxi. A. and M. CROISET, Histoire de la litterature grecque, 5 vols., Paris, 1887-1900, 2nd and 3rd editions, 1899-1914, V, last two chapters. See also ch. xxix of their, An abridged history of Greek literature, translated by G. F. HEFFELBOWEB, New York, 1904. H. STEINACHER, "Die romische Kirche und die griechischen Sprachkenntnisse des Friihmittelal- ters," in Festschrift fiir Theodor Gomperz, Vienna, 1902, 324-341. Saint Jerome. G. GRUTZMACHER, Hieronymus: eine biogra/iliix Studie zur alien Kirchengeschichte, 3 vols., Leipzig, 1901-1908. E. TRANSITION PERIOD 337 CUTTS, Saint Jerome, 4th edition, London, 1897 (The fathers for English readers). Mrs. C. MARTIN, The life of St. Jerome, London, 1888. J. DE SiGi'ENZA, The life of Saint Jerome, the great doctor of the church, in six books, from the original Spanish . . . 15'J5, by M. MONTEIRO, London, 1907. A. LARGENT, Saint Jerome, 6th edition, Paris, 1907 (Les saints). J. BROCKET, S. Jerome et sea (i.x, Paris, 1906. J. TURMEL, St. Jtrome, Paris, 1906. L. SANDERS, Etudts sur St. Jerome, Paris, 1903. Later Roman education. P. R. COLE, Later Roman education in Ausonius, Capella and the Thcodosian Code, New York, 1909. G. RAUSCHEN, Das gricchisch-romische Schulwesen zur Zeit des aus- gehenden Heidentum, Bonn, 1901. O. DENK, Geschichte dcs Gallo- frdnkischen Unterrichts- und Bildungswesens, Mainz, 1892, chs. i-v. <;. KAUFMAN, Bhetorenschulen und Klosterschulen oder heidnische und Christliche Cultur in Gallien wdhrend dcs 5 und 6 Jahrhunderts, Leip- zig, 1869 (Historisches Tascheubuch). Ausonius. MARIE J. BVRNE, Prolegomena to an edition of the u-tirktt of I>i i-'iini.'i Magnus Auionius, Columbia University Press, 1917. R. Pirnns. Lea derniers tcrivains profanes: les Pant-gyristes; Ausone; le Querolu* Kutiliuji Namatianus, Paris, 1906 (Etudes sur 1'histoire 'Ic la literature latino dans les Gaules) ; see also book IV of his Histoirt dc la litterature latine, 3rd edition, Paris, 1903. 1'. DE LAHKIOLLE, Une episode de la fin du paganisme: la correspond- • I'. Insane et de Paulin de Nola, Paris, 1910, contains transla- tions into French together with studies. C. JULLIAN, An/tone et Bordeaux: i'ln,l. Saint Sidoine Apollinaris (413- 489), I'aris. 1909 (Les saints). T. MOMMSKN, "Apollinaris Siilonius und seine Zeit," Rede zum Geburstsag des Kaisers, 1885, in his l;..l,n .•< nn/.»t,n.\ ./- .Mi I lira. Paris, 1900, 3r«l edition, 1913, trans- lated from the second edition by J. M. McCoRMACK, The mysteries of Mithra, Chicago, 1910. F. LEOOE, Forerunners and rivals of Chrit- ';/: Ilium A/I/J/KX in nJiiiniii.1 lu*tory from 3.10 B.C. to 330 A. D., •_' \uls.. Cambriilgi- I'lm.-rsity Pr«w, 15H.">t II, ch. XII, "The wor- ship of Mithras," ch. xni, "Millies ami the Manichaeans. " T. R. GLOVER, The conflict of rcliiiinn* in tin mrlii ]>'i>man empire, London, 1910. C. ELSEE, .%"«•• i-'nt' mxin in nlntii.n In <'hri*fianity : an 338 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in Cambridge University Press, 1908. C. BIGG, Neoplatonism, London. 1895. The end of paganism. G. BOISSIER, La fin du paganisms, 2 vols., Paris, 1891, 5th edition, 1907. MAUDE A. HUTTMANN, The establish- ment of Christianity and the proscription of paganism, New York, 1914 (Columbia University studies). W. K. BOYD, The ecclesiastical edicts of the Theodosian Code, New York, 1905 (Columbia Uni- versity studies). G. UHLHORN, Der Kampf des Christentums mit dem Heidentum, Stuttgart, 1875, translated from the 3rd German edi- tion by E. C. SMYTH and C. J. EOPES, The conflict of Christianity with heathenism, New York, 1879, revised edition, 1908. P. D. SCOTT-MONCRIEFF, Paganism and Christianity in Egypt, Cambridge University Press, 1913. V. SCHULTZE, Geschichte des Untergangs des griechisch-romischen Heidentums, Jena, 1887. G. E. A. GRINDLE, The destruction of paganism in the Eoman empire, Oxford, 1892. C. BIGG, The church's task in the Eoman empire, Oxford, 1905. Julian the Apostate. P. ALLARD, Julien I'Apostat, 2 vols., Paris, 1900-1903. ALICE GARDNER, Julian, philosopher and emperor, and the last struggle of paganism against Christianity, London, 1901. G. MAU, Die religionsphilosophie Kaiser Julians in seinen Reden auf Konig Helios und die Goiter-Mutter, Leipzig, 1907, contains trans- lations of the two speeches. G. NEGRI, L'imperatore Giuliano I'Apostata, Florence, 1902, translated by the Duchess LiTTA-Vis- CONTI-ARESE, 2 vols., London, 1905. Arianism. H. M. GWATKIN, Studies of Arianism, 2nd edition, Cambridge, 1900; see also his Arian controversy, London, 1889 (Epochs of church history) ; and his The knowledge of God, 2 vols., Edinburgh, 1906. E. L. WOODWARD, Christianity and nationalism in the later Eoman empire, London and New York, 1916. Paulinus of Nola and Paulinus of Pella. J. S. PHILLIMORE, ' ' St. Paulinus of Nola," in Dublin review, CXLVII (1910), 288-305. J. BROCKET, La correspondance de Saint Paulin de Nole et de Sulpice Severe, Paris, 1906. P. REINELT, Studien uber die Briefe des hi. Paulinus von Nola, Breslau, 1903 (dissertation). J. EOCAFORT, Un type gallo-romain, Paulin de Pella: sa vie, son poeme, Paris, 1896. The church and ancient culture. E. HATCH, The influence of Greek ideas and usages upon the Christian church, edited by A. M. FAIRBAIRN, 4th edition, London, 1892. G. HODGES, The early church from Ignatius to Augustine, Boston, 1915. A. H. LEWIS, Paganism surviving in Christianity, New York, 1892. H. v. EICKEN, Geschichte und System der mittelalterlichen Weltanschauung, 109-14,7. J. A. LALANNE, Influence des peres de I'eglise sur I' education publiqu- pendant les cinq premiers siecles de I' ere chretienne, Paris, 1850. ie TYPES OP THE TRANSITION 339 A. HARNACK, History of dogma, vol. I. G. LOESCHCKE, Jildisches und heidnisch.es im christlichen Kult, Bonn, 1910. P. WENDLAND, Die hellenistisch-romische Kultur in ihren Beziehungen zu Judentum und Christentum, Tubingen, 1907 (Handbuch zum neuen Testament, vol. I, part II). E. RENAN, Lectures on the influence of the institutions, thought and culture of Borne on Christianity and on the development of the catholic church, translated by C. BEARD, London, 1880 (Hib- bert lectures, 1880). U. BENIONI, Storia sociale della chiesa, Milan, 1912. The barbarians and ancient culture. F. LAURENT, Les barbares et le catholicixme, Ghent, 1857, 2nd edition, Brussels, 1864 (Etudes sur 1'histoire de I'humanit6, 5). See also FUSTEL DE COULANGES, ".e found in TEUKFEL, Geschichte der r<»nixi -In n I.itrratur, 6th eilition, III, 3filff., and for Boethius, Cassiodorus and Gregory in MANITIUS, GesrJiirhti- drr lateiniscln n Litiratur, I, and in SANDYS, A history of rlasxiral nrhnlnrnhip, I. See also A uaust in 's Enchiridion, edited by O. SciiEEL, Tiibingcn .•iii'l I.«-i|./.ig, 1903 (Sammlung ausgewiililter kirchen- und gcsehichtlicher Quellenschriften, 2nd series, vol. IV). 344 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIH Bibliographies. CHEVALIER, no. 16 above, will be found useful. For classified lists of the best recent literature see TEUFFEL, MANI- TITJS and SANDYS just mentioned. For Gregory the Great the best bibliographical guide is DUDDEN, Gregory the Great. III. THE TEANSFOEMATION OF ANCIENT EOME INTO A MEDIEVAL CITY A. OUTLINE 1. The enchantment of Borne in the middle ages and in modern times. "O Eoma nobilis, orbis et domina, Cunctarum urbium excellentissima, Eoseo martyrum sanguine rubea, Albis et virginum liliis Candida: Salutem dicimus tibi per omnia, Te benedicimus: salve per secula. " (This is the first stanza of a poem written between the ninth and eleventh centuries, probably in Verona. See under "TRAUBE" below.) The sentiments which Borne aroused in Poggio Bacciolini, Petrarch, and Bienzo. GIBBON, the author of The decline and fall of the Boman empire, wrote in his Autobiography: "I must not forget the day, the hour, the m'ost interesting in my literary life. It was on the fifteenth of October [1764], in the gloom of evening, as I sat musing on the Capitol, while the barefooted fryers were chanting their litanies in the temple of Jupiter, that I conceived the first thought of my history." 2. The transformation of pagan into Christian Borne. Gradual disuse of pagan temples and other buildings, especially libraries. The rapid decline of the city in the later days of the empire, after it had ceased to be the capital of the world. Causes of the decay of Eome. Lord Byron's line, "The Goth, the Christian, Time, War, Flood, and Fire. ' ' The following saying of St. Benedict was reported by Gregory the Great in his Dialogues, II, 15: "Borne shall never be destroyed by the gentiles, but it shall be shaken by tempests, lightnings, and earthquakes, and shall decay of itself. ' ' 3. Borne and the barbarian invaders. The sack of Borne in 410 by Alaric the Visigoth, in 455 by the Vandal Gaiseric, and in 472 by Bicimer. Comparatively little injury done to buildings and statuary. -• TRANSFORMATION OP ROME 345 4. The rejuvenescence of the city in the "golden days" of Theodoric the Great. Archaeological evidence from the works of Cassiodorus. His plan to make Rome a great seat of Christian learning. 5. Her subsequent desolation in the period of the Gothic wars, 535-555. Rome was taken by force of arms in 536, 546, 547, 549, and 552. Depopulation of the city. The threat of Totila to destroy her utterly. The destruction of aqueducts. In this dread period Gregory the Great spent his childhood in Rome. 6. Consequences of the Byzantine restoration in 553. Although there was close connection between Rome and Constantinople, the study of Greek in the former city declined very rapidly. 7. The terror of the Lombards who came in 568. Rome now began to look for succor across the Alps. Weakness of the Byzantine hold upon the city. Gradual rise of the pope as real lord of Rome. 8. Topography of Rome at the accession of pope Gregory the Great in 590. Pagan buildings, especially the forums, temples, arches, baths, theatres, the Circus Maximus, Colosseum, Pantheon, the tombs of Hadrian and Augustus, the buildings of the Capitol, the aqueducts and bridges. Christian buildings, especially the five patriarchal churches, the basilicas of St. John Lateran, of St. Peter, of St. Paul outside the wall, of 8. Maria Maggiore, and of St. Lawrence. These, together with the basilicas of St. Sebastian and 8. Croce in Gerusalemme, were the famous ' ' seven churches of Rome." The "regions" of the city. The Notitia and Curiosum in-hit regionum XIV of the fourth century. The Itinerary of the Anonymous of Einsiedeln, the Mirabilia Eomae, and the Graphia aureae urbis Eomae. 9. Restoration of Rome in the pontificate of Gregory the Great, 590-604. At his death it was "The Rome of the church, of the popes, of the middle ages." — DUDDEN. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS TOR READING The fame of Borne. J. BEYCE, Holy Roman empire, ch. xvi, ' ' The city of Rome in the middle ages." GIBBON, Decline and fall, the last chapter of the work, LXXI. F. HARRISON, "Rome revisited," in his The mcaninfj of history. London, 1894, 252-283. General short surveys of medieval Borne. N. YOUNG, The ttory of Some, London, 1905 (Mediaeval towns), especially C!IH. ni-v. See also the article "Rome" in the Catholic < //n/<-/o///itnt of the Roman catacombs, compiled from the works of Com- inriidatorc DE Rossi, 2nd edition, 2 vols., London, 1879. H. D. M. 348 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII SPENCE-JONES, The early Christians in Eome, London, 1910. ETHEL R. BARKER, Eome of the pilgrims and martyrs: a study in the mar- tyrologies, itineraries, syllogae, and other contemporary documents^ London, 1913. Churches of Borne. M. ARMELLINI, Le chiese di Soma dal secolo IV al XIX, 2nd edition, Eome, 1891. The Lateran. P. LAUER, Le palais de Lateran: etude historique et archeologique, Paris, 1911. Monuments of Christian Borne. E. BODOCANACHI, Les monu- ments de Borne aprcs la chute de I' empire, Paris, 1914; and his The Eoman capital in ancient and modern times, translated from the French by F. LAWTON, New York, 1906. A. L. FROTHINGHAM, The monuments of Christian Some from Constantine to the renaissance, New York and London, 1908. E. BERTAUX, Eome: de I' ere des cata- combes a I'avenement de Jules II, 2nd edition, Paris, 1908 (Les Villes d'art celebres). H. BERGNER, Eom im Mittelalter, Leipzig, 1913 (Beruhmte Kunststatten, 39). T. H. DYER, The city of Eome, its vicissitudes and monuments from its foundation to the end of the middle ages, London, 1883. Boman Campagna. G. TOMASSETTI, La Campagna romana antica, medioevale e moderna, vols. I-III, Borne, 1910-1913. O. KAEMMEL, Eom und die Campagna, Leipzig, 1902 (Land und Leute: Monogra- phien zur Erdkunde, XII). Periodicals for Christian archaeology of Borne. Bullettino di archeologia cristiana, edited by G. B. DE Bossr, 13 vols., Borne, 1863- 1895; followed by the Nuovo bullettino, 1895ff. Bullettino della Commissione archeologica comunale di Eoma, Borne, 1873ff. Edm- ische Quartalschrift fur Christliche AltertumsJcunde, Bome, 1887ff. Original sources. Inscriptiones Christianae urbis Eomae VII° saeculo antiquiores, edited by G. B. DE Bossi, vols. I-II, Bome 1857- 1888. Iscrizione delle chiese e di altri edifici di Eoma dal secolo XI ai nostri giorni, edited by V. FORCELLA, 14 vols., Bome, 1869-1880. Bibliographies. E. CALVI, Bibliografta di Soma' nel medio evo (476-1499), Eome, 1906, with an appendix, 1908. F. CERROTI and E. CELANI, Bibliografia di Eoma medievale e moderna, vol. I, Bome, 1893. IV. THE CLASSICAL HEEITAGE OF THE EABLY MIDDLE AGES A. OUTLINE 1. The three great waves in the continuous flow of classical influences during the middle ages: (1) early middle ages, chiefly language and political and social institutions; (2) twelfth and IV CLASSICAL HERITAGE 349 thirteenth centuries, chiefly Roman law and Greek philosophy; (3) fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, chiefly Roman and Greek literature and art. 2. Survival of classical forms and ideas of government and social order in church and state. 3. Graeco-Roman influence in art and the crafts of the early mid- dle ages. The importance of medieval archaeology. 4. The seven liberal arts (artes liberates) : trivium — grammar, rhetoric, and dialectic; quadrivium — arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music. The Greek origin and the Roman elaboration of the idea of liberal arts. The Disciplinarium libri novem (not extant now) of Varro, 116-27 B.C. The De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii of Martianus Capella who wrote in Africa before 330 A.D. Cassio- dorus, in his DC artibus, was the first Christian who used the expres- sion "seven liberal arts." Changing conception of liberal arts, and differences of meaning and content of each of the arts from age to age. Variation in the popularity of the various arts, e.g., dialectic or logic. .">. Tin- stucly and use of classical language and literature. Almost total neglect of Greek in the west. Decline of interest in the Latin classics of pagan times. Popularity of the works of Chris- tian poets and of theologians. The text books of Latin grammar. The An grammatica minor and Ars grammatica major of Donatus who lived about 350 A.D., and was the teacher of St. Jerome. The Barbarism us. The In&titutionum grammaticorum libri XVIII of I'riscan who flourished in Constantinople about 500 A.D. The first sixteen of those books were known as the Prlscianus major and the last two books as the Priscianus minor. Elementary Latin readers such as Cato (Distichia), Aesopiw, and Avianiu. 6. Transmission of ancient knowledge of natural sciences, medi- cine, :ind mathematics. Pliny's Natural history. The Physiologus. Bestiaries and lapidaries. 7. The tiny stream of Roman law in the early middle ages. Neglect of the Corpus turn civilis in the west. Roman influence in the law of the church. 8. Transmission of ancient philosophy. The services of Boethius as a translator of Aristotle and Plato. Predominance of theo- logical learning, based largely on Jewish thought, but modified decidedly by Greek speculation and Latin practical sense. 9. The encyclopaedia of Isidore of Seville (ca. 570-636), known as the Etymologiac or Orif/ine*, in 20 books which were frequently abridged. Isidore's attitude towards the Latin classics. 10. Monastery and cathedral schools in the early middle ages. 350 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII Contrast with the Koman schools in the time of Ausonius. The monastic scriptorium and the transmission of classical texts. Ele- mentary instruction by parish priests. 11. Early medieval libraries. The armarium. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general surveys. H. O. TAYLOR, The classical heritage of the middle ages, especially 44-70, and portions of chs. vm-x; see also his Mediaeval mind, I, eh. v. E. NORDEN, ' ' Die lateinische Literatur im Vbergang vom Altertum zum Mittelalter, " in Die Kultur der Gegenwart, I, part 8, (1905), 374-411, 2nd edition (1907), 401-438, 3rd edition (1912), 483-522. M. MANITIUS, Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur des Mittelalters, I, 3-21. For details concerning Donatus, Priscian, Martianus Capella, Cato, etc., see the index of TEUFFEL, Geschichte der romischen Literatur, III, M. SCHANZ, Geschichte der romischen Literatur, IV; as well as SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, I. The seven liberal arts. P. ABELSON, The seven liberal arts, New York, 1906 (dissertation). H. PARKER, "The seven liberal arts," in English historical review, V (1890), 417-461. A. F. WEST, Alcuin and the rise of the Christian schools, New York, 1892, ch. I, ' ' The seven liberal arts." The article "Arts, the seven liberal," by O. WILLMANN, in the Catholic encyclopedia. Attitude towards the Latin classics. D. C. MUNRO, "The atti- tude of the western church towards the study of the Latin classics in the early middle ages," reprinted from vol. VIII of the American society of church history, 1897. D. COMPARETTI, Vergil in the middle ages, especially chs. v and vi. Isidore of Seville. An easy introduction is E. BREHAUT, An encyclopedist of the dark ages: Isidore of Seville, New York, 1912 (dissertation), who translates freely from the Etymologiae. For precise details concerning his life and work consult, MANITIUS, Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur, I, 52-70. See also M. ROGER, L'enseignement des lettres classiques d'Ausone a Alcuin, 195-201. Natural sciences and mathematics. F. LAUCHERT, Geschichte des Physiologus, Strassburg, 1889, edited this famous book in the Greek version, with a paraphrase in German, but most of his book consists of introduction and elucidations. M. GOLDSTAUB, "Der Physiologus," in Philologus, Supplementband VIII, 3, Leipzig, 1901. On mathematics see W. R. BALL, A short account of the his- tory of mathematics, 4th edition, London, 1908, ch. viii ; or M. CANTOR, Vorlesungen iiber Geschichte der Mathematik, 4 vols., 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1898-1908, ch. xxxvm. For details concerning natural CLASSICAL HERITAGE 351 sciences and mathematics see outline XXI below. For law see outline X.\ In-low. Original sources. The \nturnl history of PLINY, 6 vols., London, 1855-1857. SAN ISIDOBO DE SKVII.I.A, Mapa-Mundi, translated into Spanish by A. BLAZQUEZ v DELGADO AQUILERA, Madrid, 1908. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See especially the general books on literature, nos. 782-814 above. Much general literature will also be found under outlines XVIII and XXIII below. General surveys. L. FRIEDLANDER, "Das Nachleben der Antike iin Mittelalter, " in his Erinnerungen, Beden, und Schriften, 2 vols., Strasburg, 1905, I, 272-391, is the best systematic account we have at present, but see also G. KORTING, Anfange der Renaissance- litiratur in Itdlicn (vol. Ill of his (Icxchichte der Literatur Italiens), I.«-i|./.ig, 1884, 1-75, "Die Cultur des spateren Altertums und die Ku'.tur des Mittelalters. " A. GRAF, Roma /- ti> nnc, June, 1900. Heritage of classics. K. BORINSKI, Die Antike in Poetik und nli, ,,rn, I. Mittelalter, Renaissance, Barock, Leipzig, 1914 (Das Erbe der Alten, IX). J. STIGLMAYB, Kirchenvdter und Klassizi- mus, Freiburg, 1913. H. J. LcBLANC, Essai hixtoriijue et critique sur I'etudc et I'enscigncment des lettres profanes dans les premiers siecles • I- I'eglisc, Paris, 1852. J. W. THOMPSON, "Vergil in mediaeval culture," in African journal of theology, X (1906), 648-662. T. XIKI.INSKI, Cirrro im If'andel der Jahrhundcrte, 3rd edition, Berlin, 1912, chs. vn VIM. G. ZAPPERT, Virgil's Fotilcbcn im Mittclaltir, ViiMiiia. l*~il ( reprint'-,! from Denkschriften of the Vienna academy.) Natural science. M. P. E. BERTHELOT, "Ensai snr la trimsniis sion .|i> l.-i M, •i(.|i.-i- antique au moyen Age," in vol. I of his Histoire La chimie au moyen Age, 3 vols., I'arin, 1893. P. STRrN7., {iixrhichtr der Natuncissenschaften im Mittelalter, Stutt- gart, 1910, rh. ii. F. DANNEMANN, Dir \titnrn i*.«i,i-«-li, '2-2-2. K. RUCK, "Die Naturalis historia des Plinins im Mittelalter." in Sit :iiiif Latin Christianity, IX, 7. will serve in a l>rief introduction. HAKNACK. History of ,l»,/ni,i. es| ially I. I.'." '2'2\ ; II. 1M7 .",1v III. I'M 315; IV, 268- 330. (Those who know German should read the corresponding 354 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in pages in the 4th German edition.) The beginnings of all chapters in A. D. WHITE, A history of the warfare of science with theology in Christendom. H. O. TAYLOR, Classical heritage, especially chs. V-VH. R. EUCKEN, The problem of human life as viewed by the great thinkers, 131-252. V. RYDBERG, The magic of the middle ages, trans- lated from the Swedish by A. H. EDGREN, New York, 1879, see especially ch. i, "The cosmic philosophy of the middle ages, and its historical development." LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part I, 237-242. H. v. EICKEN, Geschichte und System der mittelalter- liclien Weltanschauung, is not so good for our purposes as its title would indicate; see especially 63-147, 311-325, 589-671. See the note under no. 816 above. J. WATSON, Christianity and idealism, new edition, New York, 1897, ch. v, "Medieval Christianity." Asceticism. W. JAMES, The varieties of religious experiences, New York, 1902 (Gifford lectures), 296ff., on saintliness. For litera- ture on monasticism see outline IV in part II above. The Christian epic. G. SANTA YANA, Eeason in religion, New York, 1905, ch. vi. See also his Interpretations of poetry and re- ligion, New York, 1905, chs. in-iv. The legends of the saints. H. DELEHAYE, Les legendes hagi- ographiques, 2nd edition, Brussels, 1906, translated by Mrs. V. M. CRAWFORD, The legends of the saints: an introduction to hagiography, London and New York, 1907. Medieval ideas reflected in art and poetry. Y. HIRN, The sacred shrine: a study of the poetry and art of the catholic church (the bibliography on pp. 555-570 is very valuable). Dionysius the Areopagite. R. F. WESTCOTT, "Dionysius the Areopagite, " in Contemporary review, V (1867), 1-28. See also the articles on Dionysius in nos. 104, 106, 108 and 112 above, and MANITIUS, Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur, I, 325-328. Original sources. Practically all the writings of the middle ages are of value in this study. The writings of the church fathers which are translated in the Nicene and post-Nicene fathers, will be found most useful. Add to these especially BEDE'S famous Eccles- iastical history of England, revised translation by A. M. SELLAR, London, 1912 (see especially the account of Drythelm's visit to the underworld with its graphic picture of hell and purgatory). The celestial and ecclesiastical hierarchy of DIONYSIUS THE AREO- PAGITE are translated by J. PARKER, London, 1894, his remaining Works, by the same translator, London, 1897. The revelations to the monk of Evesham Abbey in the year of our Lord eleven hundred ninety-six concerning the places of purgatory and paradise, are rendered into modern English by V. PAGET, New MKDIEVAL WELTANSCHAUUNG 355 York, 1909. C. S. BOSWELL, Irish precursor of Dante: study on the vision of heaven and hell ascribed to the 8th century Irish S. Adam- nan, with translation, London, 1908. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See especially the books on the "History of freedom of thought, ' ' nos. 739-748 above, and those on ' ' Medieval Weltanschauung," nos. 815-821 above; but almost all general books on the church, nos. 394-498 above, and on the history of culture and civilization, iios. 729-849 above, bear upon the subject of this outline more or less directly. The encyclopaedias for the history of the rhurrh, nos. 104—114 above, are absolutely indispensable, and even the general encyclopaedias, nos. 96-103 above, will be found very useful. See also the periodicals for church history, philosophy, and education, nos. 176-182 above (also nos. 169-170). For additional general books on the church see outlines IV-VI, XV, and XXIV of part II above. For medieval science in general see outline XXI below. Demonology, devil-lore, hell, and purgatory. G. ROSKOFP, ('•• - schichte des Tcufels, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1869. A. R^VILLE, Histotre ilu diable, Strasburg, 1870, translated by A. B., The devil: his great- new and decadence, London, 1871. P. CARUS, The history of the mill ilu idea of evil, Chicago, 1900, is quite inadequate, at least for the middle ages. J. BAISSAC, Histoire de la diablerie, I, Le diable, Paris, 1882. M. J. RUDWIN, Der Teufel in den deutsolien geistliohen Spiclcn des Mittelaltcrs und dcr Reformationszeit: ein Beitrag zur Literatur-, Kuitur-, und Kirchengcschichte Deutscfilands, (iuttingen and Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1915 (Hesperia: Schriften zur germanischen Philologie, VI). H. WIECK, Die Teufel auf dcr mittrlalterlichen ttysterU-nbiihne Frankrcichs, Leipzig, IMS? •>ertation, Marburg). W. MICHEL, Das Teuflische und Groteske I'M der Kit nut, Munich, 1911. M. D. CONWAY, Demonoloyy and ilt r< . trims l:it>>n, 1896. Cardinal NEWMAN, "The 356 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART m patristic idea of Antichrist," in his Discussions and arguments on various subjects, London, 1897. W. MEYER, "Ludus de Anti- christo, " in Sitsungsberichte der Miinchener Akademie, phil.-hist. Klasse, 1882, no. 1. E. WADSTEIN, Die eschatologische Ideengruppe: Antichrist, Weltsabbat, Weltende und Weltgericht, Leipzig, 1896. Asceticism. H. STRATHMAN, Geschichte der friihchristlichen Askese bis zur Entstehung des Monchtums im religionsgeschichtlichen Zusammenhange, vol. I, Leipzig, 1914. F. MARTINEZ, L'asceticisme Chretien pendant les trois premiers siecles de I'eglise, Paris, 1913 (Etudes de theologie historique publiees sous la direction des pro- fesseurs de theologie a 1'Institut catholique, no. 6). H. JOLY, The psychology of the saints, translated by G. TYRELL, London, 1898. Mysteries, miracles, and relics. S. CHEETHAM, The mysteries, pagan and Christian, London, 1897 (Hulsean lectures). G. ANRICH, Das antike Mysterienwesen in seinem Einfluss auf das Christentum, Gottingen, 1894. A. E. HABERSHON, The study of the miracles, Lon- don, 1910. P. SAINTYVES, Le miracle et la critique historique, Paris, 1907; and his Les reliques et les images legendaires, Paris, 1912. Myths, legends, and superstitions. H. A. GUERBER, Myths and legends of the middle ages: their origin and influence on literature and art, London, 1909. L. F. A. MAURY, Croyances et legendes du may en age, new edition, Paris, 1896. K. MEYER, Der Aberglaube des Mittelalters und der ndchstfolgenden Jahrhunderte, Basle, 1884. A. GRAF, Miti, leggende e superstizioni del medio evo, 2 vols., Turin, 1892. F. W. HACKWOOD, Christ-lore: legends, traditions, myths, symbols, customs, superstitions of the Christian church, London, 1902. Saints. M. and W. DRAKE, Saints and their emblems, New York, 1914. H. DELEHAYE, Les origines du culte des martyrs, Brussels, 1912. E. Lucius, Die Anfdnge des Heiligenkults in der Christlichen Kirche, Tubingen, 1904. H. QUENTIN, Les martyrologes historiques du moyen age: etude sur la formation du martyrologe romain, Paris, 1906 (Etudes d'histoire des dogmes et d'aneienne litterature eccles- iastique). P. SAINTYVES, Les saints successeurs des dieux, Paris, 1907. J. P. KIRSCH, The doctrine of the communion of saints in the ancient church, English translation, Edinburgh, 1910. See also no. 258 above. Christian iconography. A. BELL, Saints in Christian art, 3 vol London, 1901-1904. S. HEATH, The romance of symbolism and relation to church ornament and architecture, London, 1909. J. NEALE and B. WEBB, The symbolism of churches and church on ments, 3rd edition, London, 1906. F. E. HULME, Symbolism Christian art, London, 1899. C. E. CLEMENT, A handbook of Chr tian symbols and stories of the saints, as illustrated in art, 5th edi- FRANKS AND VISIGOTHS 357 ti«;ii, Boston, 1895. H. V. D. GABELENTZ, Die kirchliche Kunst im it,,„ Ti»im »t<-i /tit. L«>ip/iy, 1S.'iJ>, 2n-l editifui. with a-1'litions l.y K. Hr.RNHARDT, 360 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in Leipzig, 1869. M. BONNET, Le latin de Grcgoire de Tours, Paris, 1890. B. KRUSCH, "Zu M. Bonnet's Untersuchungen iiber Gregor von Tours," in Neues Archiv, XVI (1891), 432-434. R. URBAT, Beitrage zu einer Darstellung der romanischen Elemente im Latein der Historic Francorum des Gregor von Tours, KSnigsberg, 1890. G. KURTH, ' ' Saint Gregoire de Tours et les etudes classiques au VP siecle, " in Eevue des questions historiques, XXIV (1878), 586- 593. Venantius Fortunatus. R. KOEBNER, Venantius Fortunatus, Leip- zig, 1915. See also MANITIUS, Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur, I, 170-181. Merovingian Latin. H. D'ARBOIS DE JUBAINVILLE, Etudes sur la langue des Francs a I'epoque merovingienne, Paris, 1900; see also his La declinalson latine en Gaule a I'epoque merovingienne, Paris, 1872. E. ERNAULT, De Virgilio Marone: grammatico tolosano, Paris, 1886. O. HAAG, "Die Latinitat Fredegars, " in Zeitschrift filr romanische Forschungen, X (1899), 835ff. B. KRUSCH, "Die Sprache Frede- gars," in Neues Archiv, VII (1882), 486-494. J. PIRSON, "Le latin de f ormules merovingiennes et carolingiennes, ' ' in Eomanische For- schungen, XXVI (1909), 837-944. Merovingian civilization. A. MARIGNAN, Etudes sur la civili- sation francaise, vol. I, La societe merovingienne, vol. II, Le culte des saints sous les merovingiens, Paris, 1899. A. F. OZANAM, La civilisation chretienne chez les Francs: recherches sur I'histoire ecclesiastique, politique et litteraire des temps merovingiens et sur le regne de Charlemagne, in vol. IV of his Oeuvres completes, 11 vols., Paris, 1872-1881. C. GALY, La famille a I'epoque mero- vingienne, Paris, 1901. K. WEIMANN, Die sittliche Begriffe in Gregors von Tours " Historica Francorum,'' Duisburg, 1900 (dissertation, Leipzig). H. RUCKERT, Kulturgeschichte des deutschen Voiles in der Zeit des ttbergangs aus dem Heidentum in das Christentum, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1853-1854. L. LINDENSCHMIT, Die Alterthumer der merov- ingischen Zeit, Braunschweig, 1880. For Merovingian archaeology see also nos. 299-301 above. Learning in Merovingian Gaul O. DENK, Geschichte des gallo- frdnlcischen Unterrichts- und Bildungswesens, chs. vi-vm. G. KURTH. Histoire poetique des merovingiens, Paris, 1893. J. J. AMPERE, Hix- toire litteraire de la France avant Charlemagne, 3 vols,, Paris, 1870. P. LAHARGOU, De scholis Lerinensi aetate merovingiaca, Paris, 1892. See also especially vol. Ill of no. 803 above. Merovingian saints and churchmen. C. A. BERNOUILLI, Die Heiligen der Merovinger, Tubingen, 1900. L. VAN DER ESSEN, Etude critique et litteraire sur les Vitae des saints merovingiens de I'ancienne THE BRITISH ISLES 361 Belgiquc, Louvain, 1907. E. VACANDABD, Vie de Saint Ouen, eveque de Eouen (641-684): etude d'histoire mcrovingienne, Paris, 1902. G. KUBTH, Sainte Clotilde, Paris, 1897, 8th edition, 1905 (Les saints), translated by V. M. CRAWFORD, London, 1906. P. PARSY, Saint Eloi (590-659), Paris, 1907. R. P. CAMERLINCK, Saint Leger, ,ls\ erbindungen Westgal liens mit Irland im Altertum und friihen Mittelalter, " in Sitzungsberichte der k. Preuss. Adakemie der Wissenschaften (1909), 365ff. (answered by F. HAVERFIELD, "Ancient Rome and Ireland," in English historical review, XXVIII (1913), 1-12, who claims that Zimmer is wrong when he says that there was active trade between Ireland and Rome, 50-350 A.D.). H. XIMMKK. Der kulturgeschichtliche Hintergrund in den Erzahlungcn der altcn iriscJicn Heldensage, Berlin, 1911; see also his Keltischc Stiulii-n, 2 vols., Berlin, 1881-84; and his "Ober die friihesten Beriihrungen der Iren mit den Nordgermauen," in Sitzungsberichte der Aka.l. d.-r Wiss. /.u Herlin (1891), 279-317. W. SCHULTZE, "Die •itiiiij; ' ni tun «•» //»//)//. I'.-iri.s, 1883, book II, rli. ix. Brittany and the British isles. B. I'I.AINK, La colonisation de j» r l< s Jin tunx inttttJaii • \. I'm is, 1899. J. LOTH, L'fmi- hntoiiitt ,n .tntoriquc du Ve au VII0 sude de notre &re, Bonnes, 1883. 364 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII Theodore of Tarus. G. F. BROWNE, Theodore [of Tarsus] and Wilfrith, London, 1897. Aldhelm. G. F. BROWNE, Aldhelm: his life and times, London, 1903. L. BONHOFF, Aldlielm von Malmesbury : ein Beitrag zur Kirchengeschichte, Dresden, 1894. Bede. G. F. BROWNE, The Venerable Bede, London, 1887, is a book for the general reader. K. WERNER, Beda der Ehrwiirdige und seine Zeit, Vienna, 1875, 2nd edition, 1881. M. MANITIUS, (-30. Authoritative general surveys. .1. H. Mr LUNGER, The schools (,/ Clmrlfti tin (in at, London, 1877, ahastatic reprints, New York, 366 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART HI 1904 and 1911. G. MONOD, Etudes critiques sur les sources de I 'Mstoire carolingienne, Paris, 1898, part 119 of no. 888 above, 37- 67, ' ' La renaissance carolingienne ' ' (his ' ' La renaissance earo- lingienne, " in Seances et travaux de I' Academic de sciences morales et politiques, CLII (1899), 137-166, corresponds almost word for word with pp. 37-59 of the publication just mentioned). MANITIUS, Gescliiclite der lateini-schen Literatur, I, 243-288, "Der carolingische Humanismus und sein Verfall"; see also 368-370 (Paulinus of Aquileia), 452-456 (Peter of Pisa), 537-547 (Theodolf of Orleans and Angilbert), 639-646 (Einhard). MOLINIER, Lcs sources, I, 181- 227, "Renaissance carolingienne." Alcuin. A. F. WEST, Alcuin and the rise of the Christian schools, New York, 1892. C. J. B. GASKOIN, Alcuin: his life and his work, London, 1904. G. F. BROWNE, Alcuin of York, London, 1908. ROGER, L'enseignement, 313-328, 440-448. Latin classics. L. HA VET, "Que doivent a Charlemagne les classiques latins?" in Sevue bleue, fifth series, V (1906), 129-133. SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, I, 471-482. Carolingian calligraphy. PUTNAM, Books and their makers, I, 106-117. A. MOLINIER, Les manuscrits et les miniatures, Paris, 1892, 107-139 (an extract from these pages may be found- in C. V. LANG- LOIS, Lectures historiques, 5th edition, 171-180). E. M. THOMPSON, An introduction to Greek and Latin palaeography, 367-370, 403ff. M. PROU, Manuel de paleographie, 3rd edition, 169-191. F. DELISLE, "Memoire sur 1'ecole calligraphique de Tours au IXe siecle, " in Memoires de I' Academic des inscriptions, XXXII (1885), part I, 29-56. See also in general outline XXVI below. Original sources. History of the Langobards, by PAUL, THE DEACON, translated by W. D. FOULKE. For Einhard see outline VIII of part II above. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See outline VIII of part II above. See also especially nos. 29, 788 and 803 above. General and miscellaneous accounts. G. KURTH, Les origines de la civilisation moderne, 2 vols., 5th edition, Brussels, 1903. A. HAUCK, Kirchengeschichte Deutschlands, vol. II, Die Karolingerzcit. H. BASTGEN, "Alkuin und Karl der Grosse in ihren wissenschaft- lichen und Kirchenpolitischen Ansehauungen, ' ' in Historisches Jahr- buch, XXXII (1911), 809-825. W. TURNER, "Irish teachers in the carolingian revival," in The Catholic university bulletin, XII (1907), 382, 567. G. PARIS, Histoire poetique de Charlemagne, Paris. 1865, new edition by P. MEYER, 1905. L. MA!TRE, Les ecoles epis- copales et monastiques de I'occident depuis Charlemagne jusqu'a Philippe- Auguste, Paris, 1865. G. BRUHNES, La foi chretienne VUI AGE OP CHARLEMAGNE 367 la philosophic au temps de la renaissance carolingienne, Paris, 1903. H. BLOCK, Geistesleben im Elsass zur Karolingerzeit, Strassburg, 1901 (Separatabdruck aus der illustrierten Elsassischen Rundschau, III, 4). J. PHILIPPE, Lucrcce dans la theologie chrctienne du 3e au 13^ .s-fVr/r ct spi'i-iellement dans les Scales carolingiennes, I, Paris, 1895. Alculn. F. MONNIER, Alcuin et son influence chez les Franks, Paris, 1853, 2nd edition, Alcuin et Charlemagne, Paris, 1864. K. WERNER, Alcuin und sein Jahrhundert, Paderborn, 1876, 2nd edition, Vienna, 1881. F. LORENZ, Alcuin' s Leben, Halle, 1829, translated by JANE M. SLEE, The life of Alcuin, London, 1837. R. B. PAGE, The letters of Alcuin, New York, 1909 (dissertation). E. DUMMLER, "Zur Lebensgesehichte Alchvins, " in Neues Archiv, XVIII (1893), 51- 70. W. SCHMITZ, Alcuins ars grammatica, die lateinische Schulgram- nidlik der karolingischen Renaissance, Ratingen, 1908 (dissertation, Greifswald). J. B. LAFORET, Hi&toire d' Alcuin, Paris, 1898. F. HAMELIN, Essai sur les oeuvres d' Alcuin, Paris, 1873. A. DUPUY, iii it \';<-<>\c dc St. Martin de Tours, Tours, 1876. Theodulf. C. CUISSARD, Theodulfe, cveque d 'Orleans, (Orleans, 1892. Einhard. F. KURZE, Einhard, Berlin, 1899. A. SCHMIDT, Die Kinhards, Greifswald, 1904 (dissertation). Carolingian art. In general see no. 299 above, I, ch. II. F. v. REBER, Der karolingische Palastbau, 2 parts, Munich, 1892, in .thliaiulliniiii n of the Academy of Munich. G. HUMANN, Zur (lixfhichte der karolingischen Bankunst, Strasburg, 1909 (Studien znr deutschen Kunstgeschichte). C. RHOEN, Die karolingische Pfalz zu Aachen, Aachen, 1889. K. PLATH, Nimwegen: ein Kaiserpalast Karl's des Grossen in den Niederlanden, Berlin, 1895; see also his Die Konigspfalzen der Merovinger und Karolinger, Leipzig, 1892. W. EKKMAXN, Centula — St. Biguier — : eine Untersuchung zur Ge- fidiirlitr der kirchlichen Baukunst in der Karolingerzeit, Miinster, 1912 (Forschungen und Funde). F. LEITSCHUH, Geschirhte der karolinfiixclirn Malerci, Berlin, 1894. P. CLEMEN, Mcrovingische in,,! kartiliiifiixrhe Plastik, Bonn, 1892. J. R. RAHN, Das Psaltcrium annum >;,n Sanrt-Gallen : ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der karoling- isi-ln n Miniahtrmalerei, St. Gall, 1878, contains reproductions and text. Original sources. Almost all the writings of Alcuin and his eont Scales de Chartres an moyen dge du V* au XFIe siecle, Chartres, 1895 (MSmoires de la Societ6 arch^ologique d'Eure-et-Loir, XI). W. B. ASPINWALL, Les ecoles episcopates et monastiques de I'ancienne province eccUs- iastique de Sens du VI« au XIIe siecle, Paris, 1904 (dissertation). G. SALVIOLI, L'istruzione pubblica in Italia nei secoli VIII, IX, X, Florence, 1898. A. OZANAM, "Des Ecoles et de 1 'instruction publique en Italic aux temps barbares, " in his Documents inSdits, 1850. W. (JiKSEBRECHT, De litterarum studiis apud Italos, 1845, translated into Italian by C. PASCAL, L 'istruzioni pubblica in Italia nei primi secoli t.'ip/i^. 1>7.'!. translate! by S. KHUDA HrKiisii. ('niilnhutions to the history of Islamic ririli;l,jr«l. l.y MoSES BEX MAIMOX, called MAIMOXIDES, trans- late.I l,\ M. FRIEDLAXDER, 3 vols., London, 1886. Bibliographies. Short serviceable bibliographies will be found in MACIMINAI.D. Minimi tlnnloay, 358-367; NlCHOLSOX, A history of the Arabs, 471-480; G. LE BON, La civilisation des 679-686, ALTAMIRA, Historia dc Espana, IV, 3rd e«lition, 600-608. For ilotaili-cl information consult V. CHAUVix, Bibliographic des fiiirrntitx unities ou rclatifs aux Arabcs, publics dans I'Europe din'- c de 1810 d 1885, vols. I -XI, Liege and Leipzig, 1892-1909; and Oricnttilim-hi /?i7>/i'»i»/r'* .•>•«! <-orrtxi>oit Tours et la contravene sacramentaire au XIe siccle, Paris, 1903 (extract from the Revue de I'histoire des religions). .1. S< IIMTZER, Berengar von Tours, Munich, 1891. W. BROECKINO, Bischof Eusebius Bruno von Angers uml Berengar von Tours," in I>> titxrht /titxchrift fiir Geschichtstcussenschaft, XII (1895), 344. Original sources. Most of the works of authors mentioned in this outline are to be found in no. 953 above. Berengarius Tv.ro- doi.M.v, nder eine Sammlung ihn betreffender Briefe, edited by H. SlDK.NDOKK. Cutha, 1850. Bibliographies. The best bibliography will be found in the footnotes of GRABMANN, Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, I, 215-339. PERIOD II. 1100-1300 XII. THE TWELFTH AND THIRTEENTH CENTURIES IN THE HISTORY OF CULTURE A. OUTLINE 1. The recent appreciation of the sudden advancement of civili- zation in western Europe beginning with the close of the eleventh century. Unfortunately this movement is now quite generally called "The twelfth century renaissance." 2. Relations of the culture of the twelfth and thirteenth cen- turies to that of the "renaissance" of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. See outline XXXIII in part II above. 3. In the twelfth century the chief movements which mark the beginning of a new era in European history were well under way. See outline XIX of part II above. 4. The importance of the thirteenth century in the history of culture. Recent glorification of that century. Comparison with the nineteenth century. 5. Importance of the medieval university as the embodiment of a new intellectual era. 6. France, especially northern France, was the center of this progressive movement which laid the basis of modern European civilization. In this era Paris was beginning to be the metropolis of Europe. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING "The twelfth century renaissance." H. RASHDALL, The universi- ties of Europe in the middle ages, 2 vols., Oxford, 1895, I, ch. II, ' ' Abelard and the renaissance of the twelfth century. " D. C. MUNRO, "The renaissance of the twelfth century," in the Annual report of the American historical association, 1906, vol. I, 43-50. H. O. TAYLOR, "Antecedents of the quattrocento," ibid., 1912, 89- 94. MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, enlarged edition, 474-490. C. V. LANGLOIS, Questions d'histoire et d'enseignement, Paris, 1902, 13-17. A. O. NORTON, Eeadings in the history of edu- cation: mediaeval universities, 4-12. M. GRABMANN, Die Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, vol. II, Einleituhg, "Die Signatur des PARIS 12 Jahrhunderts. " G. ROBERT, Les Scales et I'enseignement de la thtologie pendant la premiere moitie du XIIe siecle, Paris, 1909, 1-7. B. GROCHE, Beitrage zur Geschichte einer Renaissancebewegung bei den deutschen Schrifstellern im IS Jahrhundert, Halle, 1910. Similar conditions in the Byzantine empire are described by K. KRUM- BACHER, Geschichte der byzantinischen Literatur, 2nd edition, 15ff. The thirteenth century. F. HARRISON, The meaning of history, ch. v, "A survey of the thirteenth century." MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, enlarged edition, 458-473, "The intellectual movement of the thirteenth century," adapted from LAVISSE, Hi»- toire de France, III, part II, 387-416. LECOY DE LA MARCHE, La chaire franc,aise au moyen age, specialement au XIHe sifde, Paris, 1886, 467-492. P. MANDONNET, "La crise scolaire au d6but du XIII* siecle," in Revue d'histoire ecclesiastique, XV (1914), 34—49. J. J. WALSH, The thirteenth, greatest of centuries, New York, 1907, 4th edition, reprinted with additions, 1912, is addressed to Roman Catholics and not to the world of scholarship as a whole. XIII. THE CITY OF PARIS IN THE MIDDLE AGES A. OUTLINE 1. Saccrdotium, Imperium, Studium. During the twelfth and thirteenth centuries Paris was par excellence the seat of the Stndium. Recent transformations in Paris which have almost entirely obliterated the monuments of the medieval city. 2. The site of Paris. Physical geography of the region. The Seine and its islands. St. Denis. 3. The development of Paris into the capital of France. Ancient Roman Lutetia. Caesar 's presence there in 53 B.C. The revolt of the Parixii. Julian, "the Apostate," spent the winters 357-868 and 359-360 in Lutetia. Remains of Roman buildings, especially the Thermae (H&tel de Cluny). Clovis made Paris his capital. During Merovingian times Paris remained the chief city in Neu- stria, and maintained its importance even under Charles Martel and Pepin. Charlemagne made Aix-la-Chapelle his capital. With the Norman sicgi- in 885, and the elevation of Odo as king, Paris again became important. Since the accession of Hugh Capet in 987 Paris has been, without interruption, the capital of France. 4. Topography of mriliovnl Paris. The grand divisions: Ville, Cite1, University. The Petit Pont and the Grand Pont. The wall of Philip Augustus, built about 1210. 386 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART m 5. The Cite. The cathedral Notre Dame de Paris. Parvis Notre Dame. Palais Episcopal. Hotel-Dieu. Palais Eoyal. Sainte Chapelle. The Jewry. 6. The right bank of the Seine. Louvre. Grand Chatelet. St. Germain 1'Auxerrois. St. Jacques. St. Martin des Champs. The Temple. St. Antoine. Place de Greve. 7. The left bank. The Latin Quarter. St. Genevieve ("the hill"). Saint-Germain-des Pres. Pre-aux-Clercs. St. Victor. Les Bernardins. Houses of the Jacobins (Dominicans) and the Fran- ciscans. St. Severin. St. Julian le Pauvre. Petit Chatelet. Rue du Fouarre. The Sorbonne. 8. The business and social life of Paris in the middle ages. 9. Aspect of Paris in the time of Abelard 'and William of Cham- peaux, at the beginning of the twelfth century. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Paris as an historic city. F. HARRISON, The meaning of history, 368-436, "Paris as an historic city" and "The transformation of Paris. ' ' G. MONOD, ' ' Le role de Paris dans la France du moyen age," in Revue historique, CXIX (1915), 77-85. General accounts. M. POETE, L'enfance de Paris, Paris, 1908, chs. ix-xm; see also his "Les sources de 1'histoire de Paris et les historiens de Paris," in Bevue bleue, 5th series, IV (1905), 657- 660, 693-695. T. OKEY, The story of Paris, London, 1906 (Mediaeval towns). P. CORNU, Histoire de Paris, I, Paris depuis la periode gallo- romaine jusqu'd la fin du XlVe siecle, Paris, 1901, is a series of 24 lantern slides with descriptive text. See also the articles on Paris in nos. 96, 98 and 104 above, which is especially good for the churches in Paris. Pictorial history of Paris, T. J. H. HOFFBAUER, Paris a trovers les ages, 2 vols., 2nd edition, Paris, 1885. Paris in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. L. HALPHEN, Paris soils les premiers Capetiens (987-1223) : etude de topographie histori- que, Paris, 1909, with an Album de planches, in which see espe- cially plate II, ' ' Plan de Paris sous Philippe Auguste. ' ' L. BOUTIE, Paris au temps de saint Louis, Paris, 1911. L. OLSCHKI, Paris nach den altfranzosischen nationalen Epen: Topographie, StadtgeschirJite und locale Sagen, Heidelberg, 1913, with 4 plans; see also his Der ideale Mittelpunlct Franlcreichs im Mittelalter in Wirl'lichkeit und Dichtung, Heidelberg, 1913. A. SPRINGER, Paris im 13 Jahrhundert, Leipzig, 1856 (contains a plan), translated freely into French by V. FOUCHER, Paris au XHIe siecle, Paris, 1860. See also the few pages of description in J. McCABE, Peter Abelard, New York, 1901, 20-25. PARIS 387 Guide-books for Paris. K. BAEDEKER, Paris and environs: hand- book for travellers, 18th revised edition, Leipzig and New York, 1913. MARQUIS DE ROCHEGUDE, Guide pratique a trovers le vieux Paris, 4th edition, Paris, 1907. A. J. C. HARE, Paris, 2 vols., Lon- don [n. d.]. MARIA H. LANSDALE, Paris: its sites, monuments and history, compiled from the principal secondary authorities, Phila- delphia, 1898. MABELL S. C. SMITH, Twenty centuries of Paris, New- York, 1913. Paris in fiction. H. DE BALZAC, Les Proscrits (written 1831), in his Oeuvres completes XVI, Paris, 1870, 657-687 (a story about Dante in Paris in 1308) ; and VICTOR HUGO, Notre Dame de Paris (written 1830), book III (an attempt to picture Paris as it was in 1482). Original sources. ' ' Deux 61oges de la ville de Paris, ' ' composed in 1323 by JEAN DE JANDUN and an anonymous called "DICTATOR," Latin text with a French translation on opposite pages, in Paris et sat liifitnrii us aux XIV* et XVe siecles, edited by A. J. V. LE Roux DE LINCY and L. M. TISSERAND, Paris, 1867 (Histoire gene>ale de Paris), pp. 1-79. Plans. SHKI-HERD, Atlas, 149. P. VIDAL DE LA BLACHE, Atlas generale, new edition, 46b. More detailed maps and plans are indicated in the bibliography below. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See the bibliography under outline XXV in part II above. The special literature on 'the university of Paris, midrr outline XXII below, is essential for a knowledge of Paris in the middle ages. General histories of Paris. Histoire generale de Parti, published by authority of the municipality, Paris, 1866ff. (about 40 large vols.. in 1917), is the fundamental work on the history of Paris. Next in importance are the publications of the Soci£te' de 1'histoire ilc Paris et de 1'Ile de France, namely, the Bulletin, Paris, 1874ff.; the Memoires, Paris, 1874ff.; and the Documents, Paris, 1874ff., which are not numbered (vol. XVI appeared in 1909). Abb6 LEBEUF, Histoire de la ville et de tout le diocese de Paris, 15 vols., I'uris, 1754-1758, new edition in 3 vols. by H. COCHERIS, Paris, 1865-1867 (incomplete, but valuable for its notes), another edition by A. AUUIER, 6 vols., Paris, 1883; to be supplemented by Rectifica- tions et additions by F. BOURNOU, Paris, 1890-1901, and by Dom BEAUNIER, La France monastique, vol. I, Paris, • 1905. JAILLOT, /,'< •, •//. ;•<•/(» .s criUqnrx, historiques et topoarapliiques sur la ville de Paris, 5 vols., Paris, 1772-1774, new edition, 1782. H. SAUVAL, 388 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in Histoire et recherches des antiquites de la ville de Paris, 3 vols., Paris, 1724. M. FELIBIEN and G. A. LOBINEAU, Histoire de la ville de Paris, 5 vols., Paris, 1725. A. CHRISTIAN, Etudes sur le Paris d'autrefois, 6 vols., Paris, 1904-1907, are interesting popular volumes. H. RAMIN, Notre tres vieux Paris, Paris, 1909. E. DE MENORVAL, Ports [des origines a 1715], 3 vols., Paris, 1889-1897. E. FOURNIER, Paris-capitale, Paris, 1881. E. CLOUZOT, "Les inonda- tions a Paris du VP au XX* siecle, " in La Geographic, XXIII (1911), 81-100. G. PESSARD, Nouveau dictionnaire historique de Paris, Paris, 1904, is not as accurate as it should be. Topography and archaeology of medieval Paris. A. BERTY, H. LEGRAND, and others, Topographic historique du vieux Paris, 6 vols., Paris, 1866-1897, in Histoire generale de Paris. Statistique monumentale de Paris, edited by A. LENOIR, 2 folio vols., and 1 quarto volume containing explanation of plates, Paris, 1867, part of no. 965 above. C. NORMAND, Nouvel itineraire guide artistique et archeologique de Paris, published by the Societe des amis des monuments Parisiens, vols. I-II, Paris, 1889-1894. F. DE GUIL- HERMY, Description archeologique des monuments de Paris, 2nd edi- tion, Paris, 1856. J. Du BREUL, Le theatre des antiquites de Paris, Paris, 1612. A. BONNARDOT, "Iconographie du vieux Paris," in Sevue universelle des arts, vols. II-XII and XIX, Paris 1855-1860 and 1864. G. EIAT, Paris, Paris, 1907 (Les villes d'art celebres). G. SCHMIDT and G. EIAT, Paris: eine Geschichte seiner Kunstdenk- mdler, vom Altertum bis auf unsere Tage, Leipzig, 1912 (Beriihmte Kunststatten, 6). E. HESSLING, Le vieux Paris: recueil de vues de ses monuments, vol. I, Moyen age, Berlin, [1906]. ,See also no. 299 above. Plans of old Paris. The essential publication is the Atlas des anciens plans, de Paris, Paris, 1880, 3rd edition, 3 vols., 1900, in Histoire generale de Paris. A. FRANKLIN, Les anciennes plans de Paris: notices historiques et topographiques, 2 vols., Paris, 1878- 1880. A. BONNARDOT, Etudes archeologiques sur les anciens plans de Paris des XVI*, XVII* et XVIIIe siecles, Paris, 1851; see also his Dissertations archeologiques sur les anciennes enceintes de Paris, 3 vols., Paris, 1852-1877. Streets of Paris, E. FOURNIER, Promenade historique dans les rues de Paris, new edition, Paris, 1894; see also his Chroniques et legendes des rues de Paris, new edition, Paris, 1893; his Enigmes des rues de Paris, new edition, Paris, 1892; and his Histoire des enseignes de Paris, Paris, 1884. E. BEAUREPAIRE, Paris d'hier et d'au- jourd'hui: la chronique des rues de Paris, Paris, 1900. E. DE MEXOR- VAL, Promenades a travers Paris, Paris [1897]. PARIS 389 Notre Dame. A. MARTY, L'histoire de Notre-Dame de Paris d'apres les estampes, Paris, 1907, contains 100 plates together with an introduction and bibliographical notes. M. AUBERT, La cathe- drale Notre-Dame-de-Paris, Paris, 1909. C. HIATT, Notre Dame de Paris: a short history and description of the cathedral, with some account of the churches which preceded it, London, 1902. V. MORTET, Etude historique et archeologique sur la cathedrale et le palais epis- copale de Paris du VI? au XI Ie siecle, Paris, 1888; see also his Notes historiques et archeologiques sur la cathedrale et de palais episcopal de Paris, Paris, 1903-1905 (three pamphlets). F. L. CHARTIER, L'ancien chapitre de Notre-Dame-de-Paris et sa maitrise, d'apres des documents capitulaires (1326-1790), Paris, 1897. G. D'AVENEL, Les eveqa.es et archeveques de Paris, depuis saint Denis jusqu'd, nos jours, avec des documents inedits, 2 vols., Paris, 1876, is untrustworthy. Other ecclesiastical establishments. W. LOUERGAN, Historic churches of Paris, London, 1896. 8. SOPHIA BEALE, The churches of Paris from Clovis to Charles X, London, 1893. G. DUBOIS, Historia ecclesiae Parisiensis', 2 vols., Paris, 1690-1710. H. L. BORDIER (ed.), Les eglises et monastcres de Paris: pieces en prose et en vers des IXe, Mil*- et XlVe siecles, Paris, 1856. C. DESMAZE, La Sainte Chapelle du Palais de Justice de Paris, Paris, 1873. 8. J. MORAND, Histoire de la Sainte Chapt-he royale du Palais, Paris, 1790. A. LE BRUN, L'eglise Naiiil-.lnlicn le Pauvre : d'apres les historiens et des docu- ini'iitH inedits, Paris, 1889. P. FERET, L'abbaye de Sainte-Genevieve et la congregation de France, 2 vols., Paris, 1883; see also GIARD, ' ' Etude sur 1 'histoire de 1 'abbaye de Sainte-Genevieve de Paris jusqu'a la fin du XIII' siecle," in Memoires de la Societe de I'his- toire de Paris, XXX (1903), 41-126. J. BOUILLART, Histoire de I'abbaye royale de Saint-Germain-des-Pres, Paris, 1724. FOURIER- BONNARD, Histoire de I'abbaye royale et de I'ordre des chanoines ri'iitliers de Saint-Victor de Paris, first period (1113-1500), Paris [1904]. See also no. 460 above. Hospitals. Hotel Dieu. E. COYECQUE, L'Hotel-Dieu de Paris au moycn age: histoire et documents, Paris, 1889-1891 (Documents de la Soci6t6 de 1'histoire de Paris). Archives tic l'Hot<-l-IHi u Paris (1157-1SOO), edited by L. BRIELE and E. COYECQUE. Paris, 1894, part of no. 966 above. A. CHEVAUER, L'Hotcl-Dieu de Paris et les soeurs Augustine* (650-1810), Paris, 1901. L. BRIELE, Notes pour servir d 1'histoire de l'H6tel-Dieu de Paris, Paris, 1870 (extract from 1 'Union me'dicale). L. BRIELE, L'Hopital de Sainte -Catherine en la rue Saint-Denis (1184-1790), Paris, 1890. Chatelet. L. BATIFFOL, "Le Chatelet de Paris vers 1400," in historique, LX1 (1896), 225-264; LX1I (1896), 225-235, 390 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in LXIII (1897), 42-55, 266-283, treats of the period from the eleventh to the fifteenth century. A. DE BOUARD, Etudes de diplo- matique sur les actes des notaires du Chdtclet de Paris, Paris, 1911, part 186 of no. 888 above. Economic and social life in Paris. A. FRANKLIN, La vie privee au temps des premiers Capetiens, 2 vols., 2nd edition., Paris, 1911, in particular; and in general, La vie privee d'autrefois: arts et metiers, modes, moeurs, usages des Parisiens du XI Ie au XVIIIs siecle, 27 vols., Paris, 1887-1902. A. FRANKLIN, Dictionnaire his- torique des arts, metiers et professions exerces dans Paris depuis le treizieme siecle, with a preface by E. LEVASSETJE, Paris, 1906. G. HUISMAN, La jurisdiction de la municipality Parisienne de Saint Louis a Charles VII, Paris, 1912 (Bibliotheque d'histoire de Paris), see the bibliography, pp. vii-xiii. A. FRANKLIN, Les corporations ouvrieres de Paris du XIIs au XVIIIs siecle, Paris, 1885. W. GALLION, Der Ursprung der Ziinfte in Paris, Berlin and Leipzig, 1910 (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 24). E. PICARDA, Les marchands de I'eau: Hanse Parisienne et compagnie frangaise, Paris, 1901, part 134 of no. 888 above. G. GUILMOTO, Etudes sur les droits de navigation de la Seine de Paris a la Boche- Guyon au XI« au XVIIIe siecle, Paris, 1889. See also the literature which pertains to France under outline XXVI in part II above, where the editions of the Lime des metiers of ETIENNE BOILEAU are indicated under "Original sources." Jews in Paris. L. KAHN, Les juifs a Paris depuis le VIp- siecle, Paris, 1889. For general histories on the Jews see nos. 850-884 above. Original sources. Most of the printed source material for the history of Paris is to be found in the Histoire general de Paris, the Publications of the Societe de 1'histoire de Paris, and in nos. 965 and 966 above. The following collections deserve particular men- tion. Cartulaire generale de Paris, 528-1180, edited by E. DE LAS- TEYRIE, vol. I (528-1180), Paris, 1887, in Histoire generale de Paris. Documents inedits sur 1'histoire de France — Paris sous Philippe le Bel, edited by H. GERAUD, Paris, 1837, contains a good plan by the architect LENOIR, part 34 of no. 965 above. Cartulaire de Notre- Dame de Paris, 4 vols., edited by B. GUERARD, Paris, 1850, part of no. 965 above. Eecueil des chartes de I'abbaye de Saint-Germain- des-Pres, des origines au debut du XHIe siecle, edited by E. Pou- PARDIN, vol. I, Paris, 1909, vol. XVI part I of Documents of the Societe de 1'histoire de Paris. Eecueil de chartes et documents de Saint-M artin-les-Champs : monastere Parisien, edited by J. DEPOIN, vol. I-II, Paris, 1912-1913 (Archives de la France monastique, ABELAKD AND BERNARD 391 XI II- XI V.i. Hi'-ni'l olard at Melun and Corbel I. lli> teaching on the hill of St. (Senevleve. He 392 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in studied theology under Anselm of Laon. His love affair with Heloise about 1118. He became a monk at St. Denis. Popularity of his teaching in his hermitage near Rheinis. His trial for heresy at the council of Soissons, 1121. His hermitage near Troyes (-Paraclete). He aroused the antagonism of St. Norbert and St. Bernard of Clairvaux. Abelard as abbot of St. Gildas in Brittany. Back to Paris about 1136. Second trial for heresy at the council of Sens, 1141. Befriended by Peter the Venerable (died 1156), abbot of Cluny. Abelard died at St. Marcel lez Chalons, 1142. 5. Abelard 's works. His famous Sic et non. The Scito te ipsum sen Ethica. Dialogus inter philosophum, judaeum et christianum. Theological and dialectical works. The Historia calamitatum. 6. Abelard 's method and the degree of his rationalism. The question of the originality and influence of his sic-et-non method. "By doubting we are led to inquire; by inquiry we perceive the truth ' ' — Sic et non, preface. 7. The life and work of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, ca. 1090- 1153, who embodied the ascetic spirit of the new monastic move- ment, and at the same time was a practical active statesman. His book On Consideration, and his Letters. His attitude towards secular learning, and his reliance on faith. 8. The clash between Abelard and Bernard of Clairvaux. Bern- ard combatted heresy in all its forms. His visit to Aquitaine. His denunciation of Gilbert de la Porree and Arnold of Brescia as well as of Abelard. His diplomacy in connection with the trial of Abelard at Sens in 1141. The greatness of Bernard in his day contrasted with the ultimate failure of his ideals. 9. Mysticism in this age of reason. The school of St. Victor. The mystic strain in Bernard of Clairvaux and his influence upon Hugh (1096-1141) and Richard of St. Victor (prior, 1162-1173). 10. Conflicting opinions concerning the character and influence of Abelard who is popularly renowned as the founder of the university of Paris. The need of a new critical edition of his works. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general surveys. TAYLOR, Mediaeval mind, 2nd edition, I, ch. xvii, II, ch. xxxvu. LAVISSE, Histoire de France, II, part II, 366-383. S. SWEETSER, ' ' Church theology and free inquiry in the twelfth century," in Bibliotheca sacra, XVII (1860), 43-64. Standard accounts. G. ROBERT, Les ecoles et I'enseignt mint <1>- la theologie pendant la premiere moitie au XIIC siecle, Paris, 1909 (ch. vn on Abelard). GRABMANN, Geschichte der scholastic •/« " Methode, vol. II (168-229 on Abelard). ABELARD AND BERNARD 393 Abelard. Excellent short sketches of Abelanl are in POOLE, Illustration*, eh. v; and C. C. J. WEBB, Studies in the history of iintiinil religion, part III, no 3, "Abelanl." J. McCABE, Peter Abelard, New York, 1901, is the most stimulating biography. See also G. COMPAYRE, Abelard and the origin and early history of uni- i-irsities, London, 1893 (The great educators, 3). A. HOFMEISTER, "Studien iiber Otto von Freising, " in Neues Archiv, XXXVII (1912), 635-640, is a valuable contribution to our knowledge about Abelard. Is the Abelard-Heloise correspondence genuine? B. SCHMEIDLER, "Der Briefweehael zwischen Abalard und Heloise eine Falschung?" in Archie fiir Kulturgeschichte, XI (1913), 1-30 (see the references to the opinions of ORELLI, COUSIN, LALANNE, and PETRELLA in his notes). Bernard of Clalrvaux. The best short sketch is in LAVISSE, Uitttnin ill France, II, part II, 266-282 (translated in MUNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, new edition, 406-431). The best authority on Bernard is E. VACANDARD, Vie de St. Bernard, abbe de Clairvaux, Paris, 1895, 4th edition, 2 vols., 1910; see also his .s'*M;i/ Bernard, Paris, 1904 (La Pensee chr6tienne). B. S. STORRS, lit ntard of Clairvaux, New York, 1892. J. C. MORISON, The life and time* of St. Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, London, 1884, 2nd edi- tion, 1901. Original sources. For brief extracts from Abelard 's works see ROBINSON. licniliinis', I, 446-452. The Abelard-Heloise correspond- ence is analyzed and translated in pa/t by TAYLOR, Mediaeval mind, II, ch. xxv; see also Love letters of Abelard and Heloise in the Temple classics series. There is a recent German translation of the letters, including the Historia calamitatum, by W. FRED, Die Briefs von Abalard und Heloise, Leipzig, 1911. Some letters of St. Bernard, from the translation of Dr. EALES, sfli-i-ti-.l, with a preface, by F. A. GASQUET, London, 1904, furnish a convriiirtit introduction to the thought of Bernard and the reasons for his antagonism to Abelard. The complete works of S. Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, translated into English from the edi- tion of I'om JOANNES MABILLON (Paris, 1690), by 8. J. EALES, 0 vols., London, 1889-1896. Saint BERNARD'S work On Consideration has been translated by G. LEWIS, Oxford University Press, 1908. C. BIBLIOGRAIMIY General books. The general histories of philosophy, nos. 882- 835 above, are most useful. See ••-[.<•, i.-illy nos. 822, 829 and 833. The encyclopaedias for church history, nos. 104-114 above, are very helpful. See also no. 472 above. 394 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIH Abelard. The following are well-known biographies. E. KAISER, Pierre Abelard critique, Fribourg, 1901. S. M. DEUTSCH, Peter Abdlard: ein kritischer Theologe des 12 Jahrhunderts, Leipzig, 1883. A. HAUSRATH, Peter Abdlard, Leipzig, 1895 (Weltverbesserer, vol. 1). C. F. M. DE REMUSAT, Abelard, 2 vols., Paris, 1845 (do not confuse with his drama, Abelard, 1877). The article by E. POR- TALIE, "Abelard," in I, 35-55 of no. 109 above, is noteworthy. Among the special studies the following deserve mention. R. DAHMEN, Darstellung der Abdlardschen Ethik, Munster, 1906 (dis- sertation). F. THANER, Abdlard und das canonische Becht, Graz, 1900. B. HILLER, Abdlard als Ethiker, Erlangen, 1900 (disserta- tion). H. DENIFLE, "Die Sentenzen Abalards und die Bearbei- tungen seiner Theologia vor Mitte des 12 Jahrhunderts, ' ' in Archiv fur Literatur- und Kirchengeschichte des Mittelalters, I (1885), 402- 469, 484-624. F. PICAVET, Abelard et Alexandre de Hales: createurs de la methode scolastique, Paris, 1896 (Bibliotheque de 1'Ecole des hautes etudes, sciences religieuses, vol. VII, 1). F. v. BEZOLD, Cber die Anfdnge der Selbstbiographie im Mittelalter, Erlangen, 1893. B. GEYER, ' ' Die Stellung Abaelards in der Universalienf rage, ' ' in Supplementband (1913), 101-127, of no. 826 above. Bernard of Clairvaux. S. J. BALES, St. Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux, London, 1890 (Fathers for English readers). A. STEIGER, Der hi. Bernhard von Clairvaux: sein Urteil uber die Zeit- zustdnde, seine geschichtsphilosophische und kirchenpolitische An- schauung, Briinn, 1908. Comte D'HASSONVILLE, Saint Bernard, Paris, 1906. A. NEANDER, Der heilige Bernhard und seine Zeitalter, new edition, Gotha, 1889, translated by M. WRENCH, The life and times of St. Bernard, London, 1843. G. HUFFER, Der heilige Bernhard von Clairvaux: eine Darstellung seines Lebens und Wirkens, vol. I, Munster, 1886. G. SALVAYRE, Saint Bernard: maitre de vie spiritu- elle, Avignon, 1910. G. CHEVALIER, Histoire de Saint Bernard, 2 vols., Lille, 1888. G. HOFMEISTER, Bernhard von Clairvaux, Berlin, 1889-1890 (Programm). J. RIES, Das geistliche Leben in seinen Entwicklungsstufen nach der Lehre des hi. Bernhard, Freiburg, 1906. C. NEUMANN, Bernhard von Clairvaux und die Anfdnge des sweiten Ereuzzuges, Heidelberg, 1882 (dissertation). J. THIEL, Die polit- ische Thdtigkeit des Bernhard von Clairvaux, Konigsberg, 1885 (dis- sertation). Abelard and Bernard. E. VACANDARD, Abelard: sa lutte urn- saint Bernard, sa doctrine, sa methode, Paris, 1881. RAGNISCO, "P. Abelardo e S. Bernardo di Chiaravalle: la cattedra ed il pulpito, esame di alcuni guidizi su Abelardo, come logico, moralista e teologo, " in Atti di. r. istit. Veneto di scieme, VIII, Venice, 1905. ABELARD AND BERNARD 395 W. MEYER, "Die Anklagesatze des heiligen Bernhard gegen Aba- lard," in Nachrichtcn der kgl. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Gottingen, philol.-histor. Klasse, 1898, 397-468. S. M. DEUTSCH, Die Synode von Sens 1141, und die Verurteilung Abiilards, Berlin, 1880. Faith and reason. T. HEITZ, Essai historique sur les rapports entre la philosophic et la foi de Berengar de Tours d S. Thomas d'Aquin, Paris, 1909. REUTER, Geschichte der religiosen Aufklarung, 1, 183-259. William of Champeaux. G. LEFEVRE, Les variations de Guillaume de Champeaux et la question des universaux: etude suivie de docu- - originaux, Lille, 1898 (Travaux et m^moires de 1 'Universit6 Lille, VI, iiH-nioire no. 20). E. MICHAUD, Guillaume de Champeaux et les ecoles de Paris, au XII« siecle, 2nd edition, Paris, 1867. F. PICAVET, "Note sur 1'enseiguement de G. de Champeaux d'apres 1'llistoria calamitatum d'AbSlard, " in Revue Internationale d'en- seignement, October, 1910. Peter the Venerable. M. DEMIMUID, Pierre le Venerable, Paris, 1876, 2nd edition, 1895. Hugo of St. Victor. B. HAUREAU, Les oeuvres de Hugues de St.-Victor: essai critique, 2nd edition, Paris, 1886. A. MIQNON, Les oriiiines de la scolastique ct Hugues de Saint-Victor, 2 vols., Paris, 1895. J. KIUJENSTEIN, Die Gotteslehre des Hugo von Saint-Victor, \Viir/burg, 1897 (dissertation). H. OSTLER, Die Psychologic des Hugo von St. Viktor, Miinster, 1906, part VI, 1, of no. 826 above. O. SCHMIDT, Hugo von St.-Victor als Pddagog, Meissen, 1893. Mgr. HUGONIN, Essai sur la fondation de I'ecote de St. Victor de Paris, Paris, 1879; also in MIGNE, P. L., CLXXV. See also TAYLOR, Mediaeval mind, 2nd edition, II, ch. xxix. Original sources. The works of Abelard are printed in MK.NK. no. 953 above. P. L., CLXXVI1I (a reprint of Petri Abelardi opera, edited by F. AMBOESIUS, Paris, 1616). Petri Abelardi Opera, 2 vols., I'uris, 1849-1859; and Outrages inedits d'Abelard, Paris, 1836, part of no. 965 above, both edited by V. COUSIN, whose introduction to tin- luttrr is valuable. Abaclards 1121 «v Soissons verutheilter Trac- t at >i* ili \m\tntr it triintate divina: mit ciinr Kinleitung edited by R. HTMLZI.K, Freiburg, 1891. ABELARD 's Sic et non is edited separately by E. L. T. HENKE and G. 3. LINDENKOHL, Marburg, 1851. Tin- works of Bernhard are in vols. CLXXXII-CLXXXV of MKJNK. /'. /... no. 953 above. Bibliographies. Sut1i<-i<>nt bibliographical guidance will be found in nos. 822, 827, 830 above, nii'l in HKITZ, Essai historique 169-174; and ROBERT, Les ecolcs, ix-xvi. L. .IANACSCHKK, Bibliographia Ber- nardino, Vienna, 1891 (in Xenia Bernardino, 4). 396 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII XV. THE NEW ARISTOTLE A. OUTLINE 1. A momentous intellectual revolution was caused by the intro- duction of all the works of Aristotle into western Europe in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Compare with Darwinism in the nineteenth century. 2. The transmission of Aristotle's works to the twelfth century. The life and work of Aristotle (born at Stageirus in 384 B.C., and died at Chalcis in 322). History of the Aristotelian books to the time of Boethius. The translations and commentaries of Boethius. Knowledge of Aristotle in the Latin west during the early middle ages. Works of Aristotle known to Abelard. A good history of Aristotle ' ' a travers les ages ' ' unfortunately is still a desideratum. 3. Mohammedans and Jews as transmitters of Greek philosophy to the west (see outline X above). Their famous commentaries. Byzantine influences (Michael Psellos and John Italos). 4. Schools of translators in the west, especially in Sicily and Spain (Toledo). Eelative importance of translations from the Greek and Arabic. Value of these Latin translations. Decline of interest in Plato as Aristotle became more popular. 5. The "New Logic." In the thirteenth century the curricula of universities distinguished between the "New" and "Old Logic." The "Old Logic" comprised the texts on logic which were in use in the schools before ca. 1128, namely, the Categories and On interpretation of Aristotle, the Isagoge of Porphyry and sometimes the Divisions and Topics of Boethius (the Six principles of Gilbert de la Porree are sometimes included). About 1128 the whole Organon of Aristotle became known in Latin translations. The "New Logic" comprised his Prior and Posterior analytics, the Topics and the Sophistical refutations. Even these new logical books of Aristotle created a great stir in the schools. James of Venice. Henricus Aristippus of Catania (died 1162). 6. The New Aristotle par excellence was introduced towards the close of the twelfth and in the beginning of the thirteenth century and consisted of Aristotle 's books on moral and natural philosophy and metaphysics, namely, the Ethics, Physics, Meteorics, On the heavens and the earth, On generation and destruction, On animals, the "Parva naturalia," and the Metaphysics. 7. Famous translators of the New Aristotle. From the Arabic: Gerard of Cremona (died 1187), Michael Scot (died before 1235), Hermann the German (ca. 1250). From the Greek: William of Moerbeke (ca. 1215-1286), archbishop of Corinth, 1278-1286, trans- lated for St. Thomas Aquinas. THE NEW ARISTOTLE 397 8. Reception of the New Aristotle in the universities, especially the university of Paris. The prohibitions of 1210 and 1215. In !_•". 1 pope Gregory IX appointed a committee of three to purge the condemned books of Aristotle. Evidence that the books were read quite openly in Paris, 1230-1255, in spite of the ban. In lL'."i") the faculty of arts in Paris prescribed the forbidden books. 9. Various ways in which Aristotle was regarded in the thir- teenth century. Mental ferment caused by his writings. Tendency toward heresies. Averroism. 10. Unconditional acceptance of Aristotle as presented to the scholastic world by Albert the Great and Thomas Aquinas (see outline XVII above). Aristotle became "The Philosopher" among the Christians as he was among the Mohammedans. Ineffective protests of the "Oxford school" (see outline XXI below). B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Life and works of Aristotle. For brief sketches see nos. 96, 98, 104 above. UEBERWEG, no. 822 above, and CROISSET, Histoire
  • >/. ./•)/ i,f nnili'iiil philosophy, 243-253. NORTON, Eeadimjx in (In hixtnrtf <>f i iliii'otinn : mediacral iinirt rxitii \. 40—49. G. II. Li'QfKT. .Iriatnli- it l'nnivcrsit£ de Paris pendant !<• XIII1' l':iris. HUH (;ilsn in HililiothiVnio do 1'Kcolo dos hnutes eludes, rolijjioiisrs. XVI, 2). Brother AzARIAS. Aristotle and thr Christian church: tm issnii. London, 1888. P. FERKT. I.a faciiltt' ,1, tln'-ilni/i, ,h- /VM-I.V: ninii'ii u-n. 4 vols.. I'aris, 1S94 1K<»7, II, 107 l'J9. L. TRATHK. l-'inli iiiniii in ili lull nnxi In riiili'lniiii ih .s M itttliiltirs. Munii'h. I'.Ml. vol. II of his K:nli itiinii in i>nrts iiitn In philo- sophic et la foi, especially, 87-91. 398 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII Standard accounts on the New Aristotle. The best treatment is in P. MANDONNET, Siger de Brabant et L'Averroisme latin au XHIe siccle, Fribourg, 1899, second edition, Louvain, vol. I (1911), vol. II (1908), I, chs. i-n. It should be supplemented by C. H. HASKINS, "A list of text-books from the close of the twelfth cen- tury," in Harvard studies in classical philology, XX (1909), 75- 94; C. H. HASKINS and D. P. LOCKWOOD, "The Sicilian translators of the twelfth century and the first Latin versions of Ptolemy's Almagest," ibid., XXI (1910), 75-102; C. H. HASKINS, "Further notes on Sicilian translators of the twelfth century," ibid., XXIII (1913), 155-166; and his "Mediaeval versions of the Posterior analytics," ibid., XXV (1914), 87-105; P. DUHEM, "Du temps ou la scolastique latine a connu la physique d'Aristote," in Revue de philosophic, XV (1909), 163-178; and, for the "New Logic," M. GRABMANN, Die Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, I, 64-81; A. HOFMEISTER, "Studien iiber Otto von Freising, " in Neues Archiv, XXXVII (1912), 654-681; and CLERVAL, Les ecoles des Chartres, 222, 244ff., and see his index under "Aristote. " Michael Scot. J. W. BROWN, An inquiry into the life and legend of Michael Scot, Edinburgh, 1897. Original sources. Aristotle's Works, translated into English under the editorship of J. A. SMITH and W. D. Boss, London, 1910ff. (in progress), deserve particular mention among the numer- ous translations of Aristotle. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See the histories of philosophy, nos. 822-835 above, and the literature under outline XVII below. Aristotle in scholasticism. CHOLLET'S article on " L 'aristotel- isme de la scolastique, ' ' in no. 109 above, I, 1869-1887, sums up recent research. A. SCHNEIDER, Die abendldndische Speculation des 12 Jahrhunderts in ihrem Verhdltnis zur aristotelischen und judisch- ardbischen Philosophie, Miinster, 1915, vol. XVII, 4, of no. 826 above. S. TALAMO, L'aristotelismo della scolastica, Naples, 1873, 3rd edition, Siena, 1881, translated into French, Paris, 1876. F. EHRLE, "Der Augustinismus und der Aristotelismus in der Scho- lastik gegen Ende des 13 Jahrhunderts," in Archiv fur Literatur und Kirchengeschichte, V (1889), 603ff.; see also his "John Peck- ham iiber den Kampf des Augustinismus und Aristotelismus in der zweiten Halfte des 13 Jahrhunderts," in Zeitschrift fur Tcatholische Theologie, XIII (1889), 172ff. M. SCHNEID, Aristoteles in der Scho- lastik, Eichstadt, 1876. F. NITSCH, " Tiber die TJrsachen des Umschwungs und Aufschwungs der Scholastik im 13 Jahrhundert, " in Jahrbucher fur protestantische Theologie, II (1876), 532ff. XVI HERESIES AND INQUISITION 399 Latin translations of Aristotle. A. JOURDAIN, Becherches criti- ques sur I'dge et I'origine des traductions latines d'Ari$tote, et sur les commentaires grecs ou arabes employes par les docteurs scolasti- ques, Paris, 1819, 2nd edition, 1843, was the pioneer work in this interesting but difficult field of research. V. ROSE, "Die Liicke im Diogenes Laertius und der alte tfbersetzer, " in Hermes, I (1866); 367-397; and his "Ptolomaus und die ttbersetzer-Schule von Toledo," ibid., VIII (1874), 327-349. O. HARTWIG, "Die tfbersetzungsliteratur Unteritaliens in der normannisch-staufischen Epoche," in Centralblalt fur Bibliothekswesen, III (1886), 161-190, 223-225, 505. E. MOORE, Studies in Dante, first series, Oxford, 1896, 305-318, "On the translations of Aristotle used by Dante." G. H. LUQUET, "Hermann 1'Allemand, " in Revue de I'histoire des T( Unions, XLII (1901), 407-422. C. MARCHESI, L'Etica Nicomachea iH'lla Iradizione latino medievale, Messina, 1904. A. VACANT, Les versions latines de la morale a Nicomaque, Paris, 1885. A. MULLER, Die griechischen Philosophen in der arabischen Vberlieferung, Halle, 1873. B. BONCOMPAGNI, Delia vita e delle opere de Gherardo Cre- monese, Rome, 1851. For translations from the Arabic see outline X above. Aristotle's natural science. T. E. LONES, Aristotle's researches in natural science, London, 1912. T. W. THOMPSON, On Aristotle as a biologist, Oxford, 1913 (Herbert Spencer lecture). C. HUIT, La philosophic de la nature ches les anciens, Paris, 1901. C. B. JOUR- DAIN, Influence d'Aristote et de ses interpretes sur la decouverte du nouveau-monde, Paris, 1861. Bibliographies. The best bibliography is in the notes of MAN- DONNET, Siger de Brabant; but see also the bibliographical notes in the articles by HA'SKINS, HOFMEISTER, and in GRABMANN, Ge- Ki-h'fhtc der scholastwchen Methode. M. SCHWAB, Bibliographic d'Aristote, Paris, 1896. XVI. HERESIES AND THE INQUISITION A. OUTLINE 1. The connection between heresy and the pronounced intellect- ual activity and religious revival in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. 2. Purely speculative novelties of the intellectual class. Notions about the Trinity and transubstantiation which disturbed the church. The trials of Abelard in 1121 and 1141. The trials at Paris in 1147 of Gilbert de la Porr^e, 1076-1154, scholasticus in 400 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in Paris in 1141, bishop of Poitiers in 1142, author of the Liber sex principiorum. The pantheism of Chartres. Amalric (Amaury) of Bene and David of Dinant whose doctrines were condemned at Paris in 1210. Roger Bacon. The trial of Siger de Brabant in Paris in 1277. Siger de Brabant and Averroism. The censorship of books. The degree of intellectual freedom in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. -3. Demented innnovators such as Tanchelm in Belgium and Eon de 1'Etoile (Eudes de Stella) in Brittany in the first half of the twelfth century. 4. Antisacerdotal heresies in southern France in the twelfth century. Criticism of the practices of the church and of the lives of the clergy. Peter of Bruys (burned 1126) and the Petrobrusians. Henry of Lausanne (died in prison about 1149), and the Henricians. St. Bernard of Clairvaux in southern France to stem the tide of heresy. Peter Waldo of Lyons (died in Bohemia in 1197) and the Poor Men of Lyons or Waldensians, who were excommunicated by the pope in 1184, and driven from Aragon by Alphonse II in 1194. 5. Manichaens (Cathari or Albigensians, from Albi, near Toul- ouse). Theories about the origin of this sect. Possible connec- tion with Paulicians and the Bogomiles of Bulgaria (Bougre). Their dualistic beliefs and ascetic practices. Spread of the heresy in the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries. The Albigen- sian crusades (see outline XXV in part II above). 6. The suppression of heresy. The theory and practice of per- secution in the early middle ages. The canon law and heresy. Gradual development of inquisitorial machinery and punishments and the gradual growth of intolerance. Desultory efforts of bishops to stem the tide of heresy. Special papal legates sent into Langue- doc by Innocent III. Gregory IX, 1227-1241, organized the inquisi- tion as a definite and permanent piece of machinery for the sup- pression of heresy (inquisitio hereticae pravitatis). The mendicants, especially the Dominicans, and the inquisition. 7. The inquisition. Co-operation of the state with the church. Legislation of Frederick II against heretics. The use of torture and secret and questionable legal procedure. Punishments: public recantation, fines, confiscation, penance, imprisonment, and abandon- ment of the prisoner to the secular arm. Auto-da-fe (act of faith). Attitude of canonists and theologians, especially St. Thomas Aquinas, towards the death penalty. Burning at the stake. Com- parison of the medieval inquisition with the Spanish inquisition in the sixteenth century. The Jews and the inquisition. HERESIES AND INQUISITION 401 8. The beginnings of persecutions for witchcraft by the papal inquisition in the second half of the thirteenth century. The great days of witch persecution did not come until the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. 9. Influence of the inquisition on the intellectual life of the thirteenth century. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general surveys. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generate, II, 265-279. MILMAN, History of Latin Christianity, vol. V, book IX, ch. VIH. C. V. LANGLOIS, L'inquisition d'apres des travaux recents, Paris, 1901. TRENCH, Lectures in church history, eh. xv, "Heresies in the middle ages." HOLLAND, Ewe of intellectual liberty, chs. v-vn. Standard works. "The most extensive, the most profound, and the most thorough history of the inquisition which we possess" (FREDERICQ) was written by a Philadelphian, the late H. C. LEA, A history of the inquisition of the middle ages, 3 vols., New York, 1888, translated into French by S. REINACH, Histoire de Vinquisition au moyen age, with a valuable introduction, entitled "Historio- graphie de 1 'inquisition," by P. FREDERICQ, 3 vols., Paris, 1900- 1902, also translated into German by J. HANSEN, Geschichte der Iniinixitinii i MI Mittelalter, Bonn, 1905ff. LEA'S work is supplemented by C. H. 11 ASK INS, "Robert le Bougre and the beginnings of the inquisition in northern France," in American historical review, VII (1901-1902), 437-457, 631-652. In the first six chapters of vol. I, LEA gives a good account of the heresies and the general condi- tions which gave rise to the inquisition. Much has been written about LEA'S books, especially by Roman Catholics; see e.g., P. M. BAUMOARTKN, DK Werke von Henry Charles Lea und verwandte liiiflnr. Minister, 1908, translated into English, Henry Charles Lea's hifitorii-nl irritin/is, New York, 1909. The best introduction to the position of modern Roman Catholic scholars on the question of medieval non-sirs and the inquisition is E. VANCANDARD, L'inqui- ide historiquc ct critique sur le pouvmr cocrcitif de I'tglise, Paris, 1906, 5th edition, 1909, translated by P. L. CONWAY, from the 2nf tin ,-t,,rrn-, \\n\rcr of the church, New York, 1908. See also the article "Inquisition," in the Catholic r/ici/'1/"/"'/"'. Albigensian crusade. LAVISSK. lltxtnire dc France, III, part I, 259-268. The standard work is by A. LUCMAIRE, Innocent III, vol. II, Lii crnifiiuli ili.t Albigcois, the first pages of which have been translated in MCNRO and SELLERY, Medieval civilisation, enlarged edition, 432-457. 402 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in Gilbert de la Porree. POOLE, Illustrations of the history of medieval thought, ch. vi, see also ch. iv. For opposition to the doc- trines of the church in the beginning of the thirteenth century see LAVISSE, Histoire de France, III, part I, 313-318. Averroism. MANDONNET, Siger de Brabant et I'Averroisme. EENAN, Averroes et Averroisme. C. V. LANGLOIS, Questions d'his- toire et d'enseignement, 51-103, "Siger de Brabant." Original sources. Translations and reprints, vol. Ill, no. 6, pp. 8-19. ROBINSON, Readings, I, ch. xvn. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. All general histories of the church, nos. 394- 498 above, and the encyclopaedias and periodicals for church his- tory, nos. 104-114, and 176-180 above, are useful; but see especially the general histories of freedom of thought, nos. 739-748 above. See also 540 above. General surveys. H. EEUTER, Geschichte der religiosen Aufklar- ung im Mittelalter, vol. II, books V-VIII. F. THUDICHUM, Papsttum und Keformation im Mittelalter. Heresies. J. v. DOLLINGER, Beitrdge zur Sectengeschichte des Mittelalters, Munich, 2 vols., 1890 (vol. II contains source material). J. HAVET, "L'heresie et le bras seculier au moyen age jusqu'au XIIIe siecle, " in Bibliotheque de I'ecole des chartes, XLI (1880), 488-517, 570-607, 670 (or Oeuvres completes, Paris, 1896, II, 117-180). F. Tocco, L'eresia ne} medio evo, Florence, 1884. P. BEUZART, Les heresies pendant le moyen age et le reforme jusqu'a la mort de Phil- ippe II, 1598, dans la region de Douais, d' Arras, et au pays de I'Alleu, Le Puy, 1912. P. ALPHANDERY, Les idees morales chez les hete- rodoxes latins au debut du XIIIs siecle, Paris, 1903 (Bibliotheque de 1'Ecole des hautes etudes, sciences religieuses, XVI, 1); see also his Note's sur le messianisme medieval latin, Xle-XIIe siecles, Paris, 1912 (ibid.). P. HINSCHIUS, Kirchenrecht, V, 449^92. E. CONY- BEABE, Key of truth, London, 1898. C. U. HAHN, Geschichte der Ketzer im Mittelalter, 3 vols., Stuttgart, 1845-1850. Gilbert de la Porree. Abbe BERTHAUD, Gilbert de la Porree, eveque de Poitiers et sa philosophic, Poitiers, 1892. CLERVAL, Les ecoles des Chartres, 163ff. GRABMANN, Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, II, 407-438. Al marie, and David of Dinant. C. JOURDAIN, "Memoire sur les sources philosophiques des heresies d'Amaury de Chartres et de David de Dinan," in his Excursions historiques, 101-128. B. HAUREAU, ' ' Memoire sur le vraie source des erreurs attributes a David de Dinan, ' ' in Memoires de I 'Academic des inscriptions, XXIX, HERESIES AND INQUISITION 403 part II (1879), 319-330. C. BAEUMKER, "Bin Tractat gegen die Amalricaner aus dem Anfange des XIII Jahrhundert, " in Jahr- buch fiir Philosophic und speculative Theologie, 1893, 346ff. Waldensians. T. DE CAUZONS, Les Vaudois et I' inquisition, 3rd edition, Paris, 1908. E. COMBA, Histoire des Vaudois, new edition, Lausanne, 1901. K. MULLER, Die Waldenser und ihre einzelnen Gruppen bis zum Anfang des 14 Jahrhunderts, Gotha, 1886. W. PREGER, "Beitrage zur Geschichte der Waldesier im Mittelalter, " in Konigliche bay. Ak. der Wiss., phil.-hist. Classe, XIII (1877), 181- 250; see also his "ttber die Verfassung der franzosischen Walde- sier in der altesten Zeit," ibid., XIX (1891), 639-711. H. HAUPT, Waldensertum und Inquisition im siidostlichen Deutschland, Freiburg, 1890. HERZOO (II.), Die romanische Waldenser, Halle, 1853. A. DIECKHOFP, Die Waldenser im Mittelalter, Gottingen, 1851. Albigensians. T. DE CAUZONS, Les Albigeois et I 'inquisition, 2nd edition, Paris, 1908. C. SCHMIDT, Histoire et doctrine de la secte des Cathares ou Albigeois, 2 vols., Paris, 1849. C. DOUAIS, L'Albi- geisme et les Freres precheurs d, Narbonne au XIIIe siecle, Paris, 1894. N. PEYRAT, Histoire des Albigeois, 3 vols., Paris, 1870-1872. C. DOUAIS, Les Albigeois, Paris, 1879. E. DULAURIER, Les Albigeois ou les Cathares du Midi de la France, in Le Cabinet historique, XXVI (1880). J. GUIRAUD, Questions d'histoire et d'archeologie chr6tienne, Paris, 1906. VERNET'S article "Cathares," in no. 109 above, is important. Inquisition. T. DE CAUZONS, Histoire de V 'inquisition en France, vols. I-II, Paris, 1909-1912. C. DOUAIS, L' inquisition: ses origines, sa procedure, Paris, 1906. L. TANON, Histoire des tribunaux de I'inquisition en France, Paris, 1893. C. HENNER, Beitrage zur Organisation und Kompetenz des pdpstlichen Ketzergericht, Leipzig, 1890. C. MOLINIER, L'inquisition dans le Midi de la France au XIII* au XIV* siecle: elude sur les sources de son histoire, Paris, 1880. J. M. VIDAL, liullairr de I'inquisition fran^aise au XIV' siecle et jusqu'a la fin du Grand Schisme, Paris, 1913; see also his Un inquisiteur juge par ses victimes: Jean Galland et les Carcassonnais, Paris, 1903. H. THELOE, Die Ketzerverfolgungen im 11 und IS Jahrhundert: ein Jiiitrag zur Geschichte der Entstehung des pdpstlichen Ketzerinquisi- tionsgericht, Berlin, 1913 (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, 48). H. MAILLET, L'eglise et la repression sanglante de I'he're'sie, Liege and Paris, 1909 (Bibliotheque de la Facultfi de philosophie et lettres de Liege, XVI). P. FREDKRICQ, Geschiedenis der inquisitie in de Nedcrlanden, iOS5-15fOt 2 vols., Ghent, 1892— 1897. J. MARX, L'inquisition en Dauphine: etude sur le dfveloppe- mcnt et la repression de I'htresie et de la sorcellerie du XIV« sitcle 404 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in au debut du regne de Francois ler, Paris, 1914. H. KOHLER, Die Ketzerpolitik der deutschen Kaiser und Konige in den Jahren 1152- 1254, Bonn, 1913 (lenaer historische Arbeiten, VI). F. ZECHBAUER, Dber Herlcunft und Wesen des sizilischen Inquisitionsverfahrens, Ber- lin, 1908 (dissertation). E. SCHMIDT, Die Herlcunft des Inquisitions- prosesses, Freiburg, 1902. P. FLADE, Das romische Inquisitionsver- fahren in DeutscMand bis zu den Hexenprozessen, Leipzig, 1902 (Studien zur Geschichte der Theologie und der Kirche, vol. IX, 1). Witch persecutions. J. HANSEN, Quellen und Untersuchungen zur Geschichte des Hexenwahns und der Hexenverfolgung im Mittclalter: mit einer Untersuchung der Geschichte des Wortes "Hexe." von J. FRANCK, Bonn, 1901; and his Zauberwahn, Inquisition und Hexen- prozess im Mittelalter und die Entstehung der grossen Hexenver- folgung, Munich and Leipzig, 1900 (vol. XII of Historische Bibliothek). J. BAISSAC, Les grands jours de la sorcellerie, Paris, 1890. T. DE CAUZONS, La magie en France, 4 vols., Paris, 1909. W. G. SOLDAN, Geschichte der Hexenprozesse, Stuttgart, 1843, new edi- tion by H. HEPPE, 2 vols., 1880; there is also an illustrated edition by M. BAUER. Original sources. Corpus documentorum inquisitionis haereticae pravitatis Neerlandicae (1035-1528), edited by P. FREDERICQ, 5 vols., Ghent, 1889-1902. Documents pour servir a I'histoire de I'inquisition dans le Languedoc, Paris, 1900, edited by C. DOUAIS, part of no. 966 above. BERNARD GUIDO (d. 1331), Practica inquisitionis heretice pravitatis, edited by C. DOUAIS, Paris, 1886. Professor G. L. BURR of Cornell University has announced that he will edit Sources for a projected history of witchcraft, gathered and translated into English by the late H. C. LEA. Bibliographies. MOLINIER, Les sources, III, pp. 54-82. H. HAUPT, " Literaturberichte iiber Inquisition, Aberglauben, Ketz- erei und Sekten im Mittelalter, ' ' in Zeitschrift fiir Kirchengeschichte, XVI (1896), 512-536, XVII (1897), 270-287. P. FREDERICQ, "Les recents histoires catholique de I'inquisition en France," in Bevue historique, CIX (1912), 307-334. G. L. BURR, "The literature of witchcraft," in Papers of the American historical association, IV (1890), 237-266. Professor BURR has announced that a special catalogue of the collection in Cornell University on the inquisition, torture, and witch-persecution is in preparation. The collection in Cornell University of books on witchcraft is the most complete in the world. PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 405 XVII. SYSTEM ATI ZATION OF MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY A. OUTLINE 1. The word "scholasticism" in intellectual history. Strange definitions of this peculiar word. Intimate relations between phil- osophy and theology in the middle ages. The dependence of both upon logic. The so-called scholastic method. 2. Old and new books which served as a basis for instruction in these subjects. The bible and patristic writings. Graeco-Roman, Hebrew, Arabic, and Byzantine literature. Importance of reputed authoritative texts. Lack of a critical attitude towards these texts, many of which were current only in faulty Latin translations. 3. Peter Lombard, born in Novara in Lombardy, master in Paris from about 1140, died as bishop of Paris in 1160, the "Master of the Sentences." His Libri quattuor sententiarum. Their place and influence in the development of the scholastic method. 4. Alexander of Hales, an Englishman who became a Fran- ciscan in Paris about 1231 and died there in 1245. His great fame as a Franciscan master of theology. His voluminous Summa theo- logica which was the first successful attempt to utilize the New Aristotle for theology. 5. Albert the Great, born about 1193 in Swabia, a Dominican in 1223, master of theology in Paris, 1245-1248, died in Cologne in 1280. His paraphrase of the works of Aristotle for the use of the Latins. His acquaintance with Jewish and Arabic books. 6. Thomas Aquinas, born about 1225 near Monte Cassino, in the vicinity of ancient Aquinum, became a Dominican in 1243, the pupil of Albert in Cologne, whom he followed to Paris in 1245, died in 1274. His voluminous works, especially the great Summa theologica and his commentary on the literal Latin text of Aristotle, procured dinvtly from the Greek with the help of William of Moerbeke. His skill in welding Aristotelianism with Christian doctripe. The exalted place of Thomas Aquinas in the history of thought. 7. Attacks upon the apparently perfect philosophical and theo- logical system of Thomas by scholars from the British Isles. John Duns Scotus, a Franciscan master of theology in Oxford and Paris, died 1308 at the early age of about thirty-four. William of Ockam, renowned as a master of theology in Paris about 1320, died about 1347. 8. Scholastic mysticism. The inllucuce of the writings of the so-called Dionysius the Areopagite, and of the Introductorius ad 406 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTHI evangelium aeternum falsely attributed to Joachim of Flora, died 1202. St. Bonaventura of Tuscany, 1221-1274, and Franciscan mysticism. Mechthild of Magdeburg, died 1277. The phenomenal development of mysticism in the fourteenth century, especially in Germany. 9. The organization of instruction in philosophy and theology in the rising universities (see outline XXII below). 10. Neo-scholasticism. The Encyclical Aeterni Patris of pope Leo XIII, 1879. Its influence in drawing attention to the intellect- ual history of the thirteenth century. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Short general surveys. The article "Scholasticism" in nos. 96 and 104 above. J. RICKABY, Scholasticism, London, 1911. W. TURNER, History of philosophy, 237—420. R. EUCKEN, The problem of human life, 248-269. H. B. WORKMAN, Christian thought to the reformation, 188-243. See also M. R. JAMES, "The Christian renaissance," in Cambridge modern history, I, 585-593. Longer accounts. M. DE WULF, History of medieval philosophy, second period, "Medieval philosophy in the thirteenth century." TAYLOR, Medieval mind, 2nd edition, II, chs. xxxv-xxxvi, xxxix- XLI, XLIII. W. J. TOWNSEND, The great schoolmen, chs. vnr-xvi. E. MICHAEL, Culturzustiinde des deutschen Volkes, III, 63-211. H. REUTER, Geschichte der religidsen Aufkldrung, vol. II. Peter Lombard. J. DE GHELLINCK, "The Liber sententiarum, " in Dublin review, CXLVI (1910), 139-166. M. GRABMANN, Die Ge- schichte der scholastischen Methode, II, 359-407. Alexander of Hales. H. FELDER, Geschichte der wissenschaftlichen Studien im FranzisTcanerorden, Freiburg, 1904, 177-211. J. A. ENDRES, "Des Alexander von Hales' Leben und psychologische Lehre, " in Philosophisches Jahrbuch, 1888. See also the biogra- phical article on Alexander of Hales in no. 89 above. Thomas Aquinas. C. C. J. WEBB, Studies in the history of natural religion, part III, no. 4. SEDGWICK, Italy in the thirteenth century, II, ch. vi. R. W. B. VAUGHAN, The life and labours of Saint Thomas of Aquin, 2 vols., London, 1871-1872, abridged edition with the same title, London, 1872, 2nd edition, 1890. PLACID CONWAY, Saint Thomas Aquinas, of the Order of Preachers (1225-1274) : a bio- graphical study of the angelic doctor, New York, 1911. Bonaventura. L. COSTELLOE, Saint Sonaventure. SEDGWICK, Italy in' the thirteenth century, II, ch. vn. Neo-scholasticism. M. DE WULF, -Introduction a la philosophic neo-scolastique, Paris, 1904, translated by P. COFFEY, Scholasticism PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 407 old and new, London, 1907 (see ch. I for definitions of scholasticism). For a short sketch, see his article "Neo-scholasticism, " in the Catholic encyclopedia. J. L. PERKIER, The revival of scholastic phil- osophy in the nineteenth century, New York, 1909. F. PICAVET, Esquisse, ch. IX. Original sources. THOMAS AQUINAS, Of God and his creatures, a translation of the Summa contra gentiles, by J. RICKABY, St. Louis, 1905. THOMAS AQUINAS, The Summa theologica, literally translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province, vols. I- XI, London, 1911-1917. A translation of the Book of Sentences, part IV, of PETER LOMBARD, by J. T SHOTWELL, is announced to appear in no. 949 above. C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. Almost all church histories, nos. 394-498 above, especially nos. 472-478, touch upon the subjects of this outline. The general histories of philosophy, nos. 822-835 above, are most useful, particularly nos. 827-835. See also nos. 104-116, and 176- 181 above. The general literature on the church in the twelfth and thirteenth century is listed under outline XXIV in part II above. Scholasticism in general. J. DE GHELLINCK, Le mouvement thto- logique du XIle siecle, Paris, 1914. F. PICAVET, Essais sur I'his- toire generale et comparee dcs theologies et des philosophies medie- vales, Paris, 1913, contains many essays previously published in various places. G. SORTAIS, Histoire de la philosophic ancienne, Paris, 1912, 156-252, is a good summary with excellent bibliograph- ies. E. KREBS, Theologie und Wissenschaft nach der Lehre der Hoch- scholastik, Minister, 1913, part XI, 3, 4, of no. 826 above. T. HEITZ, Essai hintorique sur les rapports entre la philosophic et la foi. FERET, La farulte de the"ologic de Paris. G. v. HERTLINO, Wissenschaftliche Hit-lit iiniii-ii und philosophische Probleme im XIII Jahrhundert, Munich, 1910 (Festrede). R. v. LILIENCRON, Vber den Inhalt der iilli/tiin iiKu Hililtuifi in der Zcit der Scholastik, Munich, 1876 (Fest- rede). J. MARI£TAN, Le probleme de la classification des sciences d'Aristote d Saint Thomas, Paris, 1901. 8. REINSTADLER, Elementa philosophiae scholanticae, 2 vols., Freiburg, 1901, 5th and 6th edi- tions, 1911. G. M. MANSER, Ueber Umfang und Charakter der mittelalterlichen Scholastik," in Historische-politische Blatter, ( 'XXXIX (1907), also printed separately. H. DELACROIX, "La m6di6vale latine jusqu 'au XIV* siecle," in. Revue de hixtorujue, V (1902), 96-124. C. HoLZHEY, Die Inspiration der hciligen Schrift in der Anschauung des Mittclaltcrs von Karl dem 408 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in Grossen bis zum Konzil von Trient, Munich, 1895. M. MAYWALD, Die Lehre von der sweifachen Wahrheit: ein Versuch der Trennung von Theologie und Philosophic im Mittelalter, Berlin, 1871. J. GUTT- MANN, Die Scholastik des XIII Jahrhunderts in ihren Beziehungen zu Judentum und zur jiidischen Literatur, Breslau, 1902. M. GRAB- MANN, Der Gegenwartswert der geschichtlichen Erforschung der mit- telalterlichen Philosophic, Vienna, 1913. F. X. PPEIFER, Harmonische Beziehungen zwischen Scholastik und moderner Naturwissenschaft, Augsburg, 1881. Peter Lombard. O. BALTZER, Die Sentenzen des Petrus Lom- bardus: ihre Quellen und ihre dogmengeschichtliche Bedeutung, Leip- zig, 1902, part VIII, 3, of no. 495 above. J. DE GHELLINCK, Le traite de Pierre Lombard sur les sept ordres ecclesiastiques, Louvain, 1910 (extract from the Eevue d'histoire ecclesiastique, X-XI). J. N. ESPENBERGER, Die Philosophic des Petrus Lombardus und ihre Stellung im XII Jahrhundert, Miinster, 1901, part III, 5 of no. 826 above. F. PROTOIS, Pierre Lombard, eveque de Paris, dit le Maitre des sentences: son epoque, sa vie, ses ecrits, son influence, Paris, 1881. Albert the Great. P. MANDONNET, "Albert le Grand," in no. 109 above. F. v. HERTLING, Albertus Magnus: Beitrdge zu seiner Wiirdigung, Cologne, 1880. N. THOEMES, Albertus Magnus in Geschichte und Sage, Cologne, 1880. J. BACH, Des Albertus Magnus Verhdltniss zu der Erkenntnisslehre der Griechen, Lateiner, Araber, und Juden, Vienna, 1881. L. GAUL, Alberts des Grossen Verhdltnis zu Plato, Miinster, 1913, part XII, 1, of no. 826 above. A. SCHNEIDER, Die Psychologic Alberts des Grossen, Miinster, 1903, part of no. 826 above. For literature on Albert 's interest in natural science see outline XXI below. Thomas Aquinas. M. GRABMANN, Thomas von Aquin: eine Ein- fiihrung in seine Personlichkeit und Gedankenwelt, Munich, 1912. A. D. SERTILLANGES, Saint Thomas d' Aquin, 2 vols., Paris, 1910. J. A. ENDRES, Die Zeit des Hochscholastik: Thomas von Aquin, Mainz, 1910; see also his article, "Die Bedeutung des hi. Thomas fur das wissenschaftliche Leben seiner Zeit," in Historische-politische Blatter, CXLVII (1911), 801-824. P. MANDONNET, Des ecrits authen- tiques de S. Thomas d' Aquin, 2nd edition, Fribourg, 1910. E. TROELTSCH, Die Soziallehren der christlichen Kirchen, Tubingen, 1912, 286-358. P. EOUSSELOT, L'intellectualisme de Saint-Thomas, Paris, 1908 (Les grands philosophes). A. ROHNER, Das Schopfungs- problem bei Moses Maimonides, Albertus Magnus und Thomas von Aquin, Miinster, 1913. M. WITTMANN, Die Stellung des hi. Thomas von Aquin zu Avencebrol, Miinster, 1900, part III, 3, of no. 826 above. M. CHOSSAT, "Saint Thomas d 'Aquin et Siger de Bra- PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 409 bant," in Bevue de philosophic, XXIV (1914), 553-575; XXV (1914), 25-52. M. AsfN PALACIOS, "El averroismo de Santo Tomas de Aquino," in Homenaje a D. Francisco Codera, Saragossa, 1904, 271-331, also printed separately. Bonaventura. L. LEMMENS, Der M. Bonaventura, Kardinal und Kirchenlehrer aus dem Franziskanerorden, Kempten, 1909. G. PAL- HORIES, Saint Bonaventure, Paris, 1913 (La PensSe chrStienne, textes et etudes). John Duns Scotus. R. SEEBERG, Die Theologie des Johannes Duns Scotus, Leipzig, 1900; see also his Verhdltniss zwischen Glauben und '», Theologie und Philosophic, nach Duns Scotus, Paderborn, 1908. K. WERNER, J. Duns Scotus, Vienna, 1881. See also the article on John Duns Scotus in no. 89 above. Mysticism. W. K. FLEMING, Mysticism in Christianity, London, 1913 (Library of historic theology). W. R. INGE, Christian mysticism, London, 1899 (Bampton lectures). R. M. JONES, Studies in mystical religion, New York, 1909. E. LEHMANN, Mysticism in heathendom and Christendom, translated by G. M. G. HUNT, London, 1910. EVELYN UNDERBILL, Mysticism: a study in the nature and development of man 's spiritual consciousness, 4th edition, New York, 1912. R. A. VAUGHAN, Hours with the mystics, 2 vols., 5th edition, London, 1888. E. GEBHARDT, L'ltalie mystique. C. OULMONT, Le • r, le temple et la cellule: essai sur la sensualite dans les oeuvres ill nnffitiqne religieuse, Paris, 1912. A. LECLERE, Le mysticisme i- christliche Mystik, new edition, 5 vols., Regens- burg [1879-1880]. W. OHL, Deutsche Mystiker, vol. I, Munich, 1910. l\. I.ANf.KXBERG, Quellen und Forschungen zur Geschichte der deutschen Mystik, Bonn, 1901. P. FOURNIER, Etudes sur Joachim de Flore et sen doctrines, Paris, 1909. For a short sketch of Joachim see SEDG- u ICK, Italy in the thirteenth century, I, ch. iv. FRANCESCA M. STEELE, The life ami rixifms of St. Hildegarde, London, 1914. L. ZOEPF, Die Mystikerin Margaretha Ebner (c. 1S91-IS51), Leipzig, 1914, part 16 of no. 749 above. V. SCULLY, A medieval mystic: a short account of the life and writings of blessed John Buysbroeck, canon regular of Grcnendael, A.D. 11193-1381, London, 1910. See also the literature on the Spiritual Franciscans under outline XXIII in part II above, ami for books on the German mystics in the fourteenth century .-in. I tin- !>• imitations Chrixti of THOMAS A KKMIMS see DAHLMANN- WAITZ. Vn,ll,;,k-n>i. kam, 1157-1217, Giraldus Cambrensis (Gerald of Barri), 1147- ca. 1222, and from an anonymous list of text-books. Vincent of Beauvais, died 1264, and his Speculum mundi, divided into three parts: natural?, doctrinale, historiale. Unavailing efforts made by John Garland (died ca. 1259) to check the decline (see outline XXIII below). The "Oxford school" of scholars, especially Robert Grosseteste and Roger Bacon (see outline XXI below). 7. Neglect of the ancient classics in the universities, especially the university of Paris. There is no mention of them in the statutes of this university. Causes of this neglect. 8. The Battle of the seven artu, a French poem written by the trouvere Henri d 'Andeli in the second quarter of the thirteenth century. S>. Interest in Greek, Hebrew, and Arabic, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries (Robert Grosseteste, Roger Bacon, William of M<»>rbeke, and Thomas Aquinas). Greek in southern Italy and Sicily (see outline^XV above). Importance of Byzantine influ- rix-cs. The oriental college of Paris in the time of pope Innocent III. 1198-1216. The study of languages for missionary purposes. Raymund Lull, 1235-1315, a Franciscan, born in Majorca. The legislation of the council of Vienne, 1311, on the compulsory teach- ing of languages. 10. Textual criticism in the thirteenth century, concerned chiefly with the Vulgate. The efforts of Roger Bacon. 11. Sporadic interest in the ancient classics during the century preceding Petrarch. For Dante see outline XXVIII below. Petr- arch, railed the "morning star of the renaissance," shone forth so brightly in his advocacy of the Latin classics because it hap- I to be darkest just before the dawn. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general surveys. TAYLOR, Mcnincrnl mind, 2nd edition, II, ch. xxxi. See also his "Antecedents of the quattrocento," in Annual report of the American historical cumociation, 1912, 89-94. 412 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTIII SANDYS, A history of classical scholarship, I, chs. xxvm-xxxii, passim. MUNEO and SELLERY, Medieval civilization, 285-309. H. FELDER, Geschichte der wissenschaftlichen Studien im Franziskaner- orden, 402-417. NORDEN, Die antike Kunstprosa, II, 688-731. E. MICHAEL, Culturzustande des deutschen Volkes, III, 279-319. EGBERT, Les ecoles, ch. iv. GRABMANN, Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, II, 59-64. B. HAUREAU, ' ' De 1 'enseignement des langues anciennes, ' ' in Journal des savants, 1891, 502-508. Classics in European culture. E. K. BAND, "The classics in European education," pp. 260-282 in Latin and Greek in American education: with symposia on the value of humanistic studies, edited by F. W. KELSEY, New York, 1911. Schools of Chartres. A. CLERVAL, " L 'enseignement des arts liberaux a Chartres et a Paris dans la premiere moitie du XIP siecle d'apres 1'Heptateuchon de Thierry de Chartres," in Congres scientifique Internationale des catholiques tenu a Paris, 1888, II, 277- 296; see also his Les ecoles de Chartres, 144-272. POOLE, Illustra- tions, eh. iv. GRABMANN, Geschichte der scholastischen Methode, II, 407-476, ' ' Die Schule von Chartres, ' ' lays special stress on its influence in philosophy and theology rather than humanistic studies. John of Salisbury. POOLE, Illustrations of the history of medieval thought, ch. vn; see also his article in no. 89 above. A. C. KREY, "John of Salisbury's knowledge of the classics," in Transactions of the Wisconsin academy of sciences, arts and letters, XVI, 2 (1909- 1910), 948-987. C. C. J. WEBB, "John of Salisbury," in Proceed- ings of the Aristotelian society, II, no. 2 (1893), 91-107. Schools of Orleans. L. DELISLE, "Les ecoles d 'Orleans au XIP et au XIII8 siecle, ' ' in Annaire-Bulletin de la Societe de I 'histoire de France, VII (1869), 139-154. Mile. A. DE FOULQUES DE VILLARET, L 'enseignement des lettres et des sciences dans I'Orleanais depuis les premiers siecles du Christianisme jusqu'd la fondation de I'universite d' Orleans, Orleans, 1875. Vincent of Beauvais. E. BOUTARIC, Vincent de Beauvais et la connaissance de I'antiquite classique au treizieme siecle, Paris, 1875 (also in Revue des questions historiques, XVII [1875], 5-57). BAUMGARTNER, Geschichte der Weltliteratur, IV, 468-475. Neglect of classics in universities, L. J. PAETOW, The arts course at medieval universities with special reference to grammar and rhetoric, Urbana, 111., 1910 (University of Illinois Studies, II, no. 7), ch. i. Study of languages, especially Greek. A. LEFRANC, Histoire du College de France, Paris, 1S93, ch. I. LOUISE R. LOOMIS, Medieval THE ANCIENT CLASSICS 413 , Lancaster, Pa., 1906 (dissertation, Columbia). C. JOUR- DAIN, "Un college oriental a Paris au XIII' siecle, " in his Excur- sions histuriiiiies, 221-229. K. KRUMBACHER, "Die griechische Literatur des Mittelalters, " in Die Kultur dcr Gegenwart, 1:8 (1905), 237-288, 2nd ed. (1907), 239-290. Textual criticism. F. A. GASQUET, ."Roger Bacon and the Latin Vulgate, ' ' in Roger Bacon essays, edited by A. G. LITTLE, Oxford, 1914, 89-99; and in his The last abbot of Glastonbury and other essays, London, 1908, pp. 113-140, "English biblical criticism in the thirteenth century," first published in Dublin review, 1898. S. A. HIRSCH, "Roger Bacon and philology," in Eoger Bacon essays, 101-151. B. JARRETT, "A thirteenth century revision committee of the bible," in Irish theological quarterly, IV (1910), 56ff. For a description of the present revision committee of the Vulgate see the article "Vulgate, revision of," in the Catholic encyclopedia. E. FLVGEL, ' ' Roger Bacon 's Stellung in der Geschichte der Philo- logie," in Philoxophinche Studien, XIX (1902), 164-191. Original sources. The battle of the seven arts, by HENRI o'AN- DELI, edited ami translated, with introduction and notes and fac- similes of the two extant manuscripts, by L. J. PAETOW, University of California Press, 1914 (Memoirs of the University of Cali- fornia, IV, no. 1). C. H. HASKINS, "A list of text-books from the close of the twelfth century, ' ' in Harvard studies in classical philology, (1909), 75-94. NORTON, Readings, 25-35, translates some extracts from the works of John of Salisbury, and pp. 60-75 trans- lates the section from GRATIAN'S Decretum entitled "Shall priests be acquainted with profane literature or not" , C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. Some of the general histories of literature, nos. 782-814 above, will be found useful, see e.g., no. 790. General accounts. A. MARIOO, ' ' Cultura letteraria e preumanis- tica nelle inaggiori encidopedie del dugento, lo 'Speculum' ed il ' Tremirs. ' " in (iiornale storico dclla letteratura italiana, LXVIII (1916), 1-42, 289-326. B. GROCHE, Beitraae zur Geschichte einer H, (K//.SM//II •» lii ii -i *.-im-etill0b," in Studier fra Sprog- og Oltidsfor- >tkitiii orlcsungen iiber Kirchenrecht, edited by B. HUBLER, 2nd edition, Berlin, 1893. For the Psuedo- Isidorian Decretals see under outline XV in part II above. Bibliographies. See the general bibliographies for church his- tory, nos. 49-55 above. For Roman law there is a short practical bibliography at the head of chapters in VINOGRADOFF, Roman law, and for canon law a similar bibliography in MATER, L'eglise catholi- que, 19-43. For more detail see the books listed under the head- ings, "Sources and literature" above, and no. 60 above. 426 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in XXI. RISE AND DECLINE OF INTEREST IN THE NATURAL SCIENCES A. OUTLINE 1. Neglect of this field of medieval intellectual life in modern books. Prevalence of misconceptions about it now as in the six- teenth and seventeenth centuries when the legend of friar Bacon and friar Bungay was current. 2. Resumed The transmission of natural sciences from ancient to medieval times (see outline IV above). Neglect of the quad- rivium in western Christendom during the early middle ages. Natural sciences among the Mohammedans (see outline X above). 3. The development of a feeling for nature in the middle ages. 4. Popular notions about nature and the world. Occult science and magic. The tendency to find religious and moral lessons in nature. Bestiaries and lapidaries. 5. Interest of the intellectual class in the natural sciences in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The influence of the New Aristotle together with Ptolemy, Hippocrates, and Galen. The interplay of Mohammedan, Byzantine, and Jewish interests in natural science with those of Latin Christendom. Relations of England with southern Italy and Sicily, and with the Moham- medan world. Adelard of Bath (early twelfth century). Robert of Ketene or of Chester, about 1150. Daniel of Morley (late twelfth century). Alexander Neckam, 1157-1217. Alfred of Sereshel (Alfredus Anglicus, died 1217), John of Toledo (died 1275). Michael Scot, ca. 1190-ca. 1291. 6. The "Oxford school" of scholars who reacted against the prevalent methods in logic, philosophy and theology by stressing the study of the natural sciences and the languages. (For lan- guages see outline XVIII above.) Robert Grosseteste, bishop of Lincoln, 1235-1253, Roger Bacon, Adam Marsh. The experimental method. 7. Roger Bacon (ca. 1214-ca. 1292). His tributes to Robert Grosseteste. His Opus mains, Opus minus, and Opus tertium. Danger of overestimating Bacon and of treating him as an isolated phe- nomenon. The mooted question of his imprisonments. The legend of friar Bacon. 8. Other men of the thirteenth century interested in natural sciences. Vincent of Beauvais (died 1264), who wrote a Speculum naturale. Bartholomew the Englishman, who wrote the De proprie- tatibus rerum about 1250. Albert the Great, 1193-1280, and his interest in botany. Thomas of Cantimpre, his pupil. Peter of xxi THE NATURAL SCIENCES 427 Maricourt, praised by Eoger Bacon. Witelo, born about 1230 in Silesia. Henry Bate of Malines, born about 1244. Theoderic of Freiburg, late in the thirteenth and early in the fourteenth century. Eaymund Lull, 1235-1315. Dante (see outline XXVIII below). 9. The fate of the natural sciences in the medieval universities. Considerable interest in them at the university of Paris in the first half of the thirteenth century due especially to the influx of ancient Greek and of Mohammedan learning. Decline of interest in the second half of the thirteenth century. The Paris school of astronomers in the second half of the thirteenth century. Causes of the failure of Roger Bacon to arouse his contemporaries. 10. Geographical study and theory in the middle ages. 11. Mathematics in medieval universities. The introduction of the so-called Arabic numerals into western Europe. 12. Salerno and the beginnings of systematic higher instruc- tion in medicine in the twelfth century. The study of medicine in other universities. Clinics and hospitals. Chirurgy. Dissections. The medical profession. 13. The forces which retarded the progress of the natural sciences in the middle ages. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general surveys. E. S. HOLDEN, "The renaissance of science," in Popular science monthly, LXIV (1903), 5-25. L. THORNDIKE, "Natural science in the middle ages," ibid., LXXXVII (1915), 271-291. LAVISSE and RAMBAUD, Histoire generale, II, 566- 568; III, 244-262. T. C. ALLBUTT, Science and medieval thought, London, 1901 (Harveian oration). See also the introduction to ALEXANDER NECKAM, De naturis rerum, edited by T. WRIGHT, London, 1863 (Rolls series). Longer accounts. F. STRUNZ, Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften im Mittelalter: im Grundriss dargestellt, Stuttgart, 1910; see also his Die Vergangenheit der Naturforschung : ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des menschlichen Geistes, Jena, 1913, 1-85. DANNEMANN, Die Natur- wissenschaften in ihrer Entwiclclung und in ihren Zusammenhange dargestellt, vol. I, Leipzig, 1910, 258-287. MICHAEL, Culturzustdnde des deutschen Volkes, III, 395-460. Popular notions about nature and the world. C. V. LANGLOIS, La connaissance de la nature et du monde au moyen age d'apres quel- ques Merits fran^ais d I'usage des laics, Paris, 1911. England and Mohammedan natural science. C. H. HASKINS, "The reception of Arabic science in England," in English his- torical review, XXX (1915), 56-69; see also his "Adelard of Bath," 4'Js MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in ibid., XXVI (1911), 491-498; XXV! I (1JMH), 515-516. L. THOIJN DIKE, "Adelard of Bath and the continuity of universal nature," in Nature, XCIV (1915), 616-617. .1. W. BROWN, An siecle, 2 vols., Paris, 1894-1896. ELSIE W. ROSE, Cathedrals and cloisters of northern France, 2 vols., . Lon- don, 1914; and her Cathedrals and cloisters of the Isle de France, 2 vols., New York, 1910. F. MILTOUN, The cathedrals of northern France, London, 1904. T. F. BUMPUS, The cathedrals of northern France, New York, 1910; and his The cathedrals of southern France, New York, 1913. F. BOND, vrothic architecture in England, London, 1905; and his Cathedrals of England and Wales, London, 1899, 4th edition, 1912. E. S. PRIOR, The cathedral builders in England, London, 1905; and his A history of Gothic art in England, London, 1900. H. M. PRATT, The cathedral churches of England, London, 1910. G. H. WEST, Gothic architecture in England and France, London, 1911. W. W. COLLINS, Cathedral cities of Italy, New York, 1911. H. HARTUNG, Ziele und Ergebnisse der italienischen Gotilc, Berlin, 1912. W. W. COLLINS, Cathedral cities of Spain, New York, 1909. C. RUDY, The cathedrals of northern Spain, Boston, 1906. G. E. STREET, Some account of Gothic architecture in Spain, 2nd edition, London, 1869, edited by GEORGIANA G. KING, 2 vols., London, 1914. Great monuments of Gothic architecture. L. DEMAISON, Album de la cathedrale de Eeims, 2 vols., [Paris, 1902]; see also his smaller, La cathedrale de Eeims: son histoire, les dates de sa construction, Caen, 1902. L. BREHIER, La cathedrale de Eeims, Paris, 1916, sup- plemented by the author's "L 'histoire de France a la facade de la cathedrale de Reims," in Eevue historique, CXXII (1916), 288- 300. C. SOHAEFER, Die Kathedrale von Eeims, Berlin, 1898. E. MOREAU-NELATON, La cathedrale de Eeims, Paris [1915]. G. DURAND, Monographic de I'eglise Notre Dame, cathedrale d' Amiens, 2 vols., Amiens and Paris, 1903; and his Description abregee de la cathe- drale d' Amiens, Amiens, 1904. E. LEFEVRE-PONTALIS, Les architects et la construction des cathedrales de Chartres, Paris, 1905. A. GER- MAIN, La cathedrale de Chartres, Paris, 1914. C. HEADLAM, The story of Chartres, London, 1902 (Mediaeval towns). E. POTTET, La Sainte-Chapelle de Paris, histoire, archeologie (1246-1912), Paris, 1913. For other books on the churches of Paris see outline XIII above. Sculpture. A. GARDNER, French sculpture of the 13th century, London, 1915. LOUISE PILLION, Les sculpteurs frangais du XIII<> MEDIEVAL ART 477 siecle, Paris [1912]. R. DE LAYSTERIK, Etudes sur la sculpture fran- gaise au moyen age, Paris, 1902 (Monuments et memoires publics par 1 'Academic des inscriptions et belles-lettres, VIII). L. G. ADAMS, Eecueil de sculptures gothiques en France depuis le onzieme jusqu'au quinzieme siecle, Paris, 1866, 2 vols. of plates, without text. P. VITRY and G. BRIERE, Documents de sculpture frangaise, vol. II, Moyen age, second edition, Paris [1906]. Le musee de sculpture comparee du palais du Irocadero du XI au XV siecle, 3 vols., Paris, no date. E. S. PRIOR and A. GARDNER, An account of mediaeval figure sculpture in England, London, 1912. M. HASAK, tieschichte der deutschen Bildhauerkunst im ISten Jahrhundert, Ber- lin, 1899. W. H. v. D. MUELBE, Die Darstellung des jiingsten Gerichts an den romanischen und gotischen Kirchenportalen Frankreichs, Leipzig, 1911. A. MARQUAND and A. L. FROTHINGHAM, History of sculpture. Stained glass. H. ARNOLD, Stained glass of the middle ages in England and France; painted by L. B. SAINT, New York, 1913. A. J. DE H. BUSHNELL, Storied windows, a traveller's introduction to the study of old church glass from the twelfth century to the renaissance, especially in France, London, 1914. H. OIDTMANN, Die Glasmalerei, 2 vols., Cologne, 1896-1898. Arts and crafts. Mrs. JULIA ADDISON, Arts and crafts in the middle ages, Boston, 1908. A. D. F. HAMLIN, A history of ornament, ancient and medieval, New York, 1916. J. TAVENOR-PERRY, Didan- derie : a history and description of medieval art work in copper, brass and bronze, London, 1910. G. B. BROWN, The arts in early England [to 1066], 2 vols., London, 1903. M. KEMMERICH, Die friihmittel- alterliche Portratplastik in Deutschlaild bis sum Ende des XIII Jahr- hunderts, Leipzig, 1909. E. ViOLLET-LE-Duc, Dictionnaire raisonne du mobilier frangais de I'epoque carlovingienne a la renaissance, Paris, 1875. History of medieval music. The Oxford history of music, 6 vols., Oxford, 1901-1905, vol. I, to 1600 A.D. H. RIEMANN, Handbuch der Musilcgeschichte, vols. I-II, Leipzig, 1904-1913, vol. I, part II, Mittelalter. G. RAYNAUD, Recueil de motets franqais des XI le et XII le siecles, suivis d'une etude sur la musique au siecle de Saint Louis par H. LAVOIX fils, 2 vols., Paris, 1881-1883. P. AUBRY, La musicologie medievale: histoire des methodes, Paris, 1900. E. Cous- SEMAKER, L'art harmonique aux XIIe et XHIe siecle, Paris, 1865; and his Histoire de I'harmonie au moyen age, Paris, 1852. E. DICK- INSON, Music in the history of the western church, New York, 1903. Paleographie musicals, Tournai, 1899ff. Scriptorum de musica medii aevi nova series a Gerbertina altera, 4 vols., edited by E. COUSSE- 478 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PARTHI MAKER, Paris, 1864-1876, reprinted, Graz, 1904. J. COMBARIEU, "La musique au moyen age," in Eevue de synthcse historique, I (1900), 84-110, is a very important review of recent literature and methods. For Latin hymns see outline XXI 1 1, and for the music of the troubadours, outline XXIV above. Periodicals for history of art. Eevue dc I'art ancien et moderne, Paris, 1897ff. Gazette des beaux-arts, Paris, 1859ff. Archivio storico dell' arte, Eome, 1888ff., since 1898, under the title, L'arte. Eevue de I'art chretien, Paris, 1857ff. Zeitschrift fur christliche Kunst, Diisseldorf, 1888ff. Die christliche Kunst, Miinster, 1904ff. Original sources. Quellenschriften fur Kunstgeschichte und Kunsttechnik des Mittelalters und der Neuzeit, edited by E. EITEL- BERGER v. EDELBERG, vols. I-XVIII, Vienna, 1871ff., new series con- tinued by A. ILG and C. LIST, Vienna, 1883ff. Bibliographies. The best critical bibliography on medieval architecture, and many an allied subject, is in A. K. PORTER, Medieval architecture, I, 335-450, II, 419-470. Catalogue of books relating to architecture, construction and decoration in the public library of the city of Boston, 2nd edition, Boston, 1914. K. STURGIS and H. E. KREHBIEL, Annotated bibliography of fine art, Boston, 1897. Internationale Bibliographie der Kunstwissenschaft, Berlin, 1902ff. E. MALE, "L'art du moyen age en France depuis vingt ans, " in Eevue de synthese historique, II (1901), 81-108, is an important review of recent literature. The best collection of books on medieval art is in the Bibliotheque d'art et d 'archeologie in Paris, which contains over 100,000 volumes. XXV11I. THE SCHOLARSHIP OF DANTE A. OUTLINE 1. An inspection of the bibliographies listed below will show how stupendous is the amount of literature on Dante. Petrarch and the medieval scholars who shared his enthusiasm for ancient classical literature have fared almost as well in the modern world of scholarship, whereas many learned men of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries are still very shadowy figures. The Opus majus of Koger Bacon, e. g., was not printed until 1733, and even today there is no translation of the work in any modern language, whereas all the works of Dante have been translated into practic- ally all the modern languages and snatches of them even in Vola- piik. In the future the best progress in Dante investigations will be made by means of a closer study of the culture of the twelfth xxvin DANTE 479 and thirteenth centuries which he synthesized even better than did Thomas Aquinas. 2. The life of Dante Alighieri. Born in Florence, 1265. Dante and Beatrice. For Dante's political career in Florence see out- line XXXI I in part II above. In 1302 he was exiled from Florence and never returned. Several years before his exile he married Gemma di Manetto Donati and had four children. Dante was befriended by Bartolommeo della Scala, lord of Verona, and his younger brother, Can Grande della Scala. Dante seems to have gone to Bologna in 1304, and he may have been in Paris, 1307-1309. For his enthusiastic support of the emperor Henry VII see out- line XXXI in part II above. After many wanderings in Italy he went to Ravenna in 1317 where he completed his great poem. He died in Eavenna in 1321 and was buried there. 3. The writings of Dante. His minor works in Italian: Can- zonlere, Convito, and Vita nuova. His minor works in Latin: De monarchia, De vulgari eloquentia, Quaestio de aqua et terra, Eclogae, and Epistolae. His great masterpiece in Italian, the Divina corn- media, in three parts, Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. 4. Dante's knowledge of theology. His familiarity with the Vulgate, with the works of Augustine and with the Summa tlieo- logica of Thomas Aquinas. Comparison of the Divine comedy with the Summa. Dante and the mystics. 5. His knowledge of ancient and medieval philosophy and logic. Eeference in his works to Aristotle and Plato. His schol- astic method of reasoning, exemplified especially in. the De mon- archia. 6. His acquaintance with the Latin classical belles-lettres, espe- cially Virgil, Horace, Ovid, Lucan, Statius, and Cicero. The sources of Dante 's knowledge of the Latin classics in a period when they were so generally neglected (see outline XVIII above). His ignorance of Greek. 7. His interests in history and in political theory. His refer- ences to Livy and to Orosius. The sources of his knowledge of the history of his own time. His De monarchia gives him a very important place in the history of political thought. His ideas of world peace. 8. His acquaintance with the Roman and canon law which were studied so assiduously in Bologna in his day. 9. His knowledge of the natural sciences, especially astronomy and geography. Was he acquainted with the writings on natural sciences by Robert Grosseteste, Albert the Great, and Roger Bacon? 480 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PABTIII 10. The conflict in Dante 's mind concerning the use of Latin and Italian. Evidence from his De vulgari eloquentia. His deci- sion on the question compared with that of Petrarch. Importance of the influence of these two men in bringing about the decline of Latin and the rise of vernaculars as the learned languages of western Europe. 11. Dante's belated but well-deserved fame as one of the great- est of the world's poets. The influence of his Divine comedy on modern learning, literature, and art. B. SPECIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR READING Brief general surveys1. TAYLOR, Mediaeval mind, 2nd edition, II, ch. XLIV, "The mediaeval synthesis: Dante." R. W. CHURCH, Dante: an essay, to which is added a translation of De monarchia, London, 1878. J. R. LOWELL, "Essay on Dante," in his Among my books, 2nd series. SANDYS, Classical scholarship, I, 613-616. Short books on Dante. E. G. GARDNER, Dante, London, 1900. P. TOYNBEE, Dante Alighieri, his life and works, New York, 1900, 4th edition, 1910. A. J. BUTLER, Dante: his times and his work, London, 1897, 2nd edition, 1901. L. RAGG, Dante and his Italy, New York [1907]. K. FEDERN, Dante and his time, New York, 1902. C. H. GRANDGENT, Dante, New York, 1916 (Master spirits of litera- ture). C. A. DINSMORE, The teachings of Dante, Boston, 1903. MARIA F. ROSSETTI, A shadow of Dante, Boston, 1886. G. A. SCARTAZZINI, A companion to Dante, London, 1893. V. BOTTA, Introduction to the study of Dante: being a new edition of Dante as philosopher, patriot, and poet, New York, 1895. J. A. SYMONDS, Introduction to the study of Dante, Edinburgh, 1890, 4th edition, London, 1899. K. WITTE, Essays on Dante: being selections from the two volumes of Dante- forschungen, translated by C. MABEL LAWRENCE, London, 1898. Scholarship of Dante. E. MOORE, Studies in Dante, 3 series, Oxford, 1896-1904, see especially I for his knowledge of books, and III for his astronomy and geography. P. H. WICKSTEED, Dante and Aquinas: being the substance of the Jowett lectures for 1911, London and New York, 1913. P. TOYNBEE, Dante studies and researches, London, 1902, treats among other things of his rela- tions with the ideas of Albert the Great and Alfraganus. G. SANTA YANA, Three philosophical poets: Lucretius, Dante, and Goethe, Cambridge, 1910 (Harvard studies in comparative literature, I). For treatises and atlases of medieval geography, which help to explain Dante 's ideas of the world and the universe, see the head- ings "Geographical discoveries," and "Original sources," under outline XXVI in part II above. xxvin DANTE 481 Dante as an historian. H. FINKE, "Dante als Historiker, " Historische Zeitschrift, CIV (1909-1910), 473-503. Dante and the mystics. E. GARDNER, Dante and the mystics: a study of the mystical aspect of the Divina commedia and its relations with some of its mediaeval sources, London and New York, 1913. Early biographies of Dante. The early lives of Dante ( BOCCACCIO and LIONARDO BRUNI), translated by P. H. WICKSTEED, London, 1907 (King's classics). The earliest lives of Dante, translated from the Italian of GIOVANNI BOCCACCIO and LIONARDO BRUNI ARETINO by J. R. SMITH, New York, 1901 (Yale studies in English, X). E. MOORE, Dante and his early biographers, London, 1890. Original sources. Since all the works of Dante may be read in good English translations, students should study his scholar- ship and his thought by the direct method. Following are some of the best translations: The Divine comedy of DANTE ALIGHIERI, translated by C. E. NORTON, 3 vols., Boston, 1891-1892. The Divine comedy of DANTE ALIGHIERI translated by H. F. GARY, together with D. G. ROSSETTI'S translation of the New life, edited by O. KUHNS, New York, 1897. The Divine comedy of DANTE ALIGHIERI, trans- lated by H. W. LONGFELLOW, 3 vols., Boston, 1867-1871. La commedia di DANTE ALIGHIERI: the Divine comedy, translated by H. JOHNSON, Yale University Press, 1916. The Divina commedia of DANTE ALIGHIERI, literally translated into English verse in the hendeca- syllabic measure of the original Italian, by S. W. GRIFFITH, 3 vols., London [1912]. The Divine comedy, translated by C. E. WHEELER, 3 vols., London, 1911. Vision: or Hell, purgatory, and paradise, translated by H. F. CARY, with life of Dante, New York, 1845, revised, with an introduction by P. TOYNBEE, 3 vols., London, 1900- 1902 (The Little library), also in Everyman's library, London, 1910. The Hell of DANTE ALIGHIERI, edited with translation and notes by A. J. BUTLER, London and New York, 1892. DANTE'S Divine comedy: The Inferno, a literal prose translation with the text of the original collated from the best editions, and explana- tory notes, by J. A. CARLYLE, New York, 1849, reprinted in the Temple classics, London, 1903. The Paradiso of DANTE ALIGHIERI, translated by P. H. WICKSTEED, with Italian and English on oppo- site pages, London, 1904 (Temple classics). The Convivio of DANTE ALIGHIERI, translated by P. H. WICK- STEED, London, 1903 (Temple classics). DANTE'S Convivio, trans- lated into English by W. W. JACKSON, Oxford, 1909. The Banquet (II convito) of DANTE ALIGHIERI, translated by KATHERINE HILLARD, London, 1889. II Convito: the Banquet of DANTE ALIGHIERI, trans- lated by ELIZABETH P. SAYER, London and New York, 1887 (Mor- ley's universal library, 49). 482 MEDIEVAL CULTURE PART in DANTE ALIGHIERI, Vita nuova, translated into English by D. G. ROSSETTI in his Dante and his circle, London, 1874, I, 29-109. The New life of DANTE ALIGHIERI, translated by C. E. NORTON, Boston, 1867. The De monarchia of DANTE ALIGHIERI, edited with translations and notes, by AURELIA HENRY, Boston and New York, 1904. DANTE, De vulgari eloquentia, translated with notes by A. G. F. HOWELL, London, 1890. DANTE, Quaestio de aqua et terra, edited and trans- lated, with Latin text and its English translation on opposite pages, by C. L. SHADWELL, Oxford, 1909, who considers it a genuine work of Dante. DANTE ALIGHIERI, Eleven letters, translated with notes and historical comments, by C. S. LATHAM, Boston, 1892. A trans- lation of the Latin works of DANTE ALIGHIERI, by A. G. F. HOWELL and P. H. WICKSTEED, London, 1904 (Temple classics). C. BIBLIOGRAPHY General books. See the general histories of Italian literature, nos. 808-811 above, and the general literature listed tinder outline XXXIII in part II above. Forerunners of Dante, A. .1. BUTLER, Forerunners of Dante, Oxford, 1910. K. YOSSLER, Die gottliche Komodie, 2 vols., in 4 parts, Heidelberg, 1907-1910, parts I-II. M. DODS, Forerunners of Dan&. Edinburgh, 1903. A. D'ANCONA, I precursori di Dante, Florence, 1874. C. S. BOSWELL, An Irish precursor of Dante: a study on the Vision of heaven and hell ascribed to the eighth-century Irish saint, ADAMNAN, with a translation of the Irish text, London, 1908. Dante's political thought. F. KERN, Humana civilitas: eine Dante Untersuchung, Leipzig, 1913 (Mittelalterliche Studien, I, part I). F. KAMPERS, Dantes Kaisertraum, Breslau, 1909 (86th Jahr- buch der Schles. Gesellschaft fur vaterlandische Kultur). H. GRAUERT, Dante und die Idee des Weltfriedens, Munich, 1909 (Fest- rede). H. KELSEN, Die Staatslehre des Dante Alighieri, Vienna and Leipzig, 1905 (in Wiener staatswissenschaftliche Studien, VI, 3). F. X. KRAUS, 'Dante, sein Leben und sein Werlc, sein Verhdltniss zur Kunst und zur Politik, Berlin, 1897. DANTE, De monarchia, the Oxford text, edited by E. G. MOORE, with an introduction on the political theory of Dante by W. H. V. READE, Oxford University Press, 1916. Dante's philosophy. B. NARDI, Sigieri di Brdbante nella Divina commedia e le fonti della filosofia di Dante, Firenze, 1912. C. BAE- UMKER, "Dantes philosophische Weltanschauung," in Deutsche Lit- eraturzeitung, 1913, no. 44. A. F. OZANAM, Dante et la philosophic catholique au XHIe siecle, in vol. VI of his Oeuvres completes, Paris, DANTE 483 1872-1881, translated as, Dante and catholic philosophy, New York, 1897. G. BUSHNELL, L'Etica nicomachea e I'ordinamento morale dell' "Inferno" di Dante, Bologna, 1907. W. H. V. EEADE, The moral system of Dante's Inferno, Oxford, 1909. F. PALERMO, San Tommaso, Aristotile e Dante: ovvero della prima filosofia italiana, Florence, 1869. Aids to the study of Dante. E. K. BAND and E. H. WILKINS, Dantis Alagherii opcrum latinorum concordantiae, Oxford, 1912. E. S. SHELDON, Concordanza delle opere italiane in prosa e del conzonieri di Dante Alighieri, Oxford, 1905. G. A. SCARTAZZINI, Enciclopedia Dantesca, 3 vols., Milan, 1896-1905. P. J. TOYNBEE, A dictionary of proper names and notable matters in the works of Dante, Oxford, 1898, republished under the title, Concise dictionary of proper names and notable matters in the worlcs of Dante, Oxford, 1914. F. J. SNELL, Handbook to the works of Dante, London, 1909. C. A. DINSMORE, Aids to the study of Dante, Boston, 1903. Miscellaneous books. E. T. HOLBRCOK, Portraits of Dante from Giotto to Eaffael, London, 1911. M. A. ORR, Dante and the early astronomers, London [1914]. E. G. GARDNER, Dante's ten heavens, a study of the Paradiso, Westminster, 1898, 2nd edition, 1900. C. MARIOTTI, S. Francesco, i Francescani e Dante Alighieri, Quaracehi, 1913. H. BEATTY, Dante and Virgil, London, 1905. G. FINSLER, Homer in der Neuzeit, von Dante bis Goethe: Italien, Frankreich, England, Deutschland, Leipzig and Berlin, 1912. Periodicals. Annual report of the Dante society, Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge, 1882ff. Societa Dantesca Italiana [of Florence], Bullettino, 1894ff. Original sources. The handiest edition of all the works of Dante in the original is Tutte le opere di DANTE ALIGHIERI, edited by E. MOORE, Oxford, 1894. Bibliographies. T. W. KOCH, Catalogue of the Dante collection presented by W. Fiske to the Cornell University library, 2 vols., Ithaca, 1898-1900; and his, A list of Danteiana in American libraries, supplementing the catalogue of the Cornell collection, Boston, 1901. This collection in the Cornell University library is the largest in the world. W. C. LANE, The Dante collections in the Harvard college and Boston public libraries, Cambridge, Mass., 1890; Additions, 1890ff. Catalogue of the Dante collection in the library of the Uni- versity college, London, Oxford, 1910. For the books on Dante in the British Museum, see no. 3 above. Bibliografia dantesca, Cividale del Friuli, 1902ff. INDEX INDEX This index comprises authors, editors, subjects, and the titles of large collections in one alphabet. The black-faced figures refer to numbers in part I ; the light-faced figures to pages in parts II and III. Reference is made only to the place where the title of a work is given in full, a, 6, and ii are indexed as ae, oe, and ue. • Abbassides, 145. Abbot, G., Israel, 852. Abbreviations, 224-229. Abdy, J., Feudalism, 162. Abel, S., and Simson, B., Jahrbiicher 141. Abelard, Historia calamitatum, 393 ; Love letters, 393; Sic et non, 395; Works, 395. Abelson, P., Seven liberal arts, 350. Abhandlungen, Berlin, 894 ; Gb'ttingen, 897; Leipzig, 896; Miinchen, 895; zur Geschichte der mathematischen Wissenschaften, 436. Abrahams, I., Jewish life, 857. Acade'mie des inscriptions, 885, 975; des sciences morales, 89 1 ; royale de Belgique, 892. Academies, 885-907. Acloque, G., Corporations a Chartres, 252. Acta et diplomata graeca, 330; imperii, 985 note; imperii Angliae et Fran- ciae, 292; pontificum Danica, 1008 note ; pontificum Romanorum, 960 ; res Albaniae, 1 006 note ; sanctorum, 963; sanctorum Benedict!, 121. Adamnan, Life of St. Columba, 131. Adams, ( '., Manual, 1 4 note. Adams, G., Civilization, 363 ; European history, 362 note; French nation, 518; Medieval and modern history, 362; Petrarch, 306. Adams, H., Mont-Saint-Michel, 472. Adams, L., Sculptures gothiques, 477. Adamson, H., Roger Bacon, 431. Addison, C., Templars, 208. Addison, J., Arts and crafts, 477. Adelaide, 169, 172. Adinolfi, P., Roma, 347. Adler, E., Auto de 16, 883; Benjamin of Tudela, 884. Adolf of Nassau, 286, 287, 289. Adrian, ate Hadrian. Adrianople, battle of, 108. Ady, C., Milan, 298; Pius II, 296. Ady, J., Isabella the Catholic, 319; Painters of Florence, 313. Aeneas Sylvius, Briefwechsel, 314; De rebus Basiliae gestis, 275; How I became pope, 297. Agats, A., Hansische Baienhandel, 257. Agincourt, battle of, 277, 280. Agriculture, 247, 251. Aidan, 126. Alain de Lille, Complaint of nature, 451. Alaric, 108. Albers, J., Dagobert, 136. Albert I., 286, 287, 289. Albert II, 287, 291. Albert, F.. Geschichte der Predigt, 238. Albert-Petit, A., Normandie, 197. Albert the Great, 405, 408, 410; and natural sciences, 426, 430; Opera omnia, 410. Albigensians, 400, 401, 403. Alboin, 114. Albon, marquis- d', Cartulaire de 1'ordre de Temple, 211. Album paleographique, 231 note. Alchemy, 433. Alcuin of York, 362, 364, 366, 367. Aldhelm, 362, 364. Aldhoch, Roscelin, 382. Aldinger, P., Bistiimer, 237. Aldus Manutius, 304, 307, 312. Alemany, J., St. Dominic, 232. Alengry, C., Foires de Champagne, 255. Alexander of Hales, 405, 406. Alexander of Villedieu, 446, 448. Alexius Comnenus, 186, 191, 201, 207. Alfarabi, 374, 377, 379. Alfred the Great, 150, 152, 368, 370. Alivisatos, H. S., Justinian, 116. Allain, E., University de Paris, 441. Allard, P., Esclaves, 163; Julien PApos- tat, 338; Saint Sidoine, 337; Serv- age en France, 163. Allbutt, T., Medicine and surgery, 428 ; Science, 427. Allen, C., Danemark, 721. Allen, M., Verona, 302. Allen, R., Sylvester II, 176. Allgemeine deutsche Biographic, 90 ; Encyklopadie, 100; Geschichte, 313; Staatengeschichte, 332. Allies, T. W., Monastic life, 119. Allshorn, L., Stupor mundi, 215. Allstrom, C., Dictionary, 278. Almanach de Gotha, 277. Almaric, 400, 402. Alphande'rv, P., He'te'rodoxes latines, 402; Messianisme me'die'val latin, 402. Alsace-Lorraine, 597—598. Altamira, R., Ensefianza de la historia, 42 note; Historia de Espafia, 6-8. 486 INDEX Altfranzosische Bibliothek, 456. Altmann, W., Romerzug Ludwigs, 289. Altmann, W. and Bernheim, E., Ausge- wahlte Urkunden, 578 note. Alves, A., Dom Henrique, 321. Alzog, J., Manual. 401. Amador de los Rios, J., Arte latino- bizantino, 359; Judios de Espafia, 321. Amari, M., Biblioteca Arabo-Sicula, 150; Musulmani di Sicilia, 149; Vespro Siciliano, 301. Amatus, L'ystoire de li Normant, 200. Amboesius, F., Petri Abelardi opera, 395. Ambrosi, A., Corses, 302. Ameer All Syed, Saracens, 148; Islam, 148. Ame'lineau, E., Egypte, 148. American historical review, 148. Ametller y Vinyas, D., Alfonso V, 301. Amiens cathedral, 470, 476. Amira, K., Grundriss, 163. Ampere, J., Histoire litteraire, 360. Amtliche Sammlung der Abschiede, 292. Anagni, scene at, 267, 271. Analecta Bollandiana, 177; Byzantino- russica, 1003 note: Franciscana, 232; hymnica medii aevi, 451. Anatomy, 435. Anciens poetes de la France, 456. Ancient cities series, 251. Ancona, A., Jacopone da Todi, 450 : Precursori di Dante, 482. Ancona, A., and Bacci, O., Manuale, 810. Anderson, W., Architecture, 313. Andouin, E., Arme'e royale, 245. Andr&ssv, J., Hungarian constitutional liberty, 329. Andre, M., Raymond Lulle, 240. Andreas, W., Venezianischen Relazi- onen, 299. Andrews, C., Gambrill, J., and Tall, Lida, Bibliographv, 14 note. Angevin empire, 194. Angevins in Naples, 293, 294, 301. Anglade, J., Troubadours, 456. Angles, Saxons and Jutes, 108. Angus, S., Augustine's De civitate, 342. Annalen der deutschen Geschichte, 57 1 . Annuaire des bibliotheques, 25 note. Annual library index, 8; report of the Dante society, 483. Anrich, G., Mysterienwesen, 356. Anselm, 759 note, 380-382 ; Proslo- gium, 381. Anstey, H., Epistolae academicae. 440 ; Munimenta academica, 445 ; Statutes of colleges, 445. Antequera, J. M., Legislaci6n espaftola, 633 note. Anthony, Saint, 117. Antichrist, 353, 355. Antiquitates Italicae, 989. Anton, A., Petrarca, 310. Antony, C., In St. Dominic's country, 232. Appuhn, A., Trivium, 351. Aquinas, ate Thomas Aquinas. Arabic numerals, 373, 375, 377. Aragon, 315, 316, 320; and Sicily, 293, 294, 301; kings of, 1213-1516 A.D., 317. Arbois de Jubainville, H., Abbayes cis-- terciennes, 227; De'clinaison latine, 360; Langue des Francs, 360; Lit- terature celtique, 363. Arbusow, L., Geschichte von Liv-, Esth- und Kurland. 691 note. Archaeology, 299-302 ; classical, 303 ; Christian, of Rome, 345, 348. Archer, T., Council of Clermont, 205; Crusade of Richard I, 204. Archer, T., and Kingsford, C., Cru- sades, 204. Architecture, medieval, 470-478 ; re- naissance, 305, 307, 313. Archiv der Gesellschaft fur altere deutsche Geschichtskunde, 167; fiir die Geschichte der Naturwissen- schaften, 429 ; fiir Geschichte der Medizin, 434 ; fiir Geschichte der Philosophic, 181 ; fiir Kirchenrecht, 425; fiir Kulturgeschichte. 169; fiir Literatur- und Kirchengeschiehtp. 170; fiir Schweizergeschichte, 290; fiir slavische Philologie, 311; fiir Urkundenforschung, 248. Archives. 4 note, 5, 6, 20, 25, 83-85. 163. 464, 470. Archives de la France monastique, 121. Archivio Muratoriana, 168: paleograf- ico italiano, 233 ; storico dell' arte, 478: storico italiano, 160. Archivium Franciscanum historicum, 231. Arians, 122, 125, 334, 338. Arias, G., Comuni, 297. Aristotle, the New, 396-399. Armbrust, L., Territorialpolitik der Papste, 136. Armellini, M., Chiese di Roma, 348. Armitage, E., Norman castles, 262. Armstrong, E., Lorenzo de' Medici, 296. Arndt, W., Schrifttafeln, 237. Arne, T., Suede et 1'orient, 154. Arnold, F., Casarius von Arelate, 361. Arnold, H., Stained glass, 477. INDEX 487 Arnold, T., Islam, 147; Little Flowers of St. Francis, 225. Arnold of Brescia, 211, 218. Arnoldists, 222, 227. Aronius, J., Regesten, 1013. Ars dictaminis and ars notaria, 417— 420. Art, Carolingian, 365, 367; classical, in middle ages, 352; medieval, 470- 478; Mohammedan, 374, 375, 378; of illumination, 466—467; renais- sance, 305-307, 312-314. Art de verifier les dates, 255. Artonne, M., Mouvement de 1314, 246. Arts and crafts, 471, 477. Arts, seven liberal, 349-352. Asceticism, 479-487, 353, 354, 356. Aschbach, J., Sigmund, 291; West- goten, 112. Ashley, W., Economic history, 250; Edward III, 280 ; James and Philip van Artevelde, 281; Surveys, 250. Ashton, J., Romances of chivalry, 264. Asin Palacios, M., Abenmasarra, 376; Algazel, 376; Averroismo de Santo Tomas, 409. Aspinwall, W., Ecoles 6piscopales, 371. Asser, Life of Alfred, 370. Assisi, 223, 230. Assizes of Jerusalem, 201, 205. Assmann, W., Geschichte des Mittelal- ters, 342. Astrology, 433. Astronomy, 433. Athanasius, Saint, 117; Life of St. Anthony, 119. Athens, 660. Athos, mount, 117, 120. Atlas des anciens plans de Paris, 388. Atlases, 121-129. Attila the Hun, 108, 112. Auber, C., L'an mille, 475. Aubert, F., Parlement de Paris, 246. Aubert, M., Notre-Dame-de-Paris, 389. Aubry, P., Musicologie mMievale, 477 ; Trouveres, 456. Aucassin et Nicolette, 454. Augustine, Saint, 339-343; City of God, 341 ; Confessions, 341 ; Solilo- quies, 341 ; Works, 341. Augustine, Saint, of Canterbury, 126, 129, 130. Augustinians, 222. Aus Natur und Geisteswelt, 947. Ausonius, 334, 337. Aussaresses, F., L'arm£e byzantine, 190. Austin Canons. 222, 227: Friars, 222. Austria, 35, 588-594, 805, 900-902, 986. Auvray, L., Bernard de Meung, 420. Auxiliaries to medieval history, 212- 312. Avars, 156, 159. Avenel, G., Eveques de Paris, 389; Histoire economique, 250 ; La for- tune priv£e, 250; Les riches, 250; Paysans, 250. Averroes, 374, 376, 379. Averroism, 397, 400, 402. Avicenna, 374, 376, 379. Avignon, popes in, 267, 271. Ayer, J., Source book, 383. Ayroles, J., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Azarias, Brother, Aristotle, 397. Baas, J., Aerzliche Stand, 435. Babcock, W., Norse visits, 154. Babelon, E., Commerce des Arabes, 149. Babut, E., Saint Martin, 120. Babylonish captivity, 267, 271. Bach, J., Albertus Magnus, 408 ; Dog- mengeschichte, 478. Bacher, W., Moses ben Maimon, 376. Bachfeld, G., Mongolen, 328. Bachmann, A., Bohmen, 701; Friedrich III und Maximilian I, 291. Bachmann, J., Papstliche Legaten, 237. Bacon, L., Song of Roland, 454. Bacon, Roger, 411, 413, 416, 426, 428, 429, 431-432, 436-437; Communia naturalium, 437; Compendium phil- osophiae, 436; Compendium studii theologiae, 437; De nullitate magiae, 436; De secretis, 436; Greek gram- mar, 416; Metaphysica, 437; Opus majus, 429; Opus minus, 436; Opus tertium, 436-437. Baddeley, W., Queen Johana I, 301 ; Robert the Wise, 301. Biibler, J., Grammatik, 448. Bachtold, H., Norddeutsche Handel, 256. Baedeker, K., Paris, 387. Baer, P., Juden, 876. Biirnstein, A., Carmina burana, 450; Ubi sunt qui ante nos, 450. Baerwald, H., Formelbiicher, 419. Baethgen, F., Innocenz III, 218. Baeumker, C., Alfred von Sareschel, 428 ; Amalricaner, 403 ; Avence- brolis fons vitae, 379; Beitrage, 826 ; Dantes Weltanschauungen, 482 ; Europaische Philosophie, 831; Roger Bacon's Naturphilosophie, 432; Wi- telo, 432. Bahr, K., Hanse, 257. Baier, H., Papstliche Provisionen, 237. Baissac, J., Diable, 355; Sorcellerie, 404. Baist, G., Capitulare de villis, 142. Baker, M., Constantinople, 664. 488 INDEX Baker, E., Guide to fiction, 77. Baker, F., Model republic, 290. Balaquer, V., Calalufia y Arag6n, 320; Granada, 322 ; Reyes cat61icos, 322. Balari y Jovany, J., Catalufia, 320. Balcarres, D., Italian sculpture, 313. Balearic islands, 138, 149. Balfour, C., Life of Saint Clare, 226. Balkans, 706-716, 324, 326. Ball, W., History of mathematics, 377. Ballester y Castell, R., Las fuentes narativas de la historia de Espnfia, 997 note. Ballhausen, C., Bouvines, 245. Bnlthaser, K., Armutsstreit, 230. Baltic, 691-692. Baltzer, O., Sentenzen des Petrus Lorn- bardus, 408. Balzac. H., Les proscrits, 387. Balzani, V., Chroniclers of Italv, 988 note; Popes and Hohenstaufen, 214. Bangs, M., Jeanne d'Arc, 279. Banking, 247, 254. Bappert, J., Richard von Cornwallis, 220. Barande, H., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Barnnte, A., Dues de Bourgogne, 284. Barbarians and ancient culture, 334, 339. Barbsr, W., Ravmond Lull, 240. Bardenhewer. O.. Patrologie. 123. Barine, A., St. Francois, 229. Baring, M., Russian people, 681 note: Thoughts by Leonardo da Vinci. 314. Baring-Gould, S., Saints, 963 note. Barker, E., Dominican order, 231; Rome of the Pilgrims, 348. Barlow, J., Normans, 199. Barmby, J.. Gregory the Great, 123. Barnard, H., Universities. 423. Baronius, C., Annales, 425. Barozzi, L., and Sabbadini, R., Panor- mita e Valla, 312. Barradas. M., Don Henrique,. 321. Barriere-Flavy, C., Arts industriels, 143. Barroux, M., Bibliographic de Paris, 391. Barr>-, W., Panaev and modern times, 269; Papal monarchy, 444. Bnrtal, A., Glossarium, 448. Barth. P.. Hildebert von Lnvardin, 183. Barth. H.. Bibliographic der Schweizer Geschichte, 43. Barth, H., Constantinople, 667. Barthelemy, E., Montmartre, 391. Barthold, F., Deutsche Stadte, 252. Bartholomew Anglicus, De proprieta- tibus rerum, 429. Bartoli, A., Precursori, 413. Bartolus, Conflict of laws, 423. Bartsch, K., Chrestomathie, 457; Pro- venzalische Literatur, 456. Bas, H., Saint Martin, 120. Baschet, A., Archives de Venice, 299. Bascome, E., Epidemic pestilences, 254. Basil II, emperor, 156, 186, 189, 191. Basil, Saint, 117, 120. Basle, council of, 268, 274, 275. Bassenge, F., Sendung Augustins, 130. Bastard, A., Peintures des manuscrits, 467. Bastgen, H., Alcuin, 366. - Bates, F., and Titsworth, P., Mediaeval towns, 248; Mediaeval commerce, 248. Bateson, M., Laws of Breteuil, 2.VJ. Batiffol, L., Chfttelet de Paris, 389; France, 508 note. Batiffol, P., Inscriptions byzantines, 415; L'abbaye de Rossano, 415; Librairies byzantines, 415. Battistella, A., Venezia, 298. Battle of the seven arts, 411, 413. Baudrillart, A., Dictionnaire, 110: Droit d'intervention, 290: L'£glise, 405 note; Saint Se>erin, 339. Baudrillart, H., Histoire de luxe, 738. Baum, J., Romanische Baukunst, 475. Baumann, J., Thomas von Aquino, 462. Baumeister, A., Erziehungslehre, 838. Baumgarten, P., Kanzlei und Kammer, 236; Werke von Lea, 401. Baumgartner, A., Lateinische und griechische Literatur, 782 ; Welt- literatur, 782. Baumstark, A., Palastinerpilger, 205. Baur, F., Kirche, 403. Baur, G., Bbetius und Dante, 343. Baur, L., Robert Grosseteste, 430; Werke des Grosseteste, 437. Bautz, J., Fegefeuer, 355; Holle, 355. Baxmann, R., Politik der Papste, 124. Baxter, L., Renaissance of art, 312. Bayet, C., L'art Bvzantin, 474. Bayeux tapestry, 202, 194, 199. Bayliss, W., Seven angels, 313. Bayot, A., Grand schisme, 272. Beale, J., Bartolus, On laws, 423. Beale, S.. Churches of Paris, 389. Beatty, H., Dante and Virgil, 483. Beauchet, L., Jurisdiction eccl£sias- tique, 238. Beaudoin, E., Regime feodal, 162. Beaufreton, V., Sainte Clare, 230. Beaunier, Dom, France monastique, 387. Beaurepaire, E., Paris, 388. Beazley, C., Dawn of modern geogra- phy, 236; Henry the Navigator, 318; James I, 318; Marco Polo, 249; INDEX 489 Russian expansion, 326; Texts and versions, 241. Beazley, M., Library of Canterbury, 468. Bebel, A., Mohammedanisch-arabische Kulturperiode, 376. Bee, monastery of, 380, 382. Bechmann, 6., Kampf Sigmunds gegeii Osmanen, 329. Beck, J., Musique des troubadours, 456. Beck, L., Eisen, 258. Becker, C., Geschichte Aegyptens, 149 ; Islam, 147. Becker, G., Catalog! bibliothecarum, 469. Becker, H., Augustin, 342. Becker, P., Altfranzosische Literatur, 455. Bedarride, I., Les juifs, 856. Bede, the Venerable, 127, 362, 364; Complete works, 363; Ecclesiastical history, 129. Bedford, W., and Holbeche, R., Order of St. John, 208. Bedier, J., Fabliaux, 456; Legendes Ipiques, 455. Bedier, J., and Roques, M., Bibliogra- phie des travaux de Gaston Paris, 457. Beer, A., Kirche gegenuber Laien, 178. Beer, R., Handschriftenschatze Span- iens, 42 note. Beeson. C., Isidor-Studien, 351. Beet, W., Papacy, 454. Begni, E., Vatican, 5 note. Behaghel. W., Stellung der Frau, 252. Beissel, S., Verehrung Marias, 239. Beitrage Paul Schwenke gewidmet, 469 ; zur Geschichte der Philosophic des Mittelalters, 826 ; zur Geschichte des Benediktinerordens, 120; zur Kul- turgeschichte des Mittelalters, 749. Belgium. 45.- 549-556. 892-893. 977. Belin, F., Latinite de Constantinople, 336; Universite de Provence, 442. Belisarius. 113, 115. Bell, A., Saints, 356. Bell, A. E.. Natural sciences, 429. Bell, K.. Mediaeval Europe, 364. Bellandi, S., Luigi Marsili, 811. Belloc, H., Baveux tapestrv, 202 ; Crecv, 280: French people, 519; Poitiers, 280; Warfare in England, 262. Bellonotto, Storia del medio evo, 354. Below, G. v., Der dentsche Staat, 581 : Rezeption des romischen Rechts, 424 ; Stadtewesen, 252 ; Stadtverfassung, 252. Below, G. v., and F. Meinecke, Hand- buch, 330. Belviglieri, C., Tavole di storia italiana, 603. Bemont, C., Condemnation de Jean- Sans-Terre, 244; Melanges offerts a, 934. Bemont, C., and Monod, G., Europe, 365. Beiie of Lucca, 417, 418. Benecke, C., and Howell, A., Chronicle of Dino Compagni, 297. Benedetti, D., Gregorio Magno, 125. Benedict Biscop, 127. Benedict of Nursia, 118, 120. Benefit of clergy, 175. Bfinezit, E., Dictionnaire des peintres, 473. Benigni, V., Storia sociale della chiesa, 339. Benjamin of Tudela, the itinerary of, 884. Bennett, R., and Elton, J., Cornmill- ing, 258. Bensaude, J., L'astronomie nautique, 257. Bent, J., Genoa, 299 ; Lords of Chios, 327. Bentzinger, J., Adelheid, 172. Benzerath, M., Kirchenpatrone, 239. Benzinger, K., Buchgewerb, 466. Berbers, 145, 148. Berchtold, J., Bulle Unam sanctam, 271. Berengar, 380, 383. Berenson, B., Central Italian painters, 313; Florentine painters, 313; North Italian painters, 313; Sienese paint- er, 231 ; Venetian painters, 313. Bergengriin, A., Adolf von Nassau, 289. Berger, E., Blanche de Castille, 245; Saint Louis, 245. Berger, S., Essais pour corriger le Vul- gate, 415; Histoire de la Vulgate, 416; Quam notitiam linguae Hebra- icae, 415; Vulgate en France, 415. Berger, W., Hus, 274. Bergmann, A., Manfred, 220. Bergmiiller, L., Latinitat des Jordanes, 336. Bergner, H., Rom, 348. Bergot, R., Jeanne d'Arc, 284. Berliere, U., Loup de Ferrieres, 371. Berliner, A., Juden in Rom, 87 1 . Bernard, E., Dominicains, 441. Bernard of Clairvaux, 222, 224, 227, 391-395: Lettres. 393; On consid- eration. 393 ; Works, 393, 395. Bprnhardi, W., Konrad III. 217. Bernheim, E., Lehrbuch der historischen Methode, 64; Politische Begriffe, 461 ; Quellen des Investiturstreites, 184; Wormser Konkordat, 184. 490 INDEX Bernouilli, A., Tell, 291. Bernouilli, C., Heiligen der Merovin- ger, 360. Berr, H., L'evolution de l'humanit('>, 319. Bertaux, E., L'art dans 1'Italie, 199; Rome, 348. Berthaud, Abb6, Gilbert de la Porree, 402. Berthaud, H., Medecins, 435. Berthelot, M., Alchimie, 433; Chimie, 433; Chimie au moyen ftge, 351; Histoire des sciences: la chimie, 433: Transmission de la science, 351. Bertrand du Guesclin, 277, 279, 281. Bertrand, J., Tapisserie brodee de Ma- thilde, 199. Bertrand, L., Saint Augustin, 340. Berty, A., and Legrand, H., Topo- graphie du vieux Paris, 388. Besant, W., Early London, 251; Medi- aeval London, 251. Besnier, M., Catacombes, 347. Besse, J., Moines de France, 120: Moines d'Orient, 120 ; Monachisme Africain, 120. Besso, M., II Philobiblon, 465. Best books, 7. Besta, E., Diritto italiano, 606: L'opera d'Irnerio, 424; Sardegna, 601 note. Bestuschew, K., Geschichte Russlands. 687 : Quellen und Literatur zur rus- sischen Geschichte, 46. Bethmann-Hollweg, M., Civilprozess, 423 ; Lombardische Stadtefreiheit, 217. Beurlier, E., Raison et la foi, 382. Beuzart, P., Heresies, 402. Bezold, F., Astrologische Geschichts- construction, 460 : Deutsche Univer- sitaten, 444: Husitentum, 274; Selbstbiographie, 394; Volkssouve- ranitat, 461. Bibliografia dantesca, 483. Bibliographical works, 1-62, 87-88, 151 note. Bibliographic der deutschen Zeitschrift- enliteratnr, 10; der fremdspraehigen Zeitschriftenliteratur, 1 1 ; der Kirch- engeschichtliche Literatur. 54 : der Rezensionen, 87 ; Volkswirtschafts- lehre, 259 ; zur deutschen Geschichte, 151 note. Biblioteca Arabo-Sicula, 150. Bibliotheca Arabico-hispana, 150; hagio- graphica, 53 : historica, 1 5 1 note ; iuridica medii aevi, 425; mathemat- ica, 436; Normannica, 456: remm Germanicarum, 983 ; scriptorum medii aevi Teubneriana, 950. Bibliothek der Geschichtswissenschaft, 320 ; des kgl. preussischen histori- schen Instituts in Rom, 899 ; deutscher Geschichte, 560. Bibliotheque d'art et d'arche'ologie, 478; de la Faculte des lettres, 889 ; de 1'Ecole des chartes, 164; de 1'Ecole pratique des hautes Etudes, 888 ; des ecoles franchises d'Athencs et de Rome, 887, 959: franchise, 456; historique de la ville de Paris, 391. Bibliotheque nationale, 4, 469. Bibliotheques. livres et librairies, 6 note. Bidault des Chaumes, S., Mallum, 164. Biedermann, K., Deutsche Volks- und Kulturgeschichte, 774. Biehringer, F., Friedrich II, 219. Bielowski, A., Monumenta Poloniae, I 004 note. Biese, A., Feeling for nature, 429. Bigg, C., Church's task, 338; Neo- platonism, 338. Bikel, H., St. Gallen, 250. Bikelas, D., Griechen des Mittelalters, 415: La Grece, 659 note. Bilfinger, G., Horen, 267. Binding, C., Burgundisch-Romanisches Konigreich, 112. Biographical dictionaries, 16. 89-95. Biographie nationale, 92 ; universelle, 93. Biographisches Jahrbuch, 95 note; Lexikon, 91. Birch, W., and Jenner. H., Drawings and illuminations, 466. Biron, R., Pierre Damien, 179. Birot, J., Le saint empire, 504. Bischoff, H., and Moller, J., Worter- buch, 135. Bishop and his diocese, 233, 237. Bjornbo, A., Pergamenthandschriften, 466 ; Uebersetzungen aus dem Griech- ischen, 436. Black Death, 247, 249, 253. Black Prince, 277, 279, 281. Blades, W., Books in chains, 466. Blanche of Castille, 242, 244. Blanchet, J., and Dieudonne, A., Man- uel de numismatique, 294. Blasel, K., Langobarden, 116. Blasi, E., Regno di Sicilia, 301. Blasquez, A., Cartograffa espanola. 257; San Isidore de Sevilla, Mapa- Mundi, 351. Blatchford, A., Church councils, 237. Blennerhassett, C., Jungfrau von Or- leans, 283. Bliemetzrieder, F., Caterina von Siena. 272: Generalkonzil, 272; Polemik, 275. INDEX Bloch, H., Heinrich VI, 218; Kaiser- wahlen, 216. Bloch, M., Ile-de-France, 243. Block, H., Geistesleben im Elsass, 367. Block, W., Condottieri, 298. Blok, P., Netherlands, 557. Blondel, G., Frederic II, 219. Blume, C., Hymnologie, 450. Blume, C., and Dreves, G., Analecta hymnica, 45l. Blumenthal, H., Konstanzer Konzil, 273. Blumschein, G., Germanisierung, 220. Blythe, E., Jerusalem, 210. Boase, C., Oxford, 443. Bobbio, 126. Boccaccio, G., 304, 310; Dante, 481; Decameron, 250. Bode, W., Florentine sculptors, 313. Bockh, A., Enzvklopadie, 303. BShmer, H., Kirche und Staat, 198. Bohmer, J., Acta imperil selecta, 985 note; Fontes rerum Germanicarum, 984; Regesta imperii, 985. Bohringer, F., Vater des Papsttums, 124. Bonhoff, L., Aldhelm, 364. Boer, T., Philosophie im Islam, 376. Boethius, 340-341, 343 ; Consolations of Philosophy, 341. BSttcher, C., Wegweiser, 144. Bogomiles, 156. Bohemia, 47 note, 461 note, 699-703, 986 note, 156, 158, 268, 274. Boileau, Etienne, Reglemens sur arts de Paris, 258. Boinet, A., Miniature, 467. Bois, J., Satanisme, 355. Boissier, G., Christianisme de Boece, 343; Fin du paganism, 338. Boissonade, P., Navarre, 322. Bollandus, J., Acta sanctorum, 963. Bollettino critico di cose Francescane, 231. Bologna, G., Petrarca, 310. Bologna, university of, 438, 439, 442, 444-445. Bonaventura, 406, 409, 410; Life of St. Francis, 225; Opera omnia, 410. Boncompagni, B., Gherardo Cremonese, 399. Boncompagno, 417, 418, 420; Rhetor- ica antiqua, 420. Bond, F., Cathedral churches of Eng- land, 476; Dedications and patron saints, 239; English church archi- tecture, 472 ; Gothic architecture in England, 476. Bond, J., Handybook, 263. Bongars, J., Gesta dei per Francos, 210. Boniface, Saint, 127-131, 362, 364. Boniface VIII, pope, 267, 268, 270. Bonilla, A., FilosofJa espanola, 866 note. Bonnard, F., Honorat de Le'rins, 120. Bonnardot, A., Enceintes de Paris, 388; Iconographie du vieux Paris, 388; Plans de Paris, 388. Bonneau, A., Donation de Constantin, 314. Bonnel, H., Anfange des karolingischen Hauses, 136. Bonnet, M., Latin de Gregoire, 360. Bonnin, T., Registrum visitationum, 240. Bonsmann, T., Gregor der Grosse, 124. Bonwetch, G., Dogmengeschichte, 477. Book of the popes, 949 note. Book review digest, 88. Book reviews, 87—88. Books and libraries, 462-470. Books of reference, 63—2 1 I . Borden, G., Syllabus on Florence, 311. Bordier, H., Eglises de Paris, 389. Borinski, K., Antike in Poetik, 351. Borrelli de Serres, L., Philippe Au- guste, 244; Services publics, 245; Variations monetaires, 245. Borrmann, R., and Neuwirth, J., Bau- kunst, 474. Bosnia, 716. Boswell, C., Irish precursor of Dante, 355. Botany, 434. Botta, V., Dante, 480. Bottfield, B., Catalog! veteres librorum, 469 : Cathedral libraries, 469. Bouard, A., Chatelet de Paris, 390. Boucher de Molandon, and Beaucorps, A., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Boudet, M., Jacquerie, 281. Bouillart, J., Saint-Germain-des-Pres, 389. Boulay, C. E. du, Historia universi- tatis Parisiensis, 440. Boule', A., Jeans sans Peur, 284. Boulger, D., Belgium, 554. Boulting, W., Aeneas Sylvius 296 ; Italian republics, 613. Bouquet, M., Rerum Gallicarum et Francicarum scriptores, 967. Bourgain, L., Chaire franqaise, 450. Bourgeat, J., Vincent de Beauvais. 414. Bourgeois, E., Capitulaire de Kiersy, 163. Bourges, Pragmatic Sanction of, 268, 274. Bourgin, G., Soissons, 252. Bourne, E., Essays, 318; Henry the Navigator, 318. Bourne, H.. Mediaeval and modern Eu- rope, 366. 492 INDEX Bournou, F., Rectifications, 387. Bourquelot, F., Foires de Champagne, 255. Bourret, E., L'ecole de Seville, 359. Bousquet, G., Peuple bulgare, 712. Bousset, W., Antichrist legend, 355. Boutaric, E., Institutions militaires, 262; Philippe le Bel, 245; Regime feodal, 162; Saint Louis, 245; Vin- cent de Beauvais, 412. Boutell, C., Heraldry, 284. Boutflower, D., Life of Ceolfrid, 131. Bouti^, L., Paris, 386. Bouvier, C., Vienne, 271. Bouvines, battle of, 242, 245. Boyd, H., Triumph of Petrarch, 307. Boyd, W., Ecclesiastical edicts, 338. Boyeson, H., Norway, 724. Bozzo, S., Storiche siciliane, 302. Brachet, A., Pathologic mentale des rois de France, 283. Bradley, H., Goths, 110. Bradley, J., Dictionary of miniaturists, 466; Illuminated manuscripts, 466. Braga, T., Universidade de Coimbra, 444. Brainerd, E., Great hvmns, 452. Bramhall, E., Privileges of crusaders, 208. Brand, J., Popular antiquities, 251. Brandenburg, E., and Seeliger, G., Quellensammlung. 980. Brandenburger, C., Polnische Ge- schichte, 698. Brandi. K., Renaissance, 311; "Werden der Renaissance, 308. Branford. V., St. Columba, 129. Brants, V., Theories economiques, 461. Bratke, E., Wegweiser, 49. Brehaut, E.. History of the Franks, 949 note; Isidore of Seville, 350. Br£hier, L., Cathedrale de Reims, 476; Colonies d'orientaux, 359; Croisades, 205; L'hagiographie Bvzantine, 190; Querelle des images, 142 ; Schisme oriental, 177. Brem, E., Gregor IX, 219. Brequigny, L., Table chronologique, 975 note. Bresslau, H.. Handbuch der Urkunden- lehre, 240 : Jahrbiicher, Konrad II, 172; Quellen und Hilfsmittel, 19. Bretholz, B., Geschichte Bohmens und Mahrens, 700; Lateiniscbe Palaeo- graphie, 2 1 7. Bretigny, treatv of. 277, 281. Bretschneider, E., Mediaeval researches, 327. Brett. E.. Arms and armour, 200. Breul, K., Cambridge songs, 450. Brewer, J., Cistercians, 224 ; Giraldus Cambrensis Opera, 416; Monumenta Franciscana, 232 ; Opera inedita of Bacon, 436. Brewster. H., Saints and festivals, 239. Breyer, R., Arnold von Brescia, 218. Breysig, K., Kulturgeschichte, 732. Breysig, T., Jahrbiicher, 136. Bridges, J., Essays, 428; Jews, 857 note; Life and works of Roger Ba- con, 428 ; Opus ma jus of Bacon, 429; Roger Bacon, 428. Bridget, Saint, 126. Bridrey, E., Privilege de la croix, 208. Briele, L., Hdpital de Sainte-Catherine, 389; Hotel-Dieu, 389. Briele, L., and Coyecque, E., Hdtel- Dieu, 389. Briggs, M., Heel of Italy, 199. Bright, W., English church, 128. Brinkmeier, E., Chronologie, 266 ; Glossarium, 448. Brischar, J., Innocenz III, 218. Brissaud, J., Droit franc.ais, 531. British academy, 904. British Isles, learning in the, 361-364. British Museum, 3. British society of Franciscan studies, 232. Brittany, 541, 363. Broadribb, W., and Besant, W., Con- stantinople, 663 note. Brochet, J., Paulin de Nole, 338; S. Je>6me, 337. Brockelmann, C., Arabische Literatur, 378. Brockhaus Konversations-Lexicon, 101. Brodrick, G., Merton college, 443; Ox- ford, 443. Broeking, W., Eusebius Bruno, 383. Brogger, A., Osebergfundet, 154. Brom, G., Guide, 6 note. Brook, Z., Investiture struggle, 182. Brooks, E., Arab occupation of Crete, 146; Byzantines and Arabs, 189. Brooks, S., King Alfred, 370. Brosien. H., Karl der Grosse, 142. Brou, L'evang£lisation de 1'Inde, 240. Brown, A., Italian painting, 313. Brown, E., Norman architecture, 475 ; Romanesque architecture, 475. Brown, G., Arts in early England, 477 ; Schola to cathedral, 472. Brown, H., Venetian republic, 296 ; Venice, 298 ; Venice, an historical sketch, 296. Brown, J. B., Last great dreamer of crusades, 249. Brown, J. C.. Chemistry, 433. Brown, J. W., Builders of Florence, 300 ; Florence, past and present, 300 ; Michael Scot, 398. INDEX 493 Brown, R., Calendar of State papers: Venetian, 302. Browne, G., Alcuin, 366; Aldhelm,. 364; Augustine, 130; Bede, 364; Boniface, 128 ; Christian church, 129; Conversion of Heptarchy, 130; Theodore and Wilfrith, 364. Browning, O., Guelfs and Ghibellines, 618; Condottieri, 618. Bruce, H., Age of schism, 269. Briich, J., Vulgarlatein, 447. Bruckner, A., Geschichte Russlands, 684 ; Russische Literatur, 814; Slav- enapostel, 158. Brugerette, J., Gregoire VII, 182. Brugi, B., Atti della nazione germanica, 445 ; Giurisprudenza, 424. Bruhnes, G., Foi chretienne, 366. Brunetiere, F., French literature, 454. Brunhild, 133. Brunner, H., Deutsche Rechtgeschichte, 579; Forschungen, 579 note; Grund- ztige der deutschen Rechtsgeschichte, 579 note; Schwurgerichte, 142. Brunot, F., Langue franchise, 454. Brusadelli, M., R. Bacone, 431. Brutails, J., Precis d'archeologie, 299 note. Bryan, M., Dictionary of painters, 313. Brvce, J., Holy Roman empire, 499 ; Iceland, 728 note; Roman and Eng- lish law, 422 ; Studies, 728 note. Bryce, W., Scottish Grey Friars, 228. Bubnov, N., Gerberji opera mathe- matica, 372. Buchon, C., Frangais dans Grece, 329. Buchon, J., Choix de chroniques, 973; Collection des chroniques, 972. Buck, M., Conciliumbuch of Ulrich von Richenthal, 275. Buck. W., Deutsche Kaufmann, 257. Buckley, J., and Williams, W., Guide to fiction, 79. Budge, A., Paradise of the fathers, 119. Budinsky. A.. Universitat Paris, 440. Biicher, K., Frankfurt, 252. Biichmann, G., Gefliigelte Worte, 80. Biidinger. M., Allgemeine Geschichte, 106; Universalhistorie, 460. Biihlmann, J., and Wagner, A., Das alte Rom, 347. Bundgens, C., Landerkunde, 257. Biirkner, R., Kirchliche Kunst, 474. Butow, A., Briefsteller, 419. Bugge, A., Icelandic saga, 152; Vik- ingerne, 153. Bulaeus. C., Historia universitatis Parisiensis, 440. Bulflnch, T.. Mythologv, 796. Bulgaria. 710-713, 156. Bullnrium Franciscanum, 232. Bulletin critique de litterature, d'his- toire, 172; de la biblrotheque et des travaux historique (de Paris), 391; de la Societe franchise de 1'histoire de la medecine, 435; mensuel, 4 note. Bullettino della Commissione archeo- logica comunale di Rome, 348 ; dell' Istituto storico italiano, 1 62 ; di archeologia cristiana, 348. Bumpus, J., Dictionary, 1 08 note. Bumpus, T., Cathedrals of northern France, 476 ; of southern France, 476; Gothic architecture, 475. Burckhardt, F., Bibliographie der Schweizergeschichte, 44. Burckhardt, J., Cicerone, 306; Renais- sance, 305. Burckhardt, R., Zoologie, 434. Burdach, K., Humanismus, 308 ; Re- naissance, 308 ; Vom Mittelalter zur Reformation, 750. Burgess, J., Reconciliation, 461. Burgundians, 108, 112. Burgundy, 165, 168, 278, 284. Burke, V., Spain, 629. Burns, C., Political ideals, 459. Burnt Njal, story of, 152. Burr, G., Anent the middle ages, 106; Literature of witchcraft, 404 ; Sources for a history of witchcraft, 404; The year 1000, 171. Burton, M., Problem of evil, 342. Bury, J., Constitution of later Roman empire, 189: Gibbon's Decline and Fall, 341 ; Eastern Roman empire, 644 ; Fall of Constantinople, 327 ; Freedom of thought, 740 ; Hungari- ans, 159 : Imperial administrative system, 190; Later Roman empire, 643; Lombards and Venetians, 326; Naval policy of Roman empire, 190 ; Roman emperors, 189: St. Patrick, 128; Romances of chivalry, 264; The great palace, 661 note. Bury, Richard de, Philobiblon, 465. Buser, B., Lorenzo, 300 ; Mediceer, 300. Bushnell, A., Storied windows, 477. Bushnell. G.. Inferno di Dante, 483. Busk, W., Mediaeval popes, 216. Buss, F., Winifrid-Bonifacius. 131. Bussell, F., Roman empire, 648. Butler, A., Dante, 480 ; Forerunners of Dante, 482. Butler, E., Lausiac history, 119; Sancti Benedict! regula, 121. Butler, G., Echoes of Petrarch, 310. Butler, I., Song of Roland, 454; Tales from old French, 455. Butler. .T.. Walafrid Strabo, 371. 494 INDEX Butler, W., Lombard communes, 215. Byrne, M., Prolegomena to Ausonius, 337. Byzantinne historiae scriptores, 1002. Byzantine art, 470, 472, 474; litera- ture, 800-802; scholarship, 189,190. Byzantine chronical, 175. Byzantine emperors, lists of, 565-1118 A.D., 186-188, 1259-1453 A.D., 325. Byzantine empire, 174-176, 643-679, 800-802, 1003; in sixth century, 113-116; and Charlemagne, 139, 142 ; and the Mohammedans, 144- 146; and pope Gregory VII, 181; from 565 to 1095, 184-191; and the crusaders, 201, 206-207; under the Palaeologi, 324, 327, 330. Byzantine review, 175 note. Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 174. Cabrol, F., Angleterre chrelienne, 130; Dictionnaire, III. Cadier, L., Naples, 301. Caesar of Heisterbach, Dialogus mi- raculorum, 451. Caetani, L., Annali dell' Islam, 147 ; Maometto, 148. Caffin, C., How to study pictures, 313. Cahun, L., Turcs et Mongols, 328. Caillet, R., University d' Avignon, 442. Caird, L., Corsica, 302. Cajori, F., Mathematics, 377. Callet, A., Paris xmiversitaire, 441. Calligraphy, Carolingian, 365, 366. Calmette, ' J., Diplomatic carolingienne, 167. Calthrop, M., Crusades, 204. Calvert, A., Alhambra, 375; Moorish remains, 375. Calvi, E., Bibliografla di Roma, 348; Bibliografia Petrarchese, 315; Biblio- teca de bibliografia storica italiana, 38. Cam, H., Local government, 534. Camaldolites. 222. Cambridge historical essays, 941 ; his- torical series, 940 ; history of Eng- lish literature, 812; manuals of sci- ence and literature, 942 ; medieval history, 340. Cambridge, university of, 438, 443, 445. Camerlinck, R., Saint L6ger, 361. Campagna, Roman, 348. Campaner, Arabes en Baleares, 149. Canal, C.. San Isidore. 352. Canale, M., Genova, 299. Canon law. 421-425. Canonge, F., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Canons Regular, 222, 227. Canossa, 180-183. Cantor, M., Mathematik, 436. Cantu, C., Ezelino da Romano, 219; Storia degli Italian!, 600. Canute the Great, 151, 152. Capasso, B., Fonti Napolitane, 40. Capella, Martianus, De nuptiis Phil- ogiae, 352. Capet, Hugh, 166-168. Cappelletti, L., Le chiese d'ltalia, 466; Storia d'ltalia, 601. Cappelli, A., Cronologia, 262; Dizionario di abbreviature, 224. Cappello, G., Gregorio I, 124. Capponi, G., Firenze, 299. Garden, R., Genoa, 299. Cardenas, F., Propriedad en Espafia, 635. Cardinals, 174, 178, 233, 236. Carducci, J., Gregorio Magno, 124. Carlile, W., Modern money, 254. Carlini, A., Africa di Petrarca, 310. Carlyle, A., Sources of medieval poli- ical theory, 459. Carlyle, J., Inferno, 481. Carlyle, R. and A., Mediaeval political theory, 459. Carlyle, T., Early kings, 153. Carmelites, 222. Carmichael, M., Ladv Poverty, 225. Carmina burana, 450. Caro, E., Saint Dominique, 232. Caro, G., Genua, 299; Juden, 858; Spanische Geschichte. 319. Caro, J., Geschichte Polens, 697 (see alxo 696). Carolingian culture, 364-368. Carolingians, decline of, 165, 167. Carotti, G., History of art, 473. Carr, A., Church and Roman empire, 418. Carra de Vaux, B., Avicenne, '376; Gazali, 376. Carriere, M., Kunst, 473. Carriere, V., Ordre du Temple, 208. Cartellieri, A., Defensor pacis, 292 ; Donaueschinger Briefsteller. 420; Heinrich VI, 218; Philipp II, 244; Richard Lowenherz, 206. Cartellieri, O.. Herzoge von Burgund, 284; Sizilianische Vesper, 301; Suger, 244. Carter, J., Religious life, 335. Carthusians, 222. 227. Cartography, 248, 259. Cartwright, J.. Beatrice d'Este, 298; Isabella D'Este. 302. Cams, J., Zoologie, 434. Carus, P., Devil, 355. Gary, H.. Divine comedv. 481; Vision, or Hell, of Dante, 481. INDEX 495 Caspar, E., Pippin, 136; Roger II, 199. Cassani, Q., Studio di Bologna, 442. Cassian, of Marseilles, 117. Cassiodorus, 118, 340, 341, 343; Let- ters, 110. Castelnau, A., Medicis, 300. Castiglione, Baldassare, Courtier, 308. Castile, 315, 316, 320; list of kings of, 1214-1504 A.D., 317. Castles, 260, 262. Castro, G., Arnaldo da Brescia, 218. Catacombs of Rome, 347. Catalan culture, 317, 321, 322. Catalani, M., Aeneas Sylvius, 275. Catalina y Garcia, J., Castilla y Leon, 320. Catalogo del museo dell' ottavo cente- nario dello studio Bolognese, 442. Catalogue des ouvrages Normands de Caen, 201; general der Bibliotheque national, 4 : general des bibliotheques publiques de France, 4 note; general des manuscrits des bibliotheques de Prance, 4 note ; of books relating to architecture, 478 ; of printed books in the British Museum, 3 ; of the Dante collection in University college, 483. Catalogues of libraries and archives, 3-5 ; of manuscripts, 4 note, 5 ; of medieval libraries, 469. Catalonia, 315, 320. Cathedral schools, 368, 371. Cathedrals, 470-478. Catherine of Siena, 267, 271. Catholic encyclopedia, 104. Cattaneo, R., Architecture in Italy, 475. Caudel, M., Invasions arabes, 148. Cauzons, T., Albigeois, 403; Inquisi- tion, 403; Magie, 404: Vaudois, 403. Cavaignac, E., France, 523. Cavanna, N., Umbria serafica, 230. Cavazza, F., Studio bolognese, 443. Cazenove, J., St. Hilary, 120. Cecchuchi, E., Conciles, 471 note. Cecconi, E.-, Concilio di Firenze, 274. Celano, Lives of St. Francis, 225. Celier, L., RSforme de la cour pontifi- cale, 270. Cellini, Benvenuto, Life, 308. Celtic Christianity, 129. Cenni, Monumenta dominiationis pon- tificae. 960 note. Censorship of books, 463, 464. Centralblatt fur Bibliothekswesen, 6 note. Century dictionary of names, 86. Cerroti, F., and Celani, E., Bibliografla di Roma, 348. Cesare, Fioretti, 225. Chalandon, F., Alexis Comnene, 207 ; Domination normande, 199; Jean II Comnene, 207. Challamel, A., Peuple franc.ais, 767. Chambers, E., Mediaeval stage, 253. Chambon, F., Robert de Sorbon, 442. Champion, P., Francois Villon, 282 ; Guillaume de Flavy, 283. Chan Ju-Kua, Chinese and Arab trade, 249. Chapotin, M., Dominicaines, 231. Charency, H., Grande-Trappe, 227. Charlemagne, 138-144; age of, in his- tory of culture, 364-368. Charles IV, emperor, 286, 287, 291. Charles V, of France, 278, 282. Charles VI, of France, 277, 278. Charles VII, of France, 277, 278, 282. Charles VIII, of France, 278, 284, 295, 296. Charles, E., Roger Bacon, 428. Charles Martel, 134, 136. Charles of Anjou, 293, 301. Charles the Bold, 278, 279, 284. Charles the Fat, 151, 153, 165. Charmatz, R., Wegweiser, 35. Chart es et diplomes de France, 975. Chartier, F., Notre-Dame-de-Paris, 389. Chartres cathedral, '470, 472, 476; schools of, 380-381, 410, 412. Chartularium studii Bononiensis, 444; universitatis Parisiensis, 444. Chassant, A., Dictionnaire des abrfivia- tions, 225; Paleographie, 221. Chatelain, E., Bibliographie de 1'uni- versite de Paris, 445 ; Melanges of- ferts a, 935; Notes tironiennes, 226. Chatelet in Paris, 386, 389. Chaumont, L., Cluny, 177. Chauvin, V., Bibliographie des ouvrages arabes, 379. Chaytor, H., Troubadours, 454. Check-list of collections, 15. Cheetham. S., Mysteries, 356. Chelard, R., Civilisation frangais, 781. Chemistry, 433. Cherance, L., Saint Clare, 230; Saint Francois, 229. Chevalier, A., H6tel-Dieu, 389. Chevalier, E., Marine fran?ais, 547. Chevalier, G., Saint Bernard, 394. Chevalier, U., Poe'sie liturgiqwe, 450 ; Repertoire des sources historiques, 16, 17; Repertorium hymnologicum, 452. Chevin, I'abbe', Dictionnaire, 137. Cheyney, E., European background, 248; Industrial history, 251; Read- ings, 280. Chiappelli, L., Studio bolognese, 442. Children's crusade, 202, 207. 496 INDEX Chilperic, 133. Chivalry, 260, 261, 263. Chledowski, C., Rom, 311. Choix de chroniques, 973. Cbollet, L'aristotelisme, 398. Chone, H., Friedrich II, 219. Chossat, M.. Thomas d'Aquin, 408. Christen, B., Franciscus von Assisi, 229. Christendom, foes of, 144—158. Christian, A., Paris, 388. Christian archaeology, 301-302; cult, 174, 178. Christianity and ancient culture, 334, 338; Celtic, 129; expansion of, 174, 178; expansion of, among the Slavs, 156, 158; triumph of, 334, 335, 338. Christliche Kunst, 478. Chronicles and memorials of Great Brit- ain and Ireland, 995; of the cru- sades, 204. Chroniken der deutschen Stadte, 982. Chronology, 68-76. 250-267. Chroust, A., Monumenta palaeographica, 232. Church, 49-55, 104-114. 127-128. 176-180. 394-498. 953-964: and Charlemagne, 139, 141 ; and feudal- ism, 161, 163, 174, 178; from the 8th to the llth centuries, 173-179; Greek, 190; in the 12th and 13th centuries, 233-241 : from about 1300 to about 1450, 267-275; in Spain, 316, 321. Church, A., Stories of Charlemagne, 143. Church, R., Anselm, 381 ; Beginnings of the middle ages, 335 note; Cassi- odorus, 341 ; Dante, 480. Chwolson, D., Judentum, 874. Ciampi, I., I Cassiodori, 343\ Cid Campeador, 315, 318, 319. Cim. A., Le livre, 465. Cipolla, C., Signorie italiane, 297; Storia itnliana, 37; Vepres Sicili- ennes, 303: Verona, 302. Cirot. C., Historiographie espagnole, 997 note. Cistercians, 222, 227. Cities, 247, 251-253. Civilization, history of, 729-738, 749- 755. Claar, M., Venetianische Verfassung, 299. Claparede, H., Burgondes, 112. Clare of Assisi, 223, 225, 230. Clark, A., Colleges of Oxford, 443. Clark, G., Military architecture, 263. Clark, H., Cid Campeador, 318. Clark, J., Cambridge, 444; Care of books, 465; Libraries, 464. Clark, V., Studies in Latin, 447. Clarke, A., Cursus, 418. Clarke, W., St. Basil, 120. Classical heritage in early middle ages, 348-352 ; literature, art, and archae- ology in Italy, 303-315; scholarship, 785-786. Classics, 785-786; in time of Charle- magne, 365, 366; Latin, 349-352; rise and decline of interest in the ancient, 410-416. Classiques franc.ais, 456. Clausen, J., Honorius III, 219. Clausier, E., Gr£goire le Grand, 124. Clavel, V., Arnauld de Brescia, 218. Clay, R., Hospitals, 435. Cledat, L., Po&sie lyrique, 456. Clemen, P., Plastik, 367f Portraitsdar- stellung Karls, 142. Clement, C., Christian symbols, 356; Constantinople, 666. Clement, P., Jacques Coeur, 282. Clergy, life of, 174, 179. Clerval, A., Arts Iib6raux a Chartres, 412; Ecoles de Chartres, 371. Cleveland, R., Soliloquies of St. Au- gustine, 341. Clinch, G., Costume, 198. Cloetta, W., Komodie und Tragodie, 449. Cloquet, L., Cathedrales, 475. Clouzot, E., Depouillement d'inventaires, 391 ; Inondations n Paris, 388. Clovis, 132-135. Cluny, monastery of, 173, 176, 177. Cobham, C., Patriarchs, 671. Cochin, H., Ami de Petrarque, 310; Frere de Petrarch, 310. Cockayne, O., Leechdoms, 430. Codera, F., Almoravides, 322 ; Biblio- theca arabico-hispana, 150; Historia arabe espanola, 322. Codex diplomaticus Hungariae, 1006 note; diplomaticus neerlandicus. 977 note; diplomaticus Poloniae, 1005: diplomaticus Poloniae minoris, 1005 note; diplomaticus regni Croatiae, 1006 note; regularum monasticarum, 964; uiplomaticus, S. Sedis, 960 note. Cohen, G., Theatre a Paris, 253; Th6- fitre religieux, 253. Cohn, W., Normannisch-sizilische Flotte, 200. Coimbra, university of, 439, 444. Coins, 292-298. Coker, F.. Readings, 288. Cola di Rienzo, 293, 295, 297, 302; Briefwechsel. 750 note; Letters, 302. Cole, P., Later Roman education, 337. Coleman, C., Constantine, 136, 314. INDEX 497 Coleccion de documentos, historia de Aragon, 999 note ; de documentos ineditos, Corona de Arag6n, 999 ; de documentos ineditos, historia de Espafia, 997 ; de documentos ineditos, historia de Navarre, 999 note; de las cr6nicas y memorias de los reyes de Castilla, 998. Colleccao de historia Portugueza, 1 00 1 note. Collection complete des mSmoires, 969; des chroniques Beiges inedites, 977 ; de documents merits sur 1'histoire de France, 965 ; d'fiditions photo- graphiques de la Bibliotheque royale de Bruxelles, 467 ; des chroniquers et trouveres Beiges, 977 note; des chroniques nationales franchises. 972 ; des meilleurs dissertations, 545 ; des meinoires relatifs a 1'histoire de France, 971 ; de textes et documents pour 1'etude historique du Christian- isme, 955; de textes pour servir a 1'e'tude et a 1'enseignement de 1'his- toire, 968 ; d'etudes et de documents, 231. Collections of church history, 488— 498; of original sources, 949-1013; of secondary material, 885—948. College of cardinals, 174, 178. Colleges in medieval universities, 438, 441, 443, 445. Collignon, A., Petrone, 414. Collinet, P., Droit de Justinien, 116. Collins, W., Cathedral cities of Italy, 476; Cathedral cities of Spain, 476. Colmeiro, M., Constituci6n de L6on y Castilla, 633; Cortes, 1000; Derecho administrativo espanol, 633 note; Reyes cristianos, 319. Coluccio Salutati, 304, 311; Epistolario, 314. Columba, 126, 129. Columban, 126, 129, 130. Comba, E., Vaudois, 403. Combarieu, J., Musique, 478. Combet, J., Louis XI, 284. Comenge, L., Medicina, 321. Commemorative historical essays, 934— 939. Commerce, 247, 248, 255-257; Arabi- an, 149. Commines, Philip de, M^moires, 279. Compagni, Dino, Chronicle, 296. Comparetti, D., Vergil, 335. Compass, 248, 258. Compayre, G., Abelard, 393. Coneiliar movement, 267, 269, 272. Concilium Basiliense, 275. Conclave, 453. Concordat of Worms, 181, 184. Conde, J., Arabs in Spain, 149. Conder, C., Latin kingdom, 205. Conrad II, 170, 172, 174. Conrad III, 202, 206, 211, 213, 217. Conrad IV, 213, 214, 219. Conrad, J., Handworterbuch, I 1 6. Conradi Hirsaugensis, Dialogus, 416. Conradin, 213, 220. Conrat, M., Quellen des romischen Rechts, 423. Constance, council of, 267, 269, 273, 275. Constans, L., Les grands historiens du moyen Sge, 968 note. Constantine (Cyrillus), 156, 158. Constantinople, 661-669; 113-114; Northmen in, 151 ; and the fourth crusade, 202, 204, 206; Latin em- perors of, 1204-1261, 203; fall of, in 1453 A.D., 325, 327, 328, 330. Consuetudines monasticae, 121. Continental legal history, 943, 422. Conway, M., Demonology, 355. Conway, P., Thomas Aquinas, 406. Conybeare, E., Key of truth, 402. Cook, T., Rouen, 198. Cooke, E., St. Columba, 129. Cooper, C., Annals of Cambridge, 444 ; Memorials of Cambridge, 444. Cooper-Marsden, A., Lerins, 120. Copp£e, TL, Arab Moors, 149. Coppi, E., Universita italiane, 443. Corazzini, G., Madre di Petrarca, 310. Corbin, P., France, 537. Cordey, J., Comtes de Savoie, 281. Cornish, F., Chivalry, 261. Cornu, P., Paris, 386. Coroleu, J., and Pella y Forgas, D., Cortes, 321. Corpo diplomatico Portuguez, 1 00 1 note. Corpus iuris civilis, 116; juris canonici, 425; poeticum boreale, 154; scrip-' torum christianorum, 121; scriptorum ecclesiasticorum latinorum, 954; scriptorum historiae Byzantinae, 1003. Correa da Serra, Colleccao de livros ineditos, 1001 note. Corroyer, E., Architecture romane, 475; Gothic architecture, 475; Mont-Saint- Michel, 472. Corsica, 302. Cortes de los antiguos reinos de Ara- L-i'm y de Valencia, 1000 note; de L€on y de Castilla, 1000. Cortes of Spain, 316. 318, 320. Cosack, H., Konrads III Kreuzzug. 206. Cosenza, M., Petrarca and Cola di Rienzo, 295 ; Petrarch's letters, 307. 4!»S INDEX Cosneau, E., Connltable de Richemont, 282; Tr.-iiti'-s de Guerre de cent ans, 285. Costelloe, L., Bonaventure, 228. Costume, history of, 191-199. Cotterill, H., Italy, 617. Coulanges, Fustel de, see Fustel de Coulanges. Coulton, G., Francis to Dante, 216; Mediaeval garner, 384 ; Mediaeval studies, 909. Councils, church, 469-471, 962, 234, 237. Courland, 69 1 . Cousin, L., Constantinople, 1002 note. Cousin, V., Ouvrages d'Abelard, 395 ; Opera, 395; Roger Bacon, 432. Coussemaker, E., Art harmonique, 477 ; Histoire de 1'harmonie, 477; Scrip- torum de musica medii aevi, 477. Couture, L., Cursus, 419. Coville, A., Cabochiens, 282. Cox, C., Sanctuaries, 239. Cox, G., Crusades, 204. Coxe, W., Austria, 288. Coyecque, E., L'H6tel-Dieu, 389. Crahay, E., Thomas d'Aquin, 462. Craigie, W., Icelandic sagas, 154. Cram, R., Gothic quest, 473 ; Heart of Europe, 475 ; Lectures on architec- ture, 472. Cramer, J., De Graecis studiis, 415. Crane, T., Exempla, 451. Crawford. F., Rulers of the south, 197 ; Salve Venetia, 298. Crawfurd, R., Plague and pestilence, 254. Creasy, E., Ottoman Turks, 329. CrScy, battle of, 277, 280. Creighton, C., Epidemics, 254. Creighton, L., Heroes of European his- tory, 911. Creighton, M., Historical lectures, 910.- Papacy, 269. Creizenach, N., Aeneis im Mittelalter, 414. Crellin, A., Roger Bacon's historical scholarship, 461. ' Crete, Mohammedans in, 145, 146. Crevier, J., Universite de Paris, 440. Criticism, historical, 458, 461. Crivellucci, A., Stato e la chiesa, 136. Croiset, A. and M., Abridged history of Greek literature, 336; Litterature grecque, 336. Crosa, E., Sovranita popolare, 461. Crowe, E., France, 516. Crowe, J., and Cavalcaselle, G., History of painting, 313. Crozals. J., Lanfranc, 382. Cruel, R., Geschichte der Predigt, 238. Cruickshank, J. and A., Christian Rome, 347. Crusades, 201-211. Cubberley, E., Syllabus, 59. Cuissard, C., Grec a Orleans, 415; ThSodulfe, 367. Cult, Christian, 234, 239. . Culture, history of, 169, 729-848, 333-483. Cumont, F., Latin le langue liturgique, 336; Mysteries of Mithra, 337; Ori- ental religions, 337. Cumulative book review digest, 88. Cunha, V., Portuguese monarchy, 318. Cunningham, W., S. Austin, 342; Western civilization, 248. Curcio, G., Q. Orazio Flacco, 414. Curiosum urbis regionum XIV, 345, 346. Curschmann, F., Hungersnote, 254. Cursus, 417-419. Curteis, A., Roman empire, 346. Curtin, J., Mongols: a history, 326; Mongols in Russia, 326. Curtis, E., Roger of Sicily, 197. Cusa, Nicholas, 268, 273. Cusani, F., Storia di Milano, 298. Cust, R., Life of Cellini, 308. Cuthbert, Father, Friars, 226; Romanti- cism of St. Francis, 228; St. Francis, 224. Cutts, E., Parish priests, 235; Saint Augustine, 340; Saint Augustine of Canterbury, 130; Saint Jerome, 337; Scenes and characters, 9 1 2. Cyclopedia of education, I 1 7. Cyprus, 209. Czechs, 155-156. Czeppan, R., Cr6cy, 280. Czerny, A., Bibliothek St. Florian, 468. Dandliker, K., Geschichte der Schweiz, 290; Schweizerische Geschichte, 290; Switzerland, 288. Daenell, E., Hanse, 257. Daering, O., Deutschlands Kunstdenk- maler, 204. Dagassan, J., Autorite publique, 164. Dagobert, 133, 136. Dahlmann, F., Danemark, 722. Dahlmann-Waitz, Quellenkunde, 28. Dahmen, R., Abalardsche Ethik, 394. Dahn, F., Ko'nige der Germanen, 111: Urgeschichte, 111: Westgothen, 112. Dalton. O.. Byzantine art, 474; Letters of Sidonius. 335. Damian, Peter, 174, 179, 380, 382. Danes in England, 150, 152. Daniel, C., Etudes classiques. 413. Danmarks riges historic. 720. INDEX 499 Dann, E., Historical geography, 139 note. Dannemann, F., Naturwissenschaften, 351, 427. Dannenberg, H., Miinzkunde, 293 note. Dante, 478-483 ; Convivio, 481 ; De monarchia, 482 ; De vulgari elo- quentia, 482 ; Divine comedy, 481 ; Letters,- 482 ; Quaestio de aqua et terra, 482 ; Vita nuova, 482 ; Works, 483. Dante society, Annual report, 483. Dantier, A., Monastferes benedictins, 469. Danvila y Collado, M., El poder civil en Espafia, 634; Cortes, 320. Danzas, A., Jourdain de Saxe, 231. Daquet, A., Confederation suisse, 290. Dareste, M., France, 511. Darmesteter, A., Cours de grammaire, 455. Darmstaedter, L., Naturwissenschaften, 429. Daru, P., Venise, 298. Dasent, G., Burnt Njal, 152. Dates, lists of, 68-71. Daumet, G., France et Castille, 320. D'Auvergne, E., Castles, 263. Davenport, C., The book, 464. Davenport, E., False Decretals, 177. David of Dinant, 400, 402. Davidsohn, R., Florenz, 299; For- schungen, 299; Philipp II, 244. Davies, G., Renascence, 313. Davis, E., Invasion of Egypt by Louis IX, 207. Davis, H., Charlemagne, 140 ; Medieval Europe, 367. Davis, W., Mediaeval and modern Eu- rope, 368 ; Roman empire, 109. Davison, E., Forerunners of St. Francis, 227. Day, C., History of commerce, 248. Deane, S., Proslogium of St. Anselm, 381. Debidour, A., Du Guesclin, 281. Debidour, A., and Etienne, E., Chroni- quers francais, 968 note. Debout, H., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Dechamps, P., Dictionnaire de geogra- phie, 131. Declareuil, O., Epreuves judiciaires, 164. Decretals, pseudo-Isidorian, or False, 173, 177. Dedieu, L., Columban, 130. Decrering-Berlin, H., Kntalog der Bib- liothek Marienfeld, 469. De Guignes, M., Huns, 328. Dehio, G., and Bezold, G., Baukunst, 474. Dejob, C., Foi religieuse, 312. Delaborde, H., Charles VIII, 284; En- seignements de Saint-Louis, 246; Jean de Joinville, 207. Delabre, Baron de, Rhodes, 208. Delachenal, R., Charles V., 282. Delacroix, H., Philosophic medievale, 407. Delalain, P., Libraire parisien, 464. Delambre, J., Astronomic, 433. Delannoy, P., Louvain, 444. Delarc, O., Normands, 199; Saint Gregoire VII, 182. Delaunay, H., Societes savantes, 210. Delaville le Roulx, J., Cartulaire des Hospitaliers, 211; France en Orient, 208; Hospitaliers, 208; Ordre de S. Jean, 208. Delbriick, H., Kriegskunst, 115. Del Castillo, Diccionario de Espafia, 319. Delehaye, H., Culte des martyrs, 356; Gregoire le Grand, 125; Legends of the saints, 354; Stylites, 120. Deleque, R., Universite de Paris, 440- 441. Delisle, L., Actes de Henri II, 198 ; Album paleographique, 231 note; Alexandre de Villedieu, 449 ; Berard de Naples, 420 ; Bibliotheque de Corbie, 468 ; Cabinet des manuscrits, 469; Classe agricole, 198, 251; Doc- uments sur les livres, 469 ; Ecole calligraphique de Tours, 366; Ecoles d'Orl6ans, 412 ; Formulaire de Clair- marais, 420 ; Formulaire de Treguier, 420; Instruction de la noblesse, 264; Litterature latine, 797 ; Philippe Auguste, 244 ; Primat, 449 ; Summa dictaminis & Beauvais, 420 ; Tem- pliers, 208. Del Mar, A., Middle ages revisited, 352; Monetary systems, 254; Money and civilization, 254. Delorme, F., Opuscule de R. Bacon, 432. Delpech, H., Tactique, 262. Demaison, L., Album de la catht'drale de Reims, 476; Cath6drale de Reims, 476. Demay, G., Costume, 1 97. Demimuid, M.. Jean de Salisbury. 414; Pierre le Venerable, 227. Demonologv, 353, 355. Denicke. H.. Hansestadte, 330. Deniel, J.. Blanche de Castille. 245. Denifle, H., Archiv fur Literaturge- sehichte, 789: Benediktiner an der Universitat Paris, 441 : Bibel-Cor- rectorien, 415: D^le'gue's des univer- site's au concile de Constance, 273; 500 INDEX Desolation des 6glises, 281; Docu- ments relatifs a I'mm crsitr de Paris, 444; Sentenzen Abalards, 394; Uni- versitaten, 439; Universite's fran- ruisi's. 444. Denifle, H., and Chatelain, E., Chartu- larium, 444 ; Jeanne d'Arc et 1'uni- versite, 284. Denis, E., Boheme, 274; Huss, 274. Denison, G., Cavalry, 262. Denk, O., Unterrichtswesen, 337. Denmark, 720-722, 1007-1008. Dennistoun, J., Dukes of Urbino, 302. Denzinger, H., Enchiridion symbolorum, 241. De Pauw, N., Vie intime, 264. Depoin, J., Chartes de Saint-Martin- les-Champs, 390; Questions merov- ingiennes, 137. Depping, G., Juifs, 875; Normands, 153; Re'glemens d'Etienne Boileau, 258. D£prez, E., Guerre de cent ans, 281. De Renzi, S., Salerno, 443. Derichsweiler, H., Lotheringen, 597. Der Islam, Zeitschrift, 149. Descloux, E., Tiers ordre, 230. Desdevises du Dezert, G., Croisades, 209; Don Carlos, 320. De Selincourt, B., Homes of Francis- cans, 230. Des Essarts, A., Croisade des enfants, 207. Desiderius, 134, 138. Desjardins, A., Etats g4neraux, 281 ; Louis, XI, 284. Deslandres, P., Conciles de Latran, 47 1 ; Eglise catholique, 460 note ; Innocent IV, 219. Des Marez, G., Luttes sociales, 251. Desmaze, C., Sainte Chapelle, 389; Universite de Paris, 441. Deutsch, S., Abalard, 394; Verurteil- ung Aoalard, 395. Deutsche Literaturkalender, 95 note; Reichstagsakten, 292 ; Zeitschrift fur Geschichtswissenschaf t, I 5 1 note. Devic, Dom. and Vaissette, Dom, Lan- guedoc, 540. Deville, A., Chateau-Gaillard, 262. Devil-lore, 353, 355. De Vinne, T.t Invention of printing, 307 ; Notable printers, 307. Devrient, E., Genealogisches Handbuch, 273. Dewe, J., Mediaeval and modern his- tory, 337. D'Hozier, Armorial, 291. Dialogue of the Exchequer, 197, 436. Dibben, L., Secretaries, 418. Dickinson, E., Music, 477. Dictatus papae, 180, 183. Dictionaries and encyclopaedias, 86, 89-120, 130-138, 445, 448. Dictionnaire d'archfiologie chretienne, III; de biographic frangaise, 93 note; de geographic, 131; d'histoire et de geographic ecclt'siastique, 110: de la bible, 1 07 ; de thSologie cathol- ique, 109; du droit canonique, 107; topographique de la France, 138. Didot, A., Aide Manuce, 312. Didron, A., Iconographie chrfitien, 474. Die Kultur der Gegenwart, 729. Die osteuropaischen Literaturen, 312. Die Philosophic der Gegenwart, 57. Dieckhoff, A., Waldenser, 403. Diederichs, E., Deutsches Leben, 203. Diefenbach, L., Glossarium, 448 ; No- vum glossarium, 448. Diehl, C., Etudes byzantines, 674; Ex- archat de Ravenne, 115; Figures byzantines, 673; Justinien, 114 ; L'Afrique byzantine, 115; L'art byzantin, 199; Manuel d'art Byzan- tin, 474; Palerme, 199; Ravenne, 110; Theodora, 115; Venise, 298. Diepgen, P., Medizin, 428; Medizin- isches, 435; Traum und Traumdeu- tung, 430. Dierauer, J., Eidgenossenschaft, 290. Diercks, G., Geschichte Spaniens, 630 ; Spanische Geschichte, 630 note. Dierks, F., Araber, 376. Dieterich, K., Byzantinische Charak- terkopfe, 679. Dieterici, F., Alfarabi's philosophische Abhandlungen, 379; Philosophic der Araber, 376. Dietrich, K., Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 116. Dieudonne, A., Denier parisis, 254; Monnaie royale, 254. Diez, F., Troubadours, 456. Digest of book reviews, 88. Di Giovanni, Palermo, 199. Dill, S., Roman society, 335. Dilthey, W., Analyse des Menschen, 309; Geisteswissenschaften, 820; Weltanschauung, 8 1 8. Dinsmore, C., Aids to the study of Dante, 483 ; Dante, 480. Dionysius the Areopagite, 353, 354, 357; Celestial hierarchy, 354 ; Works, 354. Dios de la Rada y Delgado, J., Espafia cristiana, 319. Diplomatarium Norvegicum, 1009; Suecanum, 1011. Diplomatics, 238-249. Dixon, E., Florentine wool trades, 256. Dizionario di erudizione, 1 14. INDEX 501 Djuvara, T., Partage de la Turquie, 330. Dmitrewski, M., Freiwillige Armut, 179. Dobiache-Bojdestvensky, O., Vie parois- siale, 237. Documenta antiqua Franciscana, 232. Document! di storia italiana, 992. Documents inedits relativs a 1'histoire de la Grece, 330. Documents ine'dits sur 1'histoire de France, 965. Documents relating to Cambridge, 445. Dodd, J., Canon law, 424. Dods, M., Forerunners of Dante, 482 ; Works of St. Augustine, 341. Dodsworth, R., and Dugdale, W., Mo- nasticon, 226. Dodu, G., Royaume latin de Jerusalem, 206. Doeberl, M., Monumenta Germaniae selecta, 983 note. Db'llinger, J. Fables respecting the popes, 445; Griechische Literatur, 414; Jews, 857 note; Ludwig of Ba- varia, 289; Papst und das Konzil, 446 ; Sectengeschichte, 402 ; Studies, 913; Universitaten, 444. Doring, A., Die beiden Bacon, 431. Dogma, history of, 472-478. Doize, J., Gr6goire le Grand, 124. Dollfus, L., Espagnes, 319. Domet de Vorges, E., Saint Anselme, 382. Dominicans, 223, 231. Dominici, Cardinal, 273. Donation of Constantine, 134, 135, 136; of Pepin, 139, 141. Donatus, Ars grammatica, 349, 352. Dondorff, H., Normannen, 197. Donower, F., Geneva, 299. Dopffel, H., Kaisertum, 176. Dopsch, A., Wirtschaftsentwickelung, 142. Doren, A., Florentiner Wirthschaftsge- schichte, 256; Florentiner Ziinfte, 300; Kaufmannsgilden, 253. Dorez, L., Manuscrits a peintures, 467. Dorner, A., Augustinus, 342 ; Glaubens- lehren, 239. Douais, C., Albigeisme, 403 ; Albigeois, 403 ; Bernard Guido, Practica inqui- sitionis, 404 ; Confessions de St. Au- gustin, 340 ; Documents a 1'histoire de 1'inquisition, 404; Inquisition, 403. Doublier, L., Roger Bacon, 431. Douglas, N., Calabria, 199. Dow, E., Atlas, 121 note; Feudal r6- gime, 161. Dowling, T., and Fletcher, E., Hellen- ism in England, 363. Dozy, R., Cid, 319; Islamisme, 148; Recherches, 321 ; Spanish Islam, 149. Dozy, R., and Engelmann, W., Glos- saire, 378. Draseke, J., Anselm von Havelberg, 207 ; Johannes Scotus, 372. Drake, F., Masters of the spiritual life, 340. Drake, M. and W., Saints, 356. Drane, A., Christian schools, 845 ; Do- minican order, 231 ; St. Dominic, 232. Draper, J., Intellectual development, 746. Draper, W., Petrarch's secret, 307. Draycott, G., Mahomet, 146. Drehmann, J., Leo IX, 178. Dresdner, A., Kultur- und Sittenge- schichte, 465. Dreves, G., Hymnendichtung, 450 ; Hymnologische Beitrage, 451 ; Kirche der Lateiner, 450. Driault, E., Histoire de la civilisation, 733 note. Droysen, G., Handatlas, 123. Drumann, W., Bonifacius VIII, 271. Dryer, J., Planetary systems, 433. Duballet, AbbS, Droit canoniqiie, 424. Dubarle, E., University de Paris, 440. Dubnow, S., Jews in Russia, 850 note. Dubois, A., Latinite d'Ennodius, 336. Dubois, G., Historia ecclesiae Parisi- ensis, 389. Dubois, L., St. Francis, 229. Dubois, P., De recuperatione Terra Sanctae, 211. Du Bourg, A., Saint Odon, 178. Dubreuil-Chambardel, L., M6decins, 435. Du Breul, J., Paris, 388. Du Cange, C., Constantinople, 207; Glossarium, 448. Du Chaillu, P., Viking age, 153. Duchesne, A., Historiae Normannorum scriptores, 200. Duchesne, L., Christian worship, 179 ; Churches separated from Rome, 177; Cursus, 419; Early history of church, 119; Liber pontificalia, 969 note; Temporal sovereignty, 141. Duckett, G., Charters of Cluni, 179. Dudan, A., Monarchia degli Absburgo, 588 note. Dudden, F., Gregory the Great, 123. Diihring, E., The two Bacons, 431. Diimmler, E., Alchvin, 367; Anselm, 382; Hrabanstudien, 371; OstfrSnk- ishes Reich, 168. Duff, N., Matilda, 184. 502 INDEX Duffield, S., Latin hymn writers, 452. Duffy, B., Tuscan republics, 300. Dufourcq, A., Christianisnae, 426; Saint Anselme, 382; Science, 429. Dugdale, W., and Dodsworth, R., Mo- nasticon, 226. Duhem, P., Fragment de 1'Opus ter- tium, 437; Leonardo de Vinci, 314; Physique d'Aristote, 398 ; Systeme du monde, 433; Theorie physique, 433. Dulaurier, E., Albigeois, 403. Dumoulin, M., Thfiodoric, 111. Dunand, P., Etudes critiques, 282; Jeanne d'Arc, 282. Dunbar, B., Dictionary of saintly wo- men, 482 note. Duncalf, F., and Krey, A., Parallel source problems, 385. Dungern, O., Heerenstand, 262; War Deujtschland ein Wahlreich, 585. Dunham, S., Poland, 694 note; Spain and Portugal, 627. Dunning, W., Political theories, 459. Dunn-Pattison, R., Black Prince, 279. Duns Scotus, John, 405, 409, 410; Opera, 410. Dupuy, A., Alcuin, 367. Dupuy, P., Boniface VIII, 271. Durand, G., Cathe'drale d' Amiens, 476. Durrieu, P., Archives de Naples, 301; Heures du due de Berri, 467. Duruy, V., France, 522 ; Moyen ftge, 369. Dussieux, France, 976 note. Dussieux, L., Hongrois, 159. Duvernoy. E., Due de Lorraine, 244. Dwight, H., Constantinople, 665. Dyer, T., Rome, 348. Dziatzko, K., Terentius, 414. Bales, S., St. Bernard, 394; Works .of S. Bernard, 393. Eannes de Azurara,, G., Chronicle of Guinea, 322. Kasterbv, W., Law of tithes, 238. Eastern empire, gee B'-zantine empire. Eastern Europe, 311-312, 680-716, 1004-1006. 323-331. Eastlake. C., Gothic revival, 472. Eberbach, O., Reiehsritterschaft, 291. Ebersolt, J., Berengar de Tours, 383 ; Palais de Constantinople, 661 note. Eberstadt, R., Gewerberecht, 253 ; Zunftwesen. 253. Ebert. A., Literatur des Mittelalters, 788. Ebrard, J., Bonifatius, 130; Irosehot- tische Missionskirche, 130. Eckel, A., Charles le Simple, 167. Eckenstein, L., Women under monasti- cism, 482. Eckert, H., Kramer, 257. Eckstein, A., Finanzlage Felix V, 275. Eckstein, F., Lateinischer und griech- ischer Unterricht, 843 ; Lateinischer Unterricht, 842. Ecole des chartres, 890. 164. 231; pratique des hautes e'tudes, 888. Ecoles franchises d'Athenes et de Rome, 887, 959. Economic conditions, 247-259; history of Jews, 857-861. Edelstand du Meril, M., Etudes, 914; Melanges arch£ologiques, 915; Poesies ine'dites, 451 ; poesies populaires, 451; Tablettes en cire, 468. Education, history of, 58-59, 117-118. 182. 836-848. 1012, 304, 306, 312. Edward III of England, 276. Edwards, E., Founders of libraries, 465 ; Memoirs of libraries, 465. Effmann, W., Centula, 367. Egger, E., Helle'nisme, 415; Livre, 465. Egidi, P., Colonia Saracena di Lucera, 219. Egli, J., Geographische Namenkunde, 133: Nomina geographica, 132. Ehrhard, A., Mittelalter, 107. Ehrle, F., Augustinismus, 398; Biblio- teca papale d'Avignone, 469 ; John Peckham, 398; Spiritualen, 230. Ehrmann, F., Bulle Unam sanctam, 271. Eichmann, E., Kirche und Staat, 455. Eicken, H., Weltanschauung, 816; Weltuntergang, 370. Eigl, L., Walahfrid Strabo, 372. Einhard, 140, 143, 364, 367. Eitel, A., Kirchenstaat, 271. Eitelberger v. Edelberg, R., Quellen- schriften fur Kunstgeschichte, 478. Eiten, G., Unterkonigtum, 136. El-Bokhari, Traditions islamiques, 149. Eleanor of Aquitaine, 242, 244. Elections, ecclesiastical, 175, 178. Electors, the seven, 286, 291. Eleventh century, culture in the, 380- 383. Elias, N., Moghuls, 328. Eliot, C., Turkey in Europe, 329. Ellis, F., Romance of the rose, 455. Elsee, C., Neoplatonism, 337. Elster, L., Worterbuch der Volkswirt- schaft, 1 1 6 note. Elton, C. and M., Book-collectors, 466. Elton, O., and Powell, F., Danish his- tory, 328. Emerton, E., Beginnings of modern Europe, 371 note; Introduction to INDEX 503 the middle ages, 370; Mediaeval Eu- rope, 37 1 ; Religious environment, 335; Salimbene, 226. Emperors, lists of German, 887—1056 A.D., 170; 1125-1272 A.D., 213; 1273-1519 A.D., 287. Empire, medieval, 499-507, 139, 141, 169-172. Enchiridion fontium historiae ecclesias- ticae, 384 note ; fontium historiae Hungarorum, 159; symbolorum, 241. Enciclopedia universel, 103. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 96 ; of Islam, 120; of missions, 240 ; of religion and ethics, 105. Encyclopaedias. 96-120. 193. Encvclope'die des sciences religieuses, 107. Endres, J., Alexander von Hales, 406; De regimine principium, 462 ; Dialek- tiker, 382 ; Manegold von Lauten- bach, 382 ; Mittelalterlichen Philoso- phic, 832 ; Otloh von St. Emmeran, 382 ; Petms Damiani, 382 ; Scholas- tische Lehrmethode, 381 ; Thomas von Aquin, 408. Engel, A., and Serrure, R., Trait4 de numismatique, 292. Engelmann, E., Philipp von Schwaben, 218. England, history of, 36. 149. 812, 903- 904. 955-996: ecovomic history of, 250; kings of, 1327-1485 A.D., 278: learning in, 361, 363, 364; natural sciences in, 426, 427—428 ; universij ties in, 438, 443. Enlart, C., L'art gothiques en Chypre, 209; Manuel d'archgologie, 299: Rouen, 198; Teaching of mediaeval archaeology, 471. Fnsor, R.. Belgium, 556. Enzyklopadisches Handbuch, 118 note. Epidemics, 247, 253. Epistolae pontificum Romanorum, 961. Epochs of church history, 418; of mod- ern historv, 335. Equilaz Yansruas, D., Granada, -322. Erkert, R.. Wanderungen, 111. Ermnn, "W., and Horn, E., Bibliogra- phic der deutschen Universitaten, • 445. Ernault, E., De Virgilio Marone, 360. Ernst. H., Kolonisation von Ost- deutschland, 220. Errera, C., Scoperte geografiche, 258. Ersch, J., and Gruber, J., Allgemeine Encvklopiidie, 100. Erslev, K., Repertorium diplomatioum. 1008. Esmain, A., Droit francaise, 532. Espafia sagrada, 467. Espenberger, J., Petrus Lombardus, 408. Esperabe Arteaga, E., Salamanca, 444. Espinas, G., Bibliographie de 1'histoire ficonomique, 259; Douai, 252. Essays, historical, 908-939. Essen, L., see Van der Essen, L. Essenwein, A., Kulturhistorischer Bil- deratlas, 190. Estado de la cultura espanola, 321. Estates General, 242, 246. Eethonia, 691. Etablissements de Saint Louis, 246. Etienne de Bourbon, Anecdotes his- toriques, 451. Etienne Marcel, 277, 281. Etudes Franciscaines, 231. Eubel, C., Hierarchia catholica medii aevi, 422 ; Missionsgebiet der Domi- nikaner, 240. Eucken, R., Problem of human life, 819. Eugippius, Life of Saint Severinus, 335. Evans, H., Castles, 263. Everett, W., Italian poets, 309. Everyman's library, 944. Ewald, P., Gregorii I epistolae, 125. Ewalt, A., Eroberung Preussens, 221. Ewart, K., Cosimo de' Medici, 300. Exarchate of Ravenna, 114. Execrabilis, the papal bull, 268, 274. Exempla, 446, 447, 451. Paba, Guido, 417, 418. Fabre, A., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Fabre, J., Philosophic, 824 ; Proems de condemnation de Jeanne d'Arc, 285 Proces de rehabilitation, 285. Fabre, P., Melanges offerts a, 936. Fabre, P., and Duchesne, L., Liber censuum, 221. Fabricius, A., Normands dans 1'Es- pagne, 153. Fabricins, J., Bibliotheca latina, 449. Facsimiles of : manuscripts, 230-237: 467. Facultfi des lettres, Paris, 889. Fages, R.. Saint Vincent Ferrier, 272. Fagnan. E., Histoire de 1'Afrique, 322. Fagniez, G., Documents de 1'industrie, 258. Falke, J., Deutscher Handel, 257. Falko. J.-v., Geschichte des Geschmacks, 798: Ritterliche Gesellschaft, 264. Falletti-Fossati, C., Ciompi, 300. Famines, 247, 254. Famous historic of fryer Bacon, 432. Fangeron, H., Bgngfices, 163. 504 INDEX Fanuzzi, G., Veneziani, 297. Faral, E., Contes et romans courtois, 456; Jongleurs, 456. Farinelli, A., Petrarca, 310. Farnell, I., Troubadours, 456. Fasciculus lonni Willis Clark dicatus, 469. Favaro, A., Atti della nazione German- ica, 445. Favre, E., Eudes, comte de Paris, 167. Feast of Fools, 235, 236. Febvre, L., Franche-Comte', 542. Fedele, P., Nazionalita, 604. Federn, K., Dante, 480. Federn, R., Repertoire bibliographique, 457. Fehling, F., Friedrich II, 219. Fehmi, Y., Turquie, 330. Fehr, J., Gottesfriede, 163; Staat und Kirche, 136. Feierabend, H., Reichsabteien, 183. Felder, H., Studien im Franziskaneror- den, 406. Felder, J., Kirchensprache, 447. Felibien, M., and Lobineau, G., Ville de Paris, 388. Fellner, A., Albertus Magnus als Bo- taniker, 430. Felten, J., Gregor IX, 219. Felten, W., Mittelalter, 355. Ferdinand II of Aragon, 316, 317, 319, 322. Feret, P., Emprisonnements de Roger Bacon, 431; FacultS de th£ologie, 397; Sainte-Genevieve, 389; Univer- sit6 de Paris, 441. Fergusson, J., History of architecture, 474. Fernandez Duro, C., Marina de Castilla, 320. Fernandez Guerra, A., Caida del im- perio visig6tico-espanol, 149; Espana, 111; D. Pedro, 320. Ferrand, G., Relations de voyages, 258. Ferrara, 302. Ferrara-Florence, council of, 268, 274. Ferrer del Rfo, A., Don Pedro, 320. Ferrere, Sept arts, 351 ; Situation re- ligeuse de 1'Afrique, 343. Festgabe zum Bonifatius-Jubilaum, 130. Feudalism, 159-164, 174, 178. Feugueray, H., Thomas d'Aquin, 462. Ficker, G., Ausgehendes Mittelalter, 270. Ficker, G., and Hermelink, H., Kirchen- geschichte, 429. Ficker, J., Deutsches Kaiserreich, 503 ; Reichsgeschichte Italiens, 607. Ficker, J., and Winkelmann, E., Re- gesta imperii V, 221. Fiction, historical, 77-79. Field, L., Renaissance, 305. Fierville, C., Grammaire latine, 451. Figgis, J., Divine right, 287; Political thought, 269; Republica Christiana, 459. Figuier, L., Vies des savants, 76 1 . Finances of papacy, 274. Financial system of the church, 234, 235, 238. Finch, G., Letters of Hildebrand, 184. Finke, H., Acta Aragonensia, 322 ; Acta concilii Constantiensis, 275; Aragonesische Konige, 321; Bonifaz VIII, 270; Constanzer Konzil, 273; Dante als Historiker, 481; Dietrich von Niem, 290; Geschichtsforschung in Spanien, 319; Katalanische Re- naissance, 322 ; Papsttum, 271. Finkel, L., Bibliografla historyj polskiej, 47. Finlay, G., Byzantine empire, 645 ; Greece, 656. Finnland, 692. Finot, J., Flandre et France, 256; Flandre et Genes, 256; Flandre et 1'Espagne, 256. Finsler, G., Homer in der Neuzeit, 483. Finzi, G., Petrarca, 310. Fioretto, G., Umanisti, 309. Fiorvanti, A., Petrarca, 310. Firearms, oriein of, 260, 263. Fischer, E., Rumanen, 158. Fischer, J., Normannen, 154. Fischer, K., Kreuzzug Friedrichs, I, 206. Fischer, O., Bonifatius, 131. Fischer, T., Genoese world map, 259; Nicolai de Bibera Carmen, 416; See- karten, 257; Welt- und Seekarten, 259. Fischer, W., Byzantinische Geschichte, 191. Fish, C., Italian archives, 5 note. Fisher, G., Christian church, 405: Christian doctrine, 474. Fisher, H., Medieval empire, 500. Fisher, J., Bibliography of church his- tory, 50 note. Fisquet, H., France pontiflcale, 460 note. Fitting, H., Irnerius, Summa codicis, 425; Juristische Schriften, 425; Melanges offerts a, 937: Rechts- schule zu Bologna, 424; Rechtswis- senschaft, 423 ; Scuole di diritto in Francia, 424. Fitting, H., and Suchier, H., Lo codi, 425. INDEX 505 Fitzgerald, V., Saint John Capistran, 228. Fitzmaurice-Kelley, J., Spanish litera- ture, 813. Flach, J., Comte de Flandre, 167; Droit romain, 423 ; Origines de France, 167. Flade, P., Inquisitionsverfahren,. 404. Flanders, 276, 281. Flateyjarb6k, 155. Fleming, D., R. Bacone, 431. Fleming, W., Mysticism, 409. Fletcher, B., History of architecture, 474. Fletcher, C., Collectanea, 445 ; Western Europe, 350. Fletcher, H., Oxford and Cambridge, 443. Fletcher, W., Black Friars, 231. Fliche, A., Cardinal Humbert, 178; Philippe I, 168; Polemique religi- euse, 184. Flick, A., Medieval church, 428. Fling, F., Studies, 386. Plojshaus, W., Hus, opera omnia, 275. Flom, G., Konung skuggsja, 331. Florence, 294, 296, 299, 304, 311. Florez, H., Espana sagrada, 467. Floto, H., Heinrich der Vierte, 183. Fliigel, E., Roger Bacon, 413. Focke, R., Buchgewerbe, 466. Foedera, by T. Rymer, 996. Forster, F., Wegweiser, 32 note. Foes of western Christendom, 144—158. Folz, A., Friedrich II, 219. Fontana, L., Bibliografia: comuni dell' Italia, 303. Fontes rerum Austriacarum, 986; By- zantinarum, 1003 note; Gorman i- carum, 984. Fontevrault, Order of, 222, 227. Fonti per la storia d'ltalia, 990. Foord, E., Byzantine empire, 647 ; Re- pulse of the Saracens, 189. Forbes, N., Balkans, 706 note. Forcella, V., Iscrizione delle chiese, 348. Formentini, M., II ducato di Milano, 298. Forrest, J., Western civilization, 336. Forschungen zur christlichen Literatur- und Dogmengeschichte, 489. Forst-Battaglia, O., Genealogie, 271; Genealogische Tabellen, 271 note. Fortescue, A., Eastern church, 190. Fortescue, G., Subject index . . . Brit- ish Museum, 3 note. Foster, J., Lives of Vasari, 307. Fotheringham, J., Marco Sanudo, 207. Foucault, A., Yves de Chartres, 381. Foulcher of Chartres, Historia Hiero- solymitana, 210. Foulet, L., Bibliography of medieval French literature, 457 ; Roman de renard, 456. Foulke, D., Langobards, 116. Foulke, W., Love songs of Petrarch, 307. Foulkes, C., Armour, 262. Foulques de Villaret, A., L'enseigne- ment des lettres, 412. Fourier-Bonnard, Saint-Victor de Paris, 389. Fournel, H., Berbers, 148. Fournier, E.,. Enseignes de Paris, 388 ; L' esprit dans 1'histoire, 82 ; Paris- capitale, 388 ; Rues de Paris, 388. Fournier, F., D6cret de Gratien, 425. Fournier, M., Affranchissements, 251 ; Droit romain, 423 ; Science du droit, 424 ; Statuts et privileges, 444 ; Uni- versite's franchises, 442. Fournier, P., Aries, 245 ; Joachim de Flore, 409; Officialitls, 418; Yves de Chartres, 381. Fowke, F., Bayeux tapestry, 202 note. Fowler, M., Petrarch collection, 315. Fox-Davies, A., Art of heraldry, 285 note; Guide to heraldry, 285. Fracassetti, G., Epistolae of Petrarch, 314; Lettere, 314. Fragmenta historicorum Graecorum, 1002 note. Frakn6i, W., Mathias Corvinus, 329. France, 21-28. 129, 460. 508-548. 762- 767, 803, 885-891, 965-975: North- men in, 151, 153; beginnings of, 165-169; political history from 1108 to 1328 A.D., 241-246; economic history of, 250; cities in, 252; com- merce in, 255; Hundred Years' War in, 276-284; kings of, 1328-1498 A.D., 278; culture in, 278, 279; universities in, 439, 442, 444; lan- guage and literature in, 452-457. France, A., Jeanne d'Arc, 279. Franche-Comte', 542. Franchetti, A., Signorie, 297. Francis of Assisi, 223-226, 228-233. Franciscans, 223, 228-231. Franck, A., Gerbert, 372. Francke, K., Personality in German literature, 308. Frank, A., Re'formatetirs, 290. Franke, K., Schulpoesie, 449. Franke, W., Romuald, 179. Franklin, A., BibliothSque de mfidecine, 469; Bibliotheque de Notre-Dame, 469; Bibliotheques de Paris, 469; Biblioth&que de Saint-Victor, 469; 506 INDEX Chirurgiens, 435; Corporations de Paris, 390; Dictionnaire des arts, 390; Dictionnaire des noms, 449; Guide des savants, 4 note; MMecins, 435; Plans de Paris, 388; Sorbonne, 441 ; Sources de France, 23 ; Vie privee, 390. Pranks, 132-138, 357-361. Frantz, A., Kirchenrecht, 425. Franz, A., Benediktionen, 239 ; Messe, 239 ; Minoritenprediger, 228. Franz, A. M., Cassiodorus, 343. Franz-Pascha, J., Baukunst des Islam, 379. Franziskanische Studien, 231. Frati, L., Bibliografia bolognese, 445. Fred, W., Briefe von Abalard, 393. Fredegund, 133. Frederick I (Barbarossa), 202, 206, 211, 213, 217. Frederick II, 202, 207, 213, 215, 219. Frederick III, 287, 291. Fredericq. P.. Corpus inquisitionis, 404 ; Dues de Bourgogne, 284 ; Histoires catholiques de 1'inquisition, 404 ; Historiographie de 1'inquisition, 401 ; Inquisitie, 403. Freedom of thought, 739-748. Freeman, E., Charles the Bold, 279; Europe in the 8th century, 137 ; His- torical essays, 916; Historical geog- raphy of Europe, 139; Mediaeval Greece, 326; Mediaeval Italv, 295; Normans at Palermo, 197; Ottoman power, 329: Saracens, 148; Sieges of Paris, 153; Western Europe in fifth century, 110. Freeman, L., Italian sculpture, 313. Freiburger historische Studien, 488. Frenken, G., Exempla, 451. Fresne de Beaucourt, G., Charles VII, 282. FreVille, R., Organisation judiciaire en Normandie, 198. Freville de Lorme, C., Commerce de Rouen, 255. Frey, K., Vite of Vasari, 307. Frevtag, G., Deutsche Vergangenheit, 769. Friars, mendicant, 222-223. Friedbergr. E., Corpus juris canonici, 425; Kirchenrecht, 424; Lehren iiber Staat und Kirche, 458 ; Staat und Kirche, 458. Friedensburg. F.. Deutsche Miinzge- schichte, 295: Die Miinze, 296. Friedlander, L., Erinnerungen, 351; Nachleben der Antike, 351. Friedlander, M., Guide to the perplexed, 379. Friedmann, E., Welthandel von Florenz, 256. Friedrich, J., Kirchengeschichte, 131. Friedrich, R., Canossa, 183. Froissart, J., Chronicles, 279. Frothingham, A., Monuments of Chris- tian Rome, 348. Froude, J., Short studies, 917. Fuente, V. de la, Arag6n, 320. Fulda, 127. Funck-Brentano, F., France, le roi, 535; Guerre de cent ans, 281; Phil- ippe le Bel, 245. Funk, F., Kirchengeschichtliche Ab- handlungen, 497 ; Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte, 409. Funk, P., Jacob von Vitry, 450; Re- naissance, 308. Fustel de Coulanges, N., Institutions politiques, 137; Recherches, 137. Fuzet, E., Petrarque, 310. Gabelentz, H., Kirchliche Kunst, 474. Gabotto, F., Storia dell' Italia, 619. Gabrielli, A., Epistolario di Cola di Rienzo, 302 ; Goliardi, 449. Gadave, R., Universite de Toulouse, 442. Gaggese, R., Firenze, 300. Gaggia, G., Arnaldo da Brescia, 218. Gagliardi, E., Eidgenossenschaft, 292. Gaiseric, 108. Galabert, F., Pateographie, 236. Galante, A., Fontes iuris canonici, 425. Gall, Saint, 126. Gallia Christiana, 460. Gallion. W., Ziinfte in Paris, 390. Galy, C., Famille me'rovingienne, 360. Gama Barros, H., Portugal, 641. Gams, P., Kirchengeschichte von Spa- nien, 468: Series episcoporum, 423. Ganay, M., Dominicaines, 231. Gandert, F., Busswesen, 239. Gandilhon, A., Louis XI, 284. Ganem, H., Sultans Ottomans, 330. Ganzenmiiller, W., Naturbetrachtung, 430. Gapp, J., Franciscus von Assisi, 229. Gardner, A., John the Scot, 370; Juli- an, 338; Lascarids, 207; Theodore of Studium, 177. Gardner, A., French sculpture, 476. Gardner, E.. Catherine of Siena, 271 ; Dante, 480 ; Dante and the mystics, 481; Dante's ten heavens, 483; Dia- logues of St. Gregory, 118; Florence, 296; Siena, 302. Gardthausen, V., Buchwesen, 465. Garland, John, 446, 449, 451 ; De tri- umphis ecclesiae, 451 ; Parisiana, 420. INDEX 507 Garnett, R., Italian literature, 809. Gamier, C., Tapisserie de la reine Ma- thilde, 199. Garreau, L., Etat social de la France, 264. Garrod, H., and Mowat, R., Life of Charlemagne, 143. Garufl, C., Exhiquier o diwan? 199. Gaskoin, C., Alcuin, 366. Gaspar, M., Granada, 322. Gaspary, A., Italian literature, 808. Gasquet, A., Etudes byzantines, 142. Gasquet, F., Biblical criticism, 413 ; Black Death, 249; English scholar- ship, 428 ; Fragment of a work by Bacon, 437; Henry the Third, 237; Last abbot of Glastonbury, 413 ; Let- ters of St. Bernard, 393 ; Life of St. Gregory, 124 ; Monastic libraries, 464 ; Monastic life, 128 ; Monastic scriptorium, 464; Old English bible, 464; Parish life, 235; Roger Bacon and the Vulgate, 413; Rule of St. Benedict, 119. Gaste, A., Serments de Strasbourg, 167. Gatard, A., Musique, 125. Gatien-Arnoult, A., Jean de Garlande, 449. Gaudenzi, A., Bibliotheca iuridica, 425; Dettatori Bolognesi, 418; Italia e 1'impero d'Oriente, 115; Ranieri da Perugia, Ars notaria, 420. Gaul, L., Alberts des Grossen Verhalt- nis zu Plato, 408. Gaul, Moors in, 145, 149. Gauthier, L., Averroes, 376. Gauthiez, P., Catherine de Sienne, 272. Gautier, L., Chivalry, 261 ; Epopees frangaises, 455-456. Gavrilovitch, M., Traite de Paris de 1259, 245. Gay, J., L'ltalie meridionale, 149. Gay, V., Glossaire archeologique, 300. Gayangos, P., Chronicle of James I, 319. Gayet, A., Art arabe, 379; L'art byzan- tin, 474. Gayet, L., Grand schisme, 272. Gazette des beaux-arts, 478. Gebhardt, B., Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte, 562. Gebhart, E., Armies mercenaires de 1'Italie, 262; Italie mystique, 228; Origines de la renaissance, 309; Renaissance italienne, 309. Gee, H., and Hardy, W., Documents, 129. Geiger, A., Mohammed, 148. Geiger, L., Renaissance, 306. Geijer, E., Geschichte Schwedens, 726. Gelzer, H., Ausgewahlte kleine Schrift- en, 649 note ; Byzantinische Kaiser- geschichte, 189; Byzantinische Kul- turgeschichte, 649. Gemelli, A., Scritti vari, 431. Genealogy, 268-282. Gengel, A., Feudalismus, 163. Genghis Khan, 323, 326, 328. Gennrich, P., Johann von Salisbury, 414 ; Staatslehre Johannes von Salis- bury, 462. Geographical discoveries, 248, 249, 257-259; theory, 427, 428, 434. Geography and history, 130-146, 107. George, H., Genealological tables, 276; Geography and history, 107. Gerard, P., Francs, 136. Geraud, H., Paris sous Philippe le Bel, 390. Gerbert of Aurillac (Sylvester II), 170, 172, 174, 176, 369, 370, 372. Gerdes, H., Geschichte des deutsches Volkes, 574. Gerland, E^, Balduin I, 206. Gerland, E., Physik, 433. Gerland, E., and Traumuller, F., Ex- perimentierkunst, 433. Germain, A., Cartulaire de 1'universite de Montpellier, 444. Germain, A., Cathe'drale de Chartres, 476. Germany, 28-34, 461-463, 560-587, 768-781, 804-807, 894-899, 978- 985; conversion of, 130; early king- dom of, 165—169; eastward expansion of, 213, 215, 220; economic history of, 250; cities in, 252; commerce in, 256; from the Great Interregnum to Maximilian, 285—292; emperors of, 1125-1272 A.D., 213, 1273-1519 A.D., 287 ; constitutional history of, 291; universities in, 439, 444. Germon, L. de, and Polain, L., Cata- logue de la bibliotheque de Riant, 211. Gerosa, P., Sant' Agostino, 342. Gerson, Jean, 267, 273, 275. Geschichte der Erziehung, 836 ; der europaischen Staaten, 332. Geschichtschreiber der deutschen Vor- zeit, 981. Gesellschaft fur romanische Literatur, 456. Gesta Romanorum, 447. Gevaert, F., Chant liturgique, 124. Geyer, B., Stellung Abaelards, 394. Gfrorer, A., Byzantinische Geschichten, 677; Gregorius VII, 182. Ghellinck, J., Liber sententiarum, 406; Litte'rature polemique, 183 ; Mouve- 508 INDEX ment thSologique, 407 ; Pierre Lom- bard, 408. Ghettos, 869-872. Ghibellines, 211. Ghirarducci, ('., Historia di Bologna, 442. Giannone, P., Regno di Napoli, 301. Giard, Sainte-Genevieve, 389. Gibbins, H., History of commerce, 248. Gibbon, !•:.. Decline and fall, 341. Gibbons, H., Ottoman empire, 329. Gibson, S., Oxford libraries, 468. Gidel, C., Etudes grecques, 415. Gierke, < >., Genossenschaftsrecht, 580 ; Johannes Althusius, 459 ; Political theories, 459. Giesebrecht, W., De litterarum studiis apud I tains, 371; Geschichte der deutschen Kaiserzeit, 50 1 . Gieseler, J., Church history, 400. Giesing, J., Leonardo da Pisa, 436. Gilbert de la PorrSe, 392, 396, 399, 402. Gilds, 247, 253. Giles, J., Complete works of Bede, 363 ; Matthew Paris, English history, 328; Opera omnia of John of Salisbury, 416. Gillet, L., Histoire artistique des ordres mendiants, 475. Gillett, E., Huss, 274. Gilliat-Smith, E., Saint Clare, 230. Gilliodts, van Severen, L., Cartulaire, estaple de Bruges, 258. Gilman, A., Saracens, 148. Gindraux, J., Christianisme dans le monde paien, 240. Ginzel, F., Chronologie, 257. Giordani, P., Storia della Russia, 682 note. Giovanni, V., Boezio, 343. Gipsies, 324, 327. Giraldus Cambrensis, Opera, 416. Girard, P., Roman law, 422. Girgensoten, P., Hanse, 330. Giry, A., Choix de documents, 258; Manuel de diplomatique, 239 ; Rouen, 252. Giry, A., and Reville, A., Emancipation of towns, 248 ; Medieval commerce, 248. Giseke, P., Hirschauer, 227. Giudice, P., Diritto in Italia, 111. Giulini, G., Milano, 298. Gjerset, K., Norwegian people, 723. Glaser, F., Franziskanische Bewegung,, 229. Glasson, E., Histoire du droit, 518 ; Parlement, 282. Glossaires, Latin, 448. Glover, T., Conflict of religions, 337 ;' Life and letters, 335. Glyn, A., Civilization in fifth century, 336. Gobineau, J., Renaissance, 301. Godefroy, F., Dictionnaire, 455; Lex- ique, 455. Godkin, G., Monastery of San Marco, 311. Goeje, M., Arabische Literatur, 378. Goller, E., Apostolische Kammer, 275 ; Papstliche Ponitentiarie, 238 ; Sigis- mund, 291. Goelzer, H., 1,,-n init.'- de Je'rome, 336; l-atinitr de S. Avit, 336. Gorres, J., Mystik, 409. Gorresgesellschaft, 1 52 note, 898. Goschen Sammlung, 945. Goetz, L., Kiever Hohlenkloster, 158 ; Konstantinus, 158; Staat und Kirche, 158. Goctz, W., Beitrage zur Kulturge- schichte, 749; Franz von Assisi, 229; Mittelalter und Renaissance, 308 ; Robert von Neapel, 311; Wiederau- fleben des romischen Rechts, 422. Gotz, W., Historische Geographie, 1 43. Goff, C., Assisi, 231. Gokstad ship, 150, 154. Goldast, M., Monarchia xomani im- perii, 292. Golden Bull of 1356, 286, 288, 291. Goldstaub, M., Physiologus, 350. Goldziher, I., Islam, 147 ; Islamische Philosophic, 375. Goliardic literature, 446, 449-451. Golubovich, G., Bibliotheca bio-biblio- grafia della Terra Santa, 240. Gonse, L., L'art gothique, 472. Gont, P., Mont Saint-Michel, 472. Goodyear, W., Architectural refine- ments, 476; Renaissance art, 312; Roman and mediaeval art, 474 ; Ver- tical curves in Gothic cathedrals, 475. Gordon, C., Innocent the Great, 215. Gordon, L., Assisi, 230. Gothein, E., Culturentwicklung Siid- italiens, 197; Renaissance, 309. Gothic art, 470-478. Gottlieb, T., Mittelalterliche Bibli- otheken, 469. Gottlob, A., Camera apostolica, 275; Kreuzzugssteuern, 238. Gottron, A., Ramon Lulls Kreuzzugsi- deen, 208. Gougaud, L., Chre'tiente's celtiques, 129; Scotti, 130. Gourmont, R., Latin mystique, 447. Gower, R., Joan of Arc, 283. INDEX 509 Goyau, G., Jeanne d'Arc, 284. Grabmann, M., Geschichte der scholasti- schen Methode, 830 ; Mittelalterliche Philosophic, 408 ; Thomas von Aquin, 408. Graf, F., Alessandria, 217. Graefe, F., Friedrich II, 219. Grafe, K., Heinrich VII, 289. Graesel,' A., Fiihrer fiir Bibliotheksbe- nutzer, 6 note ; Handbuch, 6. Graesse, J., Orbis latinus, 1 30. Gratz, H., Jews, 850. Graevenitz, G., Deutsche in Rom, 920. Graf, A., Miti, 356; Petrarchismo, 310; Roma, 351. Graham, R., English monasteries, 371; Gilbert of Sempringham, 228. Grammar, Latin, 446-448, 451. Grammont, Order of, 222. Granada, 316, 322. Grandes chroniques franchises, 458. Grandgent, C., Dante, 480; Vulgar Latin, 336. Grandgeorge, L., Saint Augustin, 342. Grant, A., Charlemagne, 140; Europe, 372. Graphia aureae urbis Romae, 346. Gratian, 421, 425. Gratien, Franciscaines, 441 ; S. Fran- cois, 229. Grauert, H., Dante, 482 ; Johann von Toledo, 428. Graves, F., Education during the mid- dle ages, 84 1 . Gray, A., Cambridge, 444. Gray, G. E., Crusade of children, 207. Gray, G. J., Cambridge stationers, 466. Gr^a, A., Archidiacres, 237. Gr£ard, O., Sorbonne, 441. Great artists series, 314.' Great Interregnum, 213, 214, 220. Great masters in painting, 314. Great peoples, 323. Great western schism, 267, 272. Greece, 656-660. Greek church, 113, 116, 190; East, 113—116; in the renaissance. 304, 306, 311; learning in the British Isles, 362-364. Greek, study of, in the middle ages, 333, 336. 411, 412, 414, 416. Green, J., Botany, 434. Green, Mrs. J., Irish world, 129. Greene, E., Botanical historv, 434. Greene, R., Friar Bacon, 432. Greenwood, A., Empire and papacy, 459. Greenwood, T., Cathedra Petri, 443. Gregorian music, 125. Gregorovius, F., Athen, 660 ; Rome, 440. Gregory I (the Great), 121-125, 128, 340, 341, 342; Dialogues, 119, 123; Letters, 123; Pastoral rule, 123; Works, 125. Gregory VII, 180-184. Gregory IX, 213, 214, 219. Gregory XI, 267, 268, 271. Gregory of Tours, 133, 135, 357, 359; History of the Franks, 137. Greinacher, A., Nikolaus I, 177. Grenier, P., L' empire byzantin, 651. Greven, J., Beginen, 239. Grierson, E., Northumbrian saints, 130; St. Francis, 229. Griffith, S., Divina comedia, 481. Grimm, H., Michael Angelo, 314. Grimm, J., Gedichte, Friedrich I, 217. Grimme, H., Mohammed, 146, 148. Grindle, G., Destruction of paganism, 338. Grisar, H., Gregorio Magno, 124; His- tory of Rome, 441 ; Mittelalter, 107. Gritzner, M., Heraldik, 287. Groche, B., Renaissancebewegung, 385. Grober, G., Grundriss der romanischen Philologie, 305. Grb'hler, H., Franzosische Ortsnamen, 136. Grossler, H., Begriindung der Kirche, 221. Groh, H., Avaren, 159; Justin II, 190. Gromer, G., Laienbeichte, 239. Gross, C., Bibliography of British municipal history, 259; Gild mer- chant, 253 ; Sources of English his- tory, 36; University of Paris, 441. Grosseteste, Robert, 411, 416, 426, 430, 437; Epistolae, 241; Rules, 258; Works, 437. Grosvenor, E., Constantinople, 662. Grote, G., Aristotle, 397. Grote, H., Stammtafeln, 275. Grotefend, H., Abriss der Chronologie, 252; Taschenbuch der Zeitrechnung, 251 : Zeitrechnung, 250. Grotefend, S., Karl IV, 291. Griitzmacher, G., Benedikt, 120; Hie- ronymus, 336; Pachomius, 119. Gruhn, A., Bvzantinische Politik, 207 ; Kreuzzug Richards I, 206. Grundriss der germanischen Philologie, 307 ; der Geschichtswissenschaft. 331 ; der romanischen Philologie, 305. Grupp, G., Kulturgeschichte, 751. Guarino of Verona, 304, 312. Gudeman, A., Klassiche Philologie, 785 note. 510 INDEX Giidemann, M., Erziehungswesen der Juden, 868; Quellenschriften, Juden, 868 note. Guelfs, 211. Ouenin, I... Stenographic, 228. Giinter, H., Mittelalter, 107. note. Gunther, S., Erdkunde, 258; Mathe- matik, 436; Mathematischer Unter- richt, 436. Gu£rard, B., Cartulaire de Notre-Dame de Paris, 390 ; Polyptique de Irmion, 164. Guerber, H., Myths, 356. Guerzoni, G., Arnaldo da Brescia, 218. Guterbock, C., Islam, 148. Giiterbock, F., Friede von Montebello, 217; Prozess Heinrichs des Lowen, 218. Guggenheim, M., Marsilius von Padua, 290. Guglia, E., Geburts- Sterbe- und Grab- statten der romisch-deutschen Kaiser, 507. Guibal, G., Arnauld de Brescia, 218; Sentiment national, 280. Guichot, J., Pedro Primero, 320. Guido, Bernard, Practica inquisitionis, 404. Guignebert, C., De imagine mundi, 434. Guilhermy, F., Monuments de Paris, 388. Guilhermy, F. de, and Lasteyrie, R. de, Inscriptions de Paris, 391. Guilhiermoz, P., Noblesse, 163. Guillaume le Maire, Le livre de, 240. Guilmoto, Navigation de la Seine, 390. Guiraud, J., L'6glise romaine, 270; L'etat pontificate, 272 ; Questions d'histoire, 403 ; Saint Dominic, 224. Guiscard, Robert, 181. Guizot, F., Civilisation en France, 763; Collection des memoires, 97 1 ; France, 517; History of civilization, 736. Gummere, F., Germanic origins, 111. Gumplowicz, L., Staatstheorien, 459. Gundlach, W., Barbarossalieder, 217 j Kirchenstaat, 142. Gurlitt, C., Konstantinopel, 668. Gurlt, E., Chirurgie, 435. Gutsche, O., Deutsche Geschichte, 111. Gutsche, O., and Schultze, W., Deutsche Geschichte, 135. Guttmann, J., Scholastik und Judentum, 408. Guyard, S., Civilisation musulmane, 374. Gwatkin, H., Arian controversy, 338; Arianism, 338.; Knowledge of God, 338. Haag, O., Latinitat Fredegars, 360. Habel, E., Johannes de Garlandia, 449. Habershon, A., Miracles, 356. Hablitzel, J., Hrabanus Maurus, 371. Hackwood, F., Christ-lore, 356. Haddan, A., and Stubbs, W., Councils, 364. Haddon, A., Wanderings of peoples, 111. Hadley, J., Roman law, 422. Hadrian IV, pope, 212, 214, 217. Habler, K., Geschichte Spaniens, 322 ; Hermandades, 321. Hanlein, T., Bekehrung der Germanen, 131. Ha'pke, R., Brugge, 256; Deutsche Kaufmann, 256. Hagenbach, K., Christian doctrines, 474 note. Hagendorn, B., Schiffstypen, 255. Hagenmeyer, H., Anonymi gesta Fran- corum, 210 ; Chronologic de la pre- mi£re croisade, 205; Ekkehardi Hie- rosolymita, 210; Foulcher of Char- tres, 210; Kreuzzugsbriefe, 210; Peter der Eremite, 209. Haggard, A., Louis XI, 279. Hahn, A., Bibliothek der Symbole, 179. Hahn, B., Die wirtschaftliche Tatigkeit der Juden, 859. Hahn, C., Ketzer, 402. Hahnj H., Bonifaz und Lul, 131; Jahr- bucher, 136; Missionen, 240. Hahn, L., Kaisertum, 506; Lateinische Sprache in Konstantinopel, 336. Halban-Blumenstock, A., Romisches Recht, 164. Halbe, M., Friedrich II, 219. Hale, E. and S., Spain, 319. Halke, H., Numismatik, 293 note. Hall, F., A companion to classical texts. 219. Hall, H., Bibliography, English eco- nomic history, 259; English docu- ments, 243 ; Formula book, 243 note. Hallam, H., State of Europe, 348. Hallays, A., Nancy, 168. Haller, J., Concilium Basiliense, 275; Heinrich VI, 218; Karolinger, 142; Papsttum, 270; Pragmatische Sank- tion von Bourges, 274; Quellen des Kirchenstaates, 143 ; Sturz Heinrichs des Lowen, 218. Halm, C., Rhetores latini, 451. Halm, O., Goldene Bnlle, 291. Halphen, L., Annales royales, 143 ; Comte d'Anjou, 167; Cour d'Otto III, 172; Paris, 386; Rome, 141. Halphen, L., and Poupardin, R., Chroniques des comtes d'Anjou, 200. INDEX 511 Hamelin, F., Alcuin, 367. Hamlin, A., Architecture, 307; Orna- ment, 477. Hammer-Purgstall, J., Goldene Horde, 328; Literaturgeschichte der Araber, 378; Osmanisches Reich, 329. Hampe, K., Formelbiicher, 420 ; Fried- rich II, 219; Kaisergeschichte, 171; Konradin, 220 ; Stigmatisation, 230 ; Urban IV, 220. Hampe, T., Fahrende Leute, 257. Hampson, R., Medii aevi kalendarium, 259. Handbook of learned societies, 208. Handbuch der deutschen Geschichte, 562 ; der klassischen Altertumswis- senschaft, 330 note; der mittelalter- lichen und neueren Geschichte, 330. Handworterbuch der Staatswissen- schaften, I I 6. Haneberg, D., Schulwesen der Muhame- daner, 378. Hannay, J. O., Monasticism, 118. Hanotaux, G., Jeanne d'Arc, 279. Hanseatic League, 247, 257, 258. Hanserecesse, 259. Hansische Geschichtsblatter, 259; Ge- schichtsquellen, 259. Hansisches Urkundenbuch, 259. Hanssen, J., Hexenwahn, 404 ; Zauber- wahn, 404. Hantos, E., Magna carta, 326. Hapsburgs, 286, 289, 291. Harding, S., Medieval and modern his- tory, 373. Hardt, H., Magnum Constantiense con- cilium, 275. Hardwick, C., Christian church, 432. Hardy, E., Guerre de cent ans, 280. Hardy, R., Eastern monasticism, 120. Hare, A., Paris, 387. Hare, C., Baldassare Castiglione, 308 ; Italian renaissance, 311; Louis XI, 279; Maximilian, 291; Queen of queens, 319. Harnack, A., Dogmengeschichte, 472 ; Monasticism, 118; Reden und Auf- satze, 498. Harnack, O., Beziehungen des frank- isch-italischen zum byzantinischen Reiche, 190; Karolingische Reich, 142; Kurfiirstencollegium, 291. Haroun-al-Raschid, 139. Harris, M., Mediaeval Jews, 873. Harrison, F., Byzantine history, 115: Meaning of history, 921 ; Paris, 386; Rome revisited, 345; Thirteenth cen- tury, 385. Hartley, C., Moorish cities, 375. Hartmann, C., Baukunst, 474. Hartmann, L., Byzantinische Verwal- tung, 115; Geschichte Italiens im Mittelalter, 611; Spatantiken Staate, 189. Hartmann, M., Islam, 148. Hartmeyer, H., Weinhandel, 257. Hartung, H., Italienische Gotik, 476. . Hartung, J., Weltherrschaft, 461. Hartwig, O., Uebersetzungsliteratur, 399. Harvey, A., Castles, 262. Hasak, M., Bildhauerkunst, 477. Hase, K., Franz von Assisi, 230; Jungfrau von Orleans, 283. Hasenohrl, V., Sudostliche Marken, 220. Hashagen, J., Otto von Freising, 461. Haskins, C., Adelard of Bath, 427; Arabic science, 427; Canterbury monk, 189; England and Sicily, 197; Hugo; Sanctelliensis, 377; Life of mediaeval students, 439; List of text books, 398 ; Moses of Bergamo, 415; Norman institutions, 198; Nor- man jury, 164; Normans, 196; Pos- terior analytics,, 398; Robert le Bougre, 401 ; University of Paris in sermons, 440 ; Vatican archives, 5. Haskins, C., and Lockwood, D., Sicil- ian translators, 398. Hassall, A., French people, 520; Hand- book, 75. Hassonville, comte, Saint Barnard, 394. Hasting, 151. Hastings, J., Encyclopaedia of religion and ethics, 105. Hatch, E., church institutions, 178 ; Greek ideas, 338. Hatzfeld, A., Saint Augustin, 342. Hauck, A., Kirchengeschichte Deutsch- lands, 461 ; Weltherrschaft, 462. Haudecoeur, A., Saint Rfimi, 361. Haupt, H., Literaturberichte iiber In- quisition, 404; Waldensertum, 403. HaurSau, B., Charlemagne, 142 ; David de Dinan, 402; Hugues de St. -Vic- tor, 395; Jean de Garlande, 449; Langues anciennes, 412; Philosophic scolastique, 829; Primat, 449; Sin- gularite's historiques, 759. Haury, J., Procopius, 116. Hausrath, A., Abalard, 394; Arnold- isten, 227; Arnold von Brescia, 218. Haverfield, F., Rome and Ireland, 363. Havet, J., He>6sie, 402; Lettres de Gerbert, 370; Questions me>ovingi- . ennes, 137; Recueil de travaux d'£rudition d£di£s a, 938. Havet, L., Classiques latins, 366; Prose me'trique, 419. Hawkwood, Sir John, 293, 298. 512 INDEX Haydn's Dictionary of dates, 70. Hayem, J., Mthnoires et documents, 255. Hayes, C., Germanic invasions, 112. Hazlitt, W., Venetian republic, 296. Headlam, C., Chartres, 476; France, 52 1 ; Oxford, 443. Healey, J., City of God, 341. Healy, J., Insula sanctorum, 362 ; St. Patrick, 128. Heath, S., Pilgrim life, 238; Symbolism, 356. Hebert, M., Poi catholique, 239. Hebrew, study of, 411, 415, 416. Hecker, J., Black Death, 254; Epi- demics, 253. Heeren, A., Classische Literatur, 414. Heeren, A., and Ukert, F., Staaten- geschichte, 332. Heermann, O., Gefechtsfiihrung, 209. Hefele, C., Conciliengeschichte, 469 : Ximenez, 321. Hefele, H., Bettelorden, 228. Hefner- Alteneck, J., Costumes, 194. Hegel, K., Stadte und Gilden, 252; Stadtewesen, 252. Hegira, 144. Heiberg, J., Griechische Grammatik Roger Bacons, 414; Renaissance- tillob, 413 ; Syntaxis des Ptolemaios, 415. Heidelberg, university of, 439, 444. Heidelberger, P., Kreuzzugsversuche, 208. Heil, A., Otto und Ludwig IV, 167. Heil, B., Deutsche Stadte, 252; Kolo- nialstadte, 220. Heilprin, L., Historical reference book, 69. Heimbucher, M., Orden und Kongrega- tionen, 483; Papstwahlen, 177. Heimskringla saga, 152. Heinemanir, F., Tell-Bibliographie, 292. Heinemann, L., Normannen, 199; Stadtverfassung, 217. Heinrich, A., Carmina burana, 449. Heitz, T., Philosophic et la foi, 395. Hell, J., Kultur der Araber, 374. Heller, A., Physik, 433. Heller, J., Deutschland und Frankreich, 289. Hellmann, S., Grafen von Savoyen, 168; Gregor von Tours, 359. Hellwald, P., Kulturgeschichte, 733. Helmolt, H., \Veltgeschichte, 315. Hemmer, H., and P. Lejay, Collections de textes, 955. Hemming, G., Festum stultorum, 236. Henckelum, M., Spiritualistische Stro- mungen, 321. Henderson, E., Germany in the middle ages, 575; Select documents, 387; Short history of Germany, 563. Henke, E., and Lindenkohl, G., Abe- lard's Sic et non, 395. Henne-am-Rhyn, O., Allgemeine Kultur- geschichte, 734; Kulturgeschichte des deutschen Volkes, 770; Kulturge- schichte des jiidischen Volkes, 854 ; Kulturgeschichte der Kreuzziige, 209; Rittertum, 261; Schweizervolk, 291. Henneberg, H., Albrecht I, 289. Henner, C., Ketzergericht, 403. Hennig, E., Papstlichen Zehnten, 274. Hennig, R., Verkehrgeschichte, 256. Henri d'Andeli, Battle of the seven arts, 413. Henrion, M., Missions catholiques, 240. Henriot, G., and La Monneraye, J., Societies d'histoire de Paris, 391. Henry I (the Fowler), 165, 168. Henry II, 170, 172, 174. Henry III, 170, 172. 174. Henry IV, 180-184. Henry V, 181, 183. Henry VI, 202, 206, 212, 213, 218. Henry VII, 286, 287, 289. Henry, A., De monarchia of Dante, 482. Henry, P., S. Francois, 229. Henry the Lion, 212, 215, 218. Henry the Navigator, 317, 318, 321. Heraclius, 185, 190. Heraldry, 284-291. Herbert, J., Illuminated manuscripts, 466. Herbst, E., Zug Karl's VIII, 284. Herculano, A., Portugal, 636. Heresies and the inquisition, 399—404. Hergenrother, J., Anti-Janus, 446 note ; Catholic church, 182; Kirchenge- schichte, 397; Kirchenrecht, 424; Photius, 177. Herkless, J., Francis and Dominic, 228. Hermandades, 316, 321. Hermann, M., Theatergeschichte, 253. Hermann!, F., Rom, 297. Hermannson, H., Icelandic collection, 155. Heroes of the nations, 324. Herrad von Landsberg, Hortus deli- ciarum, 206. Herre, P., Deutsche Kultur, 776 ; Herr- schaft im Mittelmeer, 361 ; Quellen- kunde, 14. Herrmann, E., Hausmeieramt, 136. Herrmann, F., Geschichte des jiidischen Volkes, 853. Herrmann, P., Islam, 728. Herrmann, W., Alfons X, 320. INDEX 513 Hertling, F., Albertus Magnus, 408. Hertling, G., Augustin, 342 ; Wissen- schaftliche Richtungen, 407. Hertslet, W., Treppenwitz, 81. Hertzberg, G., Byzantiner, 652 ; Griech- enland, 658 ; Romisches Kaiserreich, 313 note. Hervas, J., Renacimiento, 308. Hervieu, H., Etats generaux, 246. Hervieux, A., Fabulistes latins, 790. Herzberg-Frankel, S., Landfrieden, 163. Herzfeld, M., Zeitalter der Renaissance, 314. Herzog, G., Sainte Vierge,.239. Herzog, J., Realencyklopadie, 112. Herzog (II), Waldenser, 403. Hesse, H., Franz von Assisi, 231. Hessel, A., Bologna, 443. Hesseling, D., Byzantium, 650. Hessels, J., Gutenberg fiction, 307. Hessling, E., Paris, 388. Hettner, H., Renaissance, 309. Heurtevant, R., Durand de Troarn, 383. Heusler, A., Deutsche Verfassungsge- schichte, 581 note. Heussi, K., Kirchengeschichte, 414. Heussi, K., and Mulert, H., Atlas zur Kirchengeschichte, 1 27. Hewett, W., University life, 440. Heyck, E., Deutsche Geschichte, 566; Florenz, 300; Genua, 299; Kreuz- ziige, 205. Heyd, W., Levantehandel, 255. Heydenreich, E., Genealogie, 272. Heyfelder, E., Renaissance, 308. Heywood, W., Little Flowers of St. Francis, 225. Hiatt, C., Notre Dame de Paris, 389. Hildebrand (pope Gregory VII), 180, 182. Hildebrand, A., Boethius, 343. Hill, D., Diplomacy, 338. Hill, G., Arabic numerals, 375. Hillard, K., Banquet of Dante, 481. Killer, B., Abalard, 394. Hime, H., Artillery, 263; Roger Bacon and gunpowder, 263. Himly, A., Formation territoriale, 140; Wala, 168. Hincmar, 173, 177. Hinneberg, P., Kultur der Gegenwart, 729. Hinojosa, E., Catalufta, 320. Hinschius, P., Decretales pseudo-Isidori- anae, 179; Kanonisches Recht, 424; Kirchenrecht, 462. Him, Y., Sacred shrine, 236. Hirsch, F., Eroffnung Asiens, 255. Hirsch R., Ludwig VII, 244. Hirsch, S., Jahrbiicher, Heinrich II, 172. Hirsch, S. A., Early English Hebraists, 415; Essays, 415; Roger Bacon and. philology, 413. Hirschau, monastery of, 222, 227. Hirth, F., and Rockhill, W., Chan Ju- Kua, 249. Hispaniae ilhistratae, 997 note. Histoire de France, edited by Lavisse, 508 ; de France racontee a tous, 508 note; de 1'Ordre de Fontevrault, 227; generale, edited by Lavisse and Ram- baud, 328 ; generale de Languedoc, 540; generale de Paris, 387; litte'- raire de la France, 803. Historia general de la Espafia, 622. Historic towns series, 251. Historiography, 457-462 ; Mohamme- dan, 378; of the crusades, 205. Historische Vierteljahrschrift, 151; Zeitschrift, 150. Historisch - padagogischer Literaturbe- richt, 58, 182. Historisches Jahrbuch, 1 52 ; Literatur- blatt, 154. History for ready reference, 76 ; of all nations, 314. History teachers' magazine, 184. History [teachers' periodical], 185. Hitchcock, F., St. Patrick, 128. Hitti, P., Origins of Islamic state, 150. Hobhouse, W., Church and world, 405 note. Hodges, G., Early church, 338; Foun- tains abbey, 227. Hodgkin, T., Charles the Great, 140; Italy and her invaders, 345 ; Letters of Cassiodorus, 110; Theodoric, 110; Visigothic Spain, 110. Hodgson, F., Early history of Venice, 298 ; Venice in thirteenth and four- teenth centuries, 298. Hody, H., De bibliorum sacrorum texti- bus, 416. Hofler, C., Hus, 274; Ruprecht, 291. Hohlbaum, K., Kurverein zu Rense, 289. Hohne, E., Heinrich IV, 183. Hoeniger, R., Schwarze Tod, 254. Hoffbauer, T., Paris, 386. Hoffmann, M., Geldhandel der Juden, 860. Hofmann, M., Stellung Konigs von Sizilien, 198. Hdfmeister, A., Chronica of Otto of Freising, 460; Deutschland und Bur- gund, 168; Genealogie, 281; Otto von Freising, 460. 514 INDEX Hofmeister, G., Bernhard von Clair- vaux, 394. Hohenstaufen und popes, 211-221. Holbrook, R., Portraits of Dante, 483. Holden, E., Renaissance of science, 427. Holder-Egger, O., Salimbene, 460; Vita Karoli, 143. Holland, A., Germany, 564. Holland, F., Intellectual liberty, 747. Holland, T., Oxford, 443. Rollings, M., Renaissance and reforma- tion, 309. Hollway-Calthrop, H., Petrarch, 306. Holm, A., Liibeck, 257. Holme, L., Extinction of churches in Africa, 343. Holmes, T., Church in Gaul, 130. Holmes, W., Justinian and Theodora, 114. Holsten, L.. Codex regularum monasti- carum, 964. Holtzendorff, F., Enzyklopadie der Rechtswissenschaft, 424. Holtzmann, R., Franzosische Verfas- sungsgeschichte, 533; Wilhelm von Nogaret, 245. Holy Roman empire, 499-507, 170, 171. Holzapfel, H., Franziskanerorden, 228. Holzhey, C., Inspiration der heiligen Schrift, 407. Home university library, 946. Honorius III, 214, 219. Hoops, J., Reallexicon, 587. Hopf, K., Chroniques Greco-Romanes, 330 ; Geschichte Griechenlands, 659. Hore, A., Greek church, 190. Horsburgh, E., Lorenzo, 300 ; Savona- rola, 300. Horten, M., Glauben und Wissen im Islam, 379; Hauptlehren des Aver- roes, 379; Metaphysik Avicennas, 376. Hortis, A., Boccaccio, 310. Hortus deliciarum, 206^. Hortzschansky, A., Bibliographic des Bibliothekswesens, 470 ; Bouvines, 245. Hosmer, J., Jews, 851. Hospitallers, 202, 208. Hospitals, 427, 435; in Paris, 389. Hotel Dieu in Paris. 386, 389. Houdas, O., and Marcais, W., Tradi- tions islamiques, 149. Houtsma, M., Encyclopaedia of Islam, 120: Seljoukides, 191. Hovgaard, W., Norsemen, 154. Howard, G., Schism, 177. Howard-Flanders, W., Balkanin, 706 note. Howe, S., European history, 374. Howell, A., De vulgari eloquentia of Dante, 482; Franciscan days, 225; Lives of St. Francis, 225. Howell, A., and Wicksteed, P., Latin works of Dante, 482. Howland, A., Local interdict, 235. Howorth, H., Augustine, 130; Danes and Franks, 153 ; Golden days of English church, 130; Mongols, 328; Northern frontages of China, 328 ; St. Gregory the Great, 123. Huart, C., Arabes, 147; Litterature arabe, 378. Hubatsch, O., Vagantenlieder, 450. Huber, A., Geschichte Oesterreichs, 589 : Oesterreichische Reichgeschichte, 593 : Waldstatte, 291. Huberti, L., Gottesfrieden, 163. Huddleston, G., Gregory the Great, 124. Huddy, E., Matilda, 184. Hudson, W., Renaissance, 305. Hiibler, B., Kirchenrechtsquellen, 52 ; Kirchliche Rechtsquellen, 425; Kon- stanzer Reformation, 273. Hiibner, J., Genealogische Tabellen, 274. Hueffer, F., Troubadours, 456. Hiiffer, G., Bernhard von Clairvaux, 394. Huemer, A., Zahlensystem, 378. Huemer, J., Registrum of Hugo of Trimberg, 416. Hiirbin, J., Schweizergeschichte, 290. Hiittebrauker, O., Minoritenorden, 272. Hug, L., and Stead, R., Switzerland, 288. Hugh Capet, 166-168. Hughes, A., Dialogus, 436. Hughes, T., Dictionary of Islam, 120 note. Hugo of St. Victor, 392, 395. Hugo of Trimberg, Registrum, 416. Hugo, V., Notre Dame de Paris, 387. Hugonin, Mgr., St. Victor de Paris, 395. Huguenin, A., Suger, 244. Huillard-Breholles, J., Historia diplo- matica Friderici Secundi, 215; Pierre de la Vigne, 219. Huillier, A. 1', Regie de S. Benoit, 120. Huisman, G., Municipality Parisienne, 390. Huit, C., Philosophic de la nature, 399. Hull, E., Northmen, 153. Hulme, E., Renaissance, 309. Hulme, F., Symbolism, 356. Humanism, 303, 306, 309, 312. INDEX 515 Humann, G., Handschriftenornamentik, 475; Karolingische Baukunst, 367. Hume, M., Spanish people, 631. Humiliati, 222, 227. Humphrey, E., Politics and religion, 342. Humphreys, H., Illuminated books, 467. Hundred Years' War, 276-284. Hungarian raids, 157, 159. Hungary, 704-705, 1006, 324, 326, 329. Hungerford, E., Arab learning, 374. Huns, 108, 112. Hunt, J., Literature of theology, 50 note. Hunt, W., English church, 128. Huntington, E., Civilization, 107; Pulse of Asia, 158. Hunyadi, John, 324. Kurd, Letters of chivalry, 263. Hurgronje, C., Mohammedanism, 146. Hurst, J., Christian church, 415. Hurter, F., Innocenz III, 218; Institu- tions de 1'eglise, 239. Hurter, H., Nomenclator litterarius theologiae, 51. Husik, I., Jewish philosophy, 866 note. Huss, John, 268, 269, 273, 275; De ecclesia, 270 ; Opera omnia, 275. Hnssite wars, 268, 274. Hutchinson, L., Oriental trade, 248. Huttmann, M., Establishment of Chris- tianity, 338. Hutton, E., Attila, 112; Boccaccio, 310; Cities of Lombardy, 218; Cities of Umbria, 230; Siena, 302; Sigis- mundo Pandolfo, 302. Hutton, W., Church and barbarians, 176; Constantinople, 661; Influence of Christianity, 130; Philip Augus- tus, 243. Huyskens, A., Karl der Grosse, 142. Hyett, F., Florence, 300. Hymns, Latin, 446, 450, 451-452. Ibarra y Rodriguez, E., Colecci6n de documentos, 999 note. Iceland, 728. Iconoclastic controversy, 173, 177, 185. Iconography, Christian, 353, 354, 356, 474. Ideler, L., Chronologie, 253. He de France, 241, 243. Ileen, T., Sphragistik, 247. Illustrations from manuscripts of H. Y. Thompson, 467. Inibart de la Tour, H., Libert6 com- merciale, 255. Imbart de la Tour, P., Elections 6pisco- pales, 237; Idfies sociales, 461; Im- munites commerciales, 178; Origines religieuses de la France, 179. Imbault-Huart, C., Becueil de docu- ments sur 1'Asie centrale, 331. Inama - Sternegg, K., Wirtschaftsge- schichte, 250. Indulgences, 433. Industries, 247, 258. Inge, W., Mysticism, 409. Innocent III, 202, 206, 212, 214, 215, 218. Innocent IV, 213, 214, 219. Inquisition, 318, 400, 403, 404. Institutions, early medieval, 159-164. Insurrections, popular, 247, 251. Interdict, 175, 176, 234, 235. Internationale Bibliographic der Kunst- wissenschaft, 478; Bibliographie der Zeitschriftenliteratur, 10, II, 87. Investiture strife, 179-184. lorga, N., Croisades au XVe siecle, 208. Ireland, Christianity in, 126; learning in, 361-364; schools of, 759 note. Irene, empress of Constantinople, 139. Irnerius, 421, 424, 425; Formularius tabellionum, 420; Quaestiones, 425; Summa codicis, 425. Isabella of Castile, 316, 317, 319, 322. Isidore of Seville, 349-352 ; Etymo- logiae, 352 ; Geschichte der Goten, 112. Islam, 144-150. Islamic culture, 373-379. Islandica, 155. Israel, W., Robert von Neapel, 301. Istituto storico italiano, 905, 162, 990, 993. Italia sacra, 464. Italv, 37-41, 464-466, 599-621, 808- 811, 905-906, 988-944; Mohamme- dans in, 145, 146, 149; early king- dom of, 166-168; and the Byzan- tine empire, 188-189 ; and the Nor- mans, 195, 197, 199; cities in, 253; commerce in, 256; in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, 293-303. Ivo of Chartres, 380, 381, 421. Jack, A., Life insurance, 253. Jackson, F., Condottieri, 298. Jackson, S., Jerusalem the golden, 451. Jackson, T., Bzyantine architecture, 472 ; Gothic architecture, 472. Jackson, W., Dante's Convivio, 481. Jacob, G., Handel der Araber, 149. Jacob, K., Benedikt XII, 271. Jacob, K., Quellenkunde, 34. Jacob, L., Bourgogne, 168. Jacob van Artevelde, 276, 281. 516 INDEX Jacobs, W., Gerold von Jerusalem, 207. Jacquerie, 247, 277, 281. Jacques de Vitry, Exempla, 451. Jiiger, O., Deutsche Geschichte, 567. Jahns, M., Kriegswesen, 262 ; Kriegs- wissenschaften, 262. Jaff6, P., Bibliotheca rerum Germani- carum, 983 ; Regesta pontificum Ro- manorum, 956. Jaffe, S., Vaganten, 449. Jahn, A., Burgundionen, 112. Jahncke, R., Guilelmus Neubrigensis, 460. Jahrbuch fur Schweizergeschichte, 290. Jahrbucher der deutschen Geschichte, 570 ; fitr Nationalokonomie, 259. Jahresbericht der germanischen Philolo- gie, 307 note. Jahresberichte der Geschichtswissen- schaft, 13. Jaillot, Recherches de Paris, 387. James I of Aragon, 315, 317-319. James, G., Joan of Arc, 279. James, H., Consolations of philosophy, 341. James, K., Perugia, 302. James. M. B., Catalogue of the library at York, 469 ; Libraries of Canter- bury and Dover, 469. James, M. R., Abbev of S. Edmund, 468 : Catalogue of manuscripts of J. P. Morgan, 467 ; De nugis by Map, 451; Greek-Latin lexicon, 414. James, W., Religious experiences, 354. Jameson, A., Legends, 487. Jamison, E., Norman administration, 198. Janauschek, L., Bibliographia Ber- nardina, 395; Origines Cistercienses, 227. Jane, L., Chronicle of Jocelin of Brake- londe, 226. Janet, P., Science politique, 459. Janitschek. H., Renaissance, 309.. Jansen, M., and Schmitz-Kallenberg, L., Historiographie, 33. Janssen, J., German people, 171. Janssens, de, Etienne de Cloves, 207. Jardet, P., Saint Odilon, 178. Jarrett, B., Mediaeval socialism, 461 ; Revision committee of the bible, 413. Jarry, E., Domination franchise & Genes, 299. Jarry, L., Louis de France, 282 ; Siege d'Orleans, 283. Jastrow, I., and Winter, G., Hohen- staufen, 216. Jastrow, J., Handbuch zu Literaturbe- richten, 1 47. Jaulmes, A., Satanisme, 355. Jaurgain, J., Vasconie, 320. Jean de Jandun, Eloges de Paris, 387. Jean de Troyes, Scandalous chronicle, 279. Jeanrov, A., Po6sie lyrique, 456. Jebb, R., Humanism, 306. Jebb, S., Opus majus of Bacon, 436. Jenghiz Khan, 323, 326, 328. Jenkinson, P., Hisperica famina, 364. Jenkinson, H., Palaeography, 242 note. Jenks, E., Law and politics, 164. Jerome of Prague, 268, 270. Jerome, Saint, 117, 333, 335, 336. Jerrold, M., Francesco Petrarca, 306. Jerusalem, kings of, 1099-1284, 203; Latin kingdom of, 201, 205. Jervis, W., France, 524. Jessopp, A., Coming of the friars, 922 ; Great pillage, 237; Studies by a re- cluse, 923. Jewett, S., God's troubadour, 229 ; Normans, 152. Jewish encyclopaedia, I I 9. Jewries, medieval, 869-872. Jews, 62, 119, 850-884. 1013; nnd Mohammedan culture, 373, 375, 376; in Paris, 386, 390; in Spain, 317, 321. Jirecek, K., Bulgaren, 713; Serben, 714; Serbien, 329; Ragusa, 255; Romanen in die Stadten Dalmatiens, 707. Joachim of Flora, 406, 409. Joan of Arc, 277, 279, 282, 285. Jocelin of Brakelonde, Chronicle, 226. Jorgensen, E., Bibliotheques danoises, 468. Jorgensen, J., Franciscan Italy, 230; Pelerinages franciscains, 238 ; St. Francis, 224. John Garland, 411. John of Salisbury, 410, 412, 414, 416, 458, 462; Opera omnia, 416; Poli- craticus, 416. John the Deacon, Vita Gregorii, 125. Johnson, A., Drapers of London, 253; Normans, 153. Johnson, C., and Jenkinson, H., Eng- lish court hand, 242. Johnson, H., Divine comedv, 481. Johnston, H., Latin manuscripts, 212 note. Johnston, K., Historical geography, 139 note. Johnstone, P., Muhammad, 148. Joinville, 458 ; Crusade of St. Lewis, 204. Jollv, Philippe le Bel, 245. Joly, H., Psychology of saints, 356. Jonas, Life of Columban, 128. INDEX 517 Jones, R., Mystical religion, 409. Jones, W., Latin chroniclers, 459. Jonquiere, A., Empire Ottoman, 330. Jordan, E., Domination Angevine, 301. Jordan, H., Topographic, Rom, 346. Jordan, L., Arabische Zahlzeichen, 378. Jordanes, Origin of the Goths, 110. Jorga, N., Civilisation roumaine, 158; Geschichte des rumanischen Volkes, 708; Lateinische Westen, 189; Moven age, 107; Osmanisches Reich, 329. Joubert, A., Invasions anglaises, 280. Jourdain, A., Traductions d'Aristote, 399. Jourdain, C., Amaury de Chartres, 402 ; Aristote et la decouverte du nouveau- monde, 399: College oriental, 413; Excursions historiques, 924 ; Philoso- phic naturelle, 429; Roger Bacon, 432 ; Thomas d'Aquin, 462 ; Univer- sit6 de Paris, 441. Journal of Royal Asiatic societv, 330. Joyce, P., Irish civilization, 362 ; social history of Ireland, 362. Judson, W., Hroswitha, 370. Julian, J., Hymnology, 450. Julian, the Apostate, 334, 338. Jullian, C., Ausone, 337; Fustel de Coulanges, Institutions, 137. Jundt, A., Walafrid Strabon, 372. Jungfer, E., Papstwahl, 236. Junghandel, M., Baukunst Spaniens, 378. Juritsch, G., Otto I von Bamberg, 221. Jusserand, J., Sports, 264; Wayfaring life, 238. Justinian, 113-116. Kammel, O., Deutsche Geschichte, 568 ; Rom, 348: Werdegang des deutschen Volkes, 568 note. Kahn, L., Juifs a Paris, 390. Kaiser, E., Abelard, 394. Kaiserurkunden in Abbildungen, 249. Kalbfuss, H., Bologneser Ars dictandi, 420. Kampers, F., Alexander der Grosse, 461 ; Dantes Kaisertraum, 482 ; Kaiseridee, 461 ; Karl der Grosse, 140. Kanitz, F., Serbien, 715. Karst, A., Manfred, 219. Kaser, K.. Maximilian I, 291. Kaufmann, G., Deutsche Geschichte, 135; Deutsche Universitiiten, 444; Rhetorenschulen, 337. Kaufmann, K., Christliche Archiiologie, 302. Kaulen, P., Vulgata, 416. Kayserling, M., Juden in Spanien, 321. Keary, C., Coinages, 298; Vikings, 152. Kehr, K., Urkunden der normannisch- sizilischen Konige, 200. Kehr, P., Geschichte Ottos III, 172 ; Regesta pontiflcum Romanorum, 958. Keicher, O., Roger Baco, 432. Keil, H., Grammatici latini, 352. Kelle, J., Deutsche Literatur, 807. Kellett, F., Gregory the Great, 124. Kellner, K., Heortologie, 258. Kelsen, H., Staatslehre des Dante, 482. Kelsey, F., Latin and Greek, 412. Kemmerich, M., Portratplastik, 477 ; Portrats deutscher Kaiser, 507 note. Kemp-Welch, A., Tumbler of our Lady, 454. Kempf, J., Grosses Interregnum, 220. Kennedy, H., Latin versions of Bible, 416. Kenyon, F., Biblical manuscripts, 467. Keppler, J., Konstanz, 273. Ker, W., Dark ages, 365; Medieval lit- erature, 793. Kerler, D., Patronate, 239. Kern, F., Acta imperil, 292 ; Franzo- sische Ausdehnungspolitik, 245 ; Ge- schichtschreiber, 460 ; Humana civi- litas, 482. Kerner, R., Bibliography of Slavic Eu- rope, 46 note. Kervvn de Lettenhove, baron, Attentat d'Anagni, 271 ; Flandre, 281 ; Jacques d'Artevelde, 281. Ketrzynski, W., Deutschen Orden, 221. Ketterer, J., Karl der Grosse, 141. Keussen, H., Koln, 252. Keutgen, F., Hanse, 257; Study of modern nations, 106. Khuda Buksh, S., Islamic libraries, 375. Kiener, F., Provence, 169. Kiepert, H., and Huelson, C., Formae urbis Romae, 347. Kiesselbach, A., Hanse, 257. Kilgenstein, J., Hugo von Saint-Victor, 395. Killermann, S., Vogelkunde des Al- bertus, 430. King, W., Three free cities, 252. King's mirror, 327, 331. Kingslev, C., Hermits, 119; Roman and Teuton, 110. Kington, T., Frederick II, 215. Kirch, C., Enchiridion, 384 note. Kirchengeschichtliche Abhandl u n g e n, 490; Studien, 492. Kirchenlexikon der katholischen The- ologie, I 1 3. Kirchenrechtliche Abhandlungen, 49 1 . 518 INDEX Kirchhoff, A., Handschriftenhandler, 466. Kirchner, E., Das Papier, 466. Kirk, J., Charles the Bold, 284. Kirkpntrick, J., Octocentenary festival of the university of Bologna, 442. Kirsch, J., Annaten, 274; Rukkehr der Papste, 272; Saints, 356. Kitchin, G., Prance, 514. Kitts, E., Days of the councils, 273 ; Pope John XXII, 269. Klaic, V., Geschichte Bosniens, 716 note. Klas/ko, J., Rome and the renaissance, 311. Kleemann, G., Papst Gregor VIII, 217. Klein, V., Italiens historie, 621. Kleinclausz, A., Dijon, 168; L' empire carolingien, 141. Kleinpaul, R., Das Mittelalter, 189. Klette, T., Italienischen Gelehrten- renaissance, 311. Klopp, O., Politische Geschichte, 334. Kluchevsky, V., Russia, 68 I . Kluckholm, A., Gottesfriede, 163. Kliipfel, L., Alfonso III, 320 ; Aragon, 320. Knackfuss, H., and Zimmermann, M., Kunstgeschichte, 473. Knapp, F., Piero di Medici, 300. Knatchbull-Hugessen, C., Hungarian nation, 326. Kneer, A., Konziliare Theorie, 272. Knights of the Sword, 213, 221. Knopfler, A., Kirchengeschichte, 408. Knox, "W., Court of a saint, 245. Kniill, B., Historische Geographic, 145. Kobell, L., Kunstvolle Miniaturen, 467. Koch, A., Hermann von Salza, 221. Koch, H., Bonifatius, 364; Pseudo- Dionysius, 357. Koch, T., Catalogue of the Dante col- lection, 483; Danteiana, 483. Koebner, R., Venantius Fortunatus, 360. KShler, C., Friedrich II, 219. Kohler, G., Kriegswesen, 262. Kohler, H., Ketzerpolitik, 404. Konig, E., Orsini, 273. Koeniger, A., Die Beicht, 239. Kopke, R., and Dummler, E., Jahr- biicher, Otto der Grosse, 172. Korting, G., Boccaccio's Leben, 310; Enzyklopadie der romanischen Philol- ogie, 304 : Handbuch der roman- ischen Philologie, 304; Petrarca's Leben, 310; Renaissance-literatur, 309; Worterbuch, 455. Kb'tzschke, R., Ostdeutsche Kolonisation, 220 ; Quellen der historischen Geogra- phic, 1 42 ; Quellen der ostdeutschen Kolonisation, 216; Wirthschaftsge- schichte, 250. Kolde, T., Staatsideal, 342. Konen, W., Heidenpredigt, 131. Konversations-Lexicon, 101-102. Koran, 144, 147, 148. Korrespondenzblatt, 1 55. Kostanecki, A., Kreditwesen, 254. Kotelmann, L., Gesundheitspflege, 435. Kounik, Tatars en Russie, 328. Kovalewsky, M., Oekonomische Ent- wickelung, 250. Krabbes, T., Die Frau, 263. Krabbo, H., Besetzung der Bistiimer, 237. Kracauer, I., Frankfurter Juden, 252; Urkundenbuch, Juden, 252. Krafft, A., Serments de Strasbourg, 167. Kralik, R., Oesterreichische Geschichte, 591. Krammer, M., Kurfiirstenkolleg, 291. Kraus, P., Christliche Kunst, 473 ; Dante, 482 ; Lehrbuch der Kirchen- geschichte, 410. Kraus, V., Deutsche Geschichte, 288. Krause, J., Die Byzantiner, 654; Kon- stantinopel, 330. Kraussold, M., Heinrich VII, 289. Krebs, E., Meister Dietrich, 432; The- ologie und Wissenschaft, 407. Krehbiel, E., Interdict, 176. Krek, G., Slavische Literaturgeschichte, 814 note. Kremer, A., Europa und Orient, 209 ; Ideen des Islams, 376; Islamic civ- ilization, 375; Kulturgeschichte des Orients, 375. Kretschmayr, H., Venedig, 298. Kretschmer, K., Erdkunde, 434; His- torische Geographic, 141. Krey, A., John of Salisbury, 412. Krieg, J., Kampf der Bischofe, 237. Kritischer Jahresbericht, 305 note. Kroeger, A., Guide to reference books, 63. Kroll, M., Immunite, 163. Kroener, A., Wahl und Kronung, 172. Krones, F., Geschichte Oesterreichs, 588 ; Grundriss der osterreichischen Geschichte, 588 note; Oesterreichische Geschichte, 588 note. Kriiger, G., Papsttum. 452 : Sainmlung ausgewahlter Quellensehriften, 955 note. Kriiger, P., Quellen des romischen Rechts, 423. Krumbacher, K., Byzantinische Litera- tur, 800; Byzantinische Zeitschrift, INDEX 519 174; Griechische Literatur, 336; Populare Aufsatze, 675. Krusch, B., Bonnet's Untersuchungen, 360; Sprache Fredegars, 360. Kiich, P., Landfriedensbestrebungen, 163. Kiihn, F., Cola di Rienzo, 297. Kiihne, A., Herrscherideal, 217. Kiihne, E., Antiochia, 200. Kiilb, P., Missionsreisen, 240. Kiinstlermonographien, 314. Kiirschner, J., Literaturkalender, 95 note. Kugler, B., Albert von Aachen, 209; Analekten, 206; Boemund und Tank- red, 200 ; Kreuzziige, 205. Kuhlman, B., Bonifatius, 130. Kuhn, A., Roma, 347. Kuhn, L., Petrus Damiani, 382. Kuhns, O., Poets of Italy, 309; Saint Francis, 229. Kultur der Gegenwart, 729. Kulturgeschichtliche Bibliothek, 730. Kunstmann, F., Rhabanus Maurus, 371. Kupelwieser, L., Kampfe Ungarns mit den Osmanen, 329. Kurth, F., Niederdeutsche Kreuzfahrer, 321. Kurth, G., Boniface, 128; Civilisation moderne, 752; Clovis, 135; Gregoire de Tours, 360; Histoire poetique, 360; Moyen age, 107; Notger de Liege, 179; Sainte Clotilde, 361. Kurtz, J., Church history, 407. Kurze, F., Einhard, 367; Karolingische Annalen, 143. Kutschera, H., Chasaren, 158. Kybal, V., Franz von Assisi, 228. Kylie, E., Boniface, 131 ; Letters of Boniface, 129. Labanca, B., Marsilio da Padova, 290. Labarte, J., Handbook of arts, 207 ; Histoire des arts, 207. Labitte, A., L'art de 1'enluminure, 466. Laborde, L., Ecoles de droit, 190. Labriolle, P., Ausone et Paulin de Nola, 337. l.atiiitti'. A., Dues de Normandie, 198. Lacabane, L., Poudre a canon, 263. Lachauvelaye, J., Guerres des Franc.ais, 280. Lacordaire, H., Saint Dominique, 232. Lacroix, P., Arts, 188; Chevalerie, 263; Costumes, 192; Manners, customs and dress, 188; Military and reli- gious life, 1 88 ; Science and litera- ture, 188. Lacroix, P., and Sere1, F., Le moyen age, 188. La Curne de Saiute-Palaye, Chevalerie, 263. Lafont, G., Nationalite franchise, 137. Lafontaine, A., Gerson, 273. Laforet, J., Alcuin, 367. Laforge, F., Alexander III, 217. La France Franciscaine, 231. Lafuente, M., Historia de Espana, 623. La Euente, V. de, Historia ecclesiastica de Espana, 467 note; Universidades en Espana, 444. Lagarde, A., Latin church, 43 1 . La grande encyclope'die, 98. Lagreze, G., Normands, 154. Lahargou, P., De scholis Lerinensi, 360. Laing, S., Heimskringla, 152. Lake, K., Mount Athos, 120. Lalande, A., Physique, 433. Lalanne, J., Peres de 1'eglise, 338. Lallemand, L., Charite, 239; Lepre, 436. Lamborn, E., Oxford stone, 443. Latnond, E., Walter of Henley's Hus- bandry, 258. Lamperez, V., Arquitectura cristiana, 475. Lamprecht, K., Deutsche Geschichte, 56 1 ; Wirtschaftsleben, 250. Lanciani, R., Ancient Rome, 346; De- struction of ancient Rome, 346; Forma urbis Romae, 347; Golden days of the renaissance in Rome, 311; L'itineraria di Einsiedeln, 346; Pagan and Christian Rome, 346; Roman Campagna, 346. Landau, M., Boccaccio, 310; Holle, 355. Landon, E., Manual of councils, 470. Lane, E., Arabian society, 376; Kuran, 147. Lane, W., Dante collections, 483. Lan6ry d'Arc, P., Livre d'or de Jeanne d'Arc, 282. Lanfranc, 380, 382. Lang, A., Aucassin et Nicolette, 454 ; Maid of France, 279; Oxford, 443. Lange, C., Diplomatarium Norvegicum, 1009. Langebek, J., Scriptores rerum Dani- carum medii aevi, 1007. Langen, J., Geschichte der romischen Kirche, 427; Roger Baco, 431; R6- mische Kirche, 216. Langenberg, R., Mystik, 409. Langeron, E., Gregoire VII, 183. Lnnglois, C. R., Vie en France, 264. Langlois, C. V., Connaissance de la nature, 427; Eloquence sacr£e, 450; England and France, 539; Etat des 520 INDEX inventaires des Archives nationales, 4 note; Formulaires de lettres, 418; Historic r61e of France, 543; His- toriographie, 459; Inquisition, 401; Lectures historiques, 358; Literature goliardique, 449 ; Mattre Bernard, 419; Manuel de bibliographic his- torique, 12; Nogaret, 271; Parle- ment de Paris, 246; Philippe III, 245; Pierre Dubois, 211; Questions d'histoire et d'enseignement, 925; Saint Louis, 245 ; Sermons parisiens, 450 ; Service militaire, 262 ; Societe franchise, 454 ; Travaux sur la so- cie'te' franchise, 264; Universites, 439; Vie en France, 454. Langlois, C. V., and Seignobos, C., In- troduction aux Etudes historiques, 65. Langlois, C. V., and Stein, H., Les ar- chives, 25. Langlois, E., Noms propres dans les chansons, 456; Roman de la rose, 456. Language and literature, Latin, 445— 452. Language, study of, 304-309, 410-416. Languedoc. 540. Lansdale, M., Paris, 387. Lanson, G., Litte'rature franchise, 454. Lanzani, F., Comuni italiani, 217; I comuni, 620. Lapotre, A., L'Europe et la Saint-Siege, 177. Largent, A., Saint Jer6me, 337. La Rive, M., Confederation suisse, 290. L'armee a travers les ages, 262. Lamed, J., History for ready reference, 78. La Ronciere, C., Marine frangaise, 546. Larousse Grand dictionnaire, 99. Larson, L., Canute the Great, 152; Household of Norwegian kings, 327; King's mirror, 331. L'arte, 478. Lasch, B., Historische Kritik, 461. La Serviere, J., Charlemagne, 141. Lasswitz, K., Atomistik, 433. Lasteyrie, R., Architecture religieuse, 475 ; Cartulaire generale de Paris, 390; Sculpture frangaise, 477. Lastevrie, R., and Vidier, A., Bibliogra- phie: societe's savantes, 26. La storia d'ltalia, 994. Lateran, 345, 348. Latham, C., Eleven letters of Dante, 482. Latin Christendom, expansion of, 125— 131; church in middle ages, 424- 429; classical authors in the middle ages, 414; empire of Constantinople, 202, 206; kingdom of Jerusalem. 201, 205; language and literature, 333, 335, 336, 445-452; palaeogra- phy, 2 1 2-237 ; West in sixth cen- tury, 107-112. Latin, medieval, 445-452; Merovingian, 358, 360. Latins in the Levant, 324, 326, 329. Latouche, R., comte du Maine, 167. La Trappe, 222, 227. Lattes, E., Banche a Venezia, 299. Lau, H., Missionsweise, 131. Lauchert, F., Physiologus, 350. Laue, F., Krankenbehandlung, 435. Lauer, P., Lateran, 348 ; Louis IV, 167; Robert Ier, 167; Tapisserie de Bayeux, 199. Lauer, P., and Samaran, C., Diplomes des Merovingiens, 138. Launoy, L., L'eglise Gaulois, 120. Laurent, F., Barbares et le catholicisme, 339. Laurentie, J., Ferdinand III, 320. Laurie, S., Universities, 439. Lauriel, P., Bibliografla: Vespro Sicili- ano, 303. Laurin, F., Corpus iuris canonici, 424. Lavallee, T., Histoire des frane.ais, 513; Turquie, 330. Lavisse, E., Charles V, 282 ; Decadence me'rovingienne, 358; Foi des Francs, 358 ; General view of political his- torv, 328 note; Histoire de France, 508; L'entree de la papaut6, 123; Saint-Empire, 141. Lavisse, E., and Rambaud, A., Histoire gene>ale, 328. Lavoix, H., Musique au siecle de Saint Louis, 477. Law, bibliography of, 60; canon, 421— 425; Germanic, 159, 161, 163; peri- odical for history of, 1 83 ; Roman, 113, 159, 161, 164, 420-425. Law, A., Medieval shipping, 248 ; Nou- veaux-riches, 248. Lawrence, W., Mediaeval storv, 794. Lazard, L., Etienne Marcel, 281; Juifs, 246. Lazarovich-Hrebelianovich, prince, Ser- . vian people, 329. Lazarus, P., Easier Konzil, 274. Lea, H., Auricular confession, 434; In- quisition of middle ages, 401; Inqui- sition of Spain, 318; Moriscoes, 318; Papal Penitentiary, 238 ; Sacerdotal celibacy, 179, 435; Studies, 436; Superstition and force, 161 ; Usury, 248. Leach, A., Educational charters, 849 ; Education in England, 848. INDEX 521 Le Beau, C., Histoire du Bas-Empire, 655. Leber, C., Dissertations, 545. Lebeuf, abbe, Ville de Paris, 387. Le Blanc, H., Lettres profanes, 351. Le Blant, E., Inscriptions chretiennes de la Gaule, 361. Le Bon, G., Civilisation des Arabes, 374. Le Brun, A., Saint-Julien le Pauvre, 389. Lechfeld, 169, 172. Lechler, G., Hus, 273 ; Kirchenstaat, 290. Lechner, J., Regesten, Karolingern, 169. Lechner, K., Grosse Geisselfahrt, 254; Grosse Sterben, 253. Lechner, P., Benedict, 120. Lecky, W., European morals, 753; Rise of rationalism, 741. Leclerc, L., Medecine arabe, 377. Leclercq, H., L'Afrique, 120; L'Afrique chretienne, 343; L'Espagne, 112; Manuel d'arch^ologie chretienne, 301. Leclere, A., Mysticisme, 409. Leclere, L., Philippe III, 245. Lecoy de la Marche, A., Anecdotes his- toriques, 451; Chaire franchise, 450; Foundation de la France, 136; L'art d'enluminer, 467 ; L'esprit de nos aieux, 447 ; Manuscrits, 467 ; Oeuvres completes de Suger, 246 ; Predication de la croisade, 208 ; St. Louis, 245; Saint Martin, 120. Lector, L., Le conclave, 453 note. Lee, G., Hincmar, 177. Lee, V., gee Paget, V. Lees, B., Central period, 379. Lefebvre, F., Bruno, 227. Lefevre, A., Germains et Slaves, 158. Lefevre, G., Guillaume de Champeaux, 395. Lefevre-Pontalis, E., Cathedrales de Chartres, 476; L'architecture reli- gieuse, 476. Lefranc, A., College de France, 412. Legates of the popes, 233, 237. Legend of the year 1000, 170, 171, 369, 370, 475. Leger, L., Cyrille, 158; Etudes slaves, 157; History of Austro-Hungary, 590; Monde slave, 157; Mythologie slave, 157; Serbes, 706 note. Legge, F., Forerunners of Christianity, 337. Legrand, E., Bibliographic Hellenique, 311. Lehmann, A., Aberglaube, 430. Lehmann, E., Mysticism, 409. Lehmann, P., Johannes Sichardus, 468 ; Literaturgeschichte, 449; Vom Mit- telalter, 106. Lehugeur, P., Philippe le Long, 246. Leist, F., Urkundenlehre, 241. Leitschuh, F., Karolingische Malerei, 367. Lelewel, J., Geographic, 257. Lelong, J., Bibliotheque historique, 27. Lembke, F., Spanien, 626. Lemcke, G., Richard von Cornwall, 220. Lemcke, H., Reisen des Marco Polo, 249. Lemmens, L., Bonaventura, 409 ; Docu- menta antiqua Franciscana, 232. Le Monnier, L., St. Francois, 229. Le moyen Hge, revue d'histoire, 165. Le musee des enluminures, 467. Le Nain de Tillemont, L., Memoires, 119; Saint Louis, 245. Lenel, W., Venedig, 299. Lenfant, J., Concile de Basle, 274; Con- cile de Constance, 273 ; Concile de Pise, 273. Lenoir, A., Statistique monumentale de Paris, 388. Leo I, pope, 108. Leo III, emperor, 185, 190. Leo III, pope, 139. Leo IX, pope, 173-175. Leonardo da Vinci, 305; 314; Thoughts on art, 314. Leonhardt, "W., Kreuzzugsplan Hein- richs VI, 206. Leprosy, 435. Lepszy, L.> Cracow, 694 note. Ldroux, A., Allemagne et la France, 281; France et 1'empire, 538: Nou- velles recherches, France avec 1' Alle- magne, 282. Le Roux de Lincy, A., and Tisserand, L., Paris, 387. Leroy-Beaulieu, A., Empire of the tsars, 688. Lersch, B., Einleitung in die Chronolo- gic, 254 note. Les grandes chroniques de France, 974. Lesne, E., Propriety ecclesiastique, 163. Lespinasse, R., and Bonnardot, F., Reglemens d'Etienne Boileau, 258. Lesser, E., Aussatzhauser, 436. Le Strange, G., Palestine, 210. Lethaby, W., Mediaeval art, 471; West- minster abbey, 475. Letters, model, 417, 418, 420. Levant, Latins in, 324, 326, 329. Levant trade, 247, 255. Levasseur, E., Classes ouvrieres, 250; Commerce de la France, 255; Popu- lation frangaise, 280. 522 INDEX Levillain, A., Lettres de Loup de Per- rieres, 371. Levison, W., Die Iren, 130. Involution de l'humanite\ 319. LeVy-Bruhl, H., Elections abbatisles, 178. Lewis, A., Paganism, 338. Lewis, C., Germany, 565. Lewis, G., Bernard's On consideration, 393. Lex Salica, 159. Lexicon abbreviaturarum, 224. Leyser, P., Historia poetarum, 451. L'histoire de France, edited by Duss- ieux, 976 note; edited by B. Zeller, 976. Liard, L., University de Paris, 441. Liber censutim, 221; diurnus, 9 58 note; pontificals, 949 note. Libraries, 3, 4, 6, 6, 83-85, 462-470. Libri, G., Sciences mathe'matiques, 436. Liebe, G., Judentum, 855. Liebert, A., Ausgewahlte Schriften von Pico della Mirandola, 315. Life of nobles, 260-264. Liliencron, R., Zeit der Scholastik, 407. Lilienfein, H., Staat und Kirche, 141. Linden, H. van der, see Van der Lin- den, H. Lindenschmit, Alterth timer, 360. Lindisfarne, 126, 150. Lindner, T., Deutsche Geschichte, 288 ; Hanse, 257; Heinrich IV, 183; K6- nigswahlen, 172 ; Kurfiirstenthum, 291; Verne, 292: Vemgerichte, 292: Weltgeschichte, 333; Wenzel, 291. Lindsay, W., Isidori Etymologiae, 352. Linsenmayer, A., Geschichte der Pre- digt, 238. Linton, E., Women of chivalry, 263. Lionardo Bruni, Dante, 481. Lipinska, M., Femmes medecins, 435. Lippert, W., Rudolf von Frankreich, 167. Lippmann, E., Schiesspulver, 263. Lipson, E., Economic history, 251. List of books in reading room in Brit- ish Museum, 3 note; of European historical societies, 208 note; of works on history of Jews, 62. Literature, history of, 170-173. 782- 814: 800-801: Latin, 445-452; old French, 452-457. Little, A., Grey Friars, 228: Initia operum latinorum, 449 ; Part of the Opus tertium, 437 ; Roger Bacon essays, 428 : Roger Bacon's works, 437. Little, C.. Cvclopedia of dates, 71. Little, W., St. Francis, 229. Little Flowers of St. Francis, 225. Littrl, E., Glossaires, 448. Lives of friar saints, 228. Livonia, 691. Livret de 1'Ecole des chartes, 164 note. Lizerand, G., Templiers, 208. Locke, C., Great western schism, 272. Lodge, E., End of the middle age, 379: Saint-AndrS of Bordeaux, 280. Lodge, R., Close of the middle ages, 329 note. Lobbel, H., Bruno, 227. Loebell, J., Gregor von Tours, 359. Loher, F., Kulturgeschichte, 778. Loeschcke, G., Jiidisches und heid- nisches, 339. Loew, E., Beneventan script, 220. Loewe, G., Corpus glossarium latinorum, 448 ; Prodromus, 448. Loewe, V., Biicherkunde, 32. Loewenfeld, S., Epistolae pontificum. 961. Logic, New, 396, 398; Old, 396; study of, 391-395. Lohmeyer, K., Ostpreussen, 221. Loiseau, A., Littfirature portugaise, 813 note. Loisel, G., Menageries, 434. Loisel, S., Legislation economiques, 143. Loisne, A., Azincourt, 280. Lokys, G., Kampfe der Araber, 149. Lombard, A., Constantin V, 190. Lombard kings, 568-774 A.D., 114: League, 212, 215, 217. Lombards. 114-116. Loncao, E., Odoacre, 111. Lones, T., Aristotle's natural science, 399. Longfellow, H., Divine comedy, 481. Longman's historical illustrations, .01. Longnon, A., Atlas historique de la France, 129; Geographic de la Gaule. 359: Livre des vassaux, 164; Na- tionalite' fran^aise, 167; Polyptique de Irmion, 164. Longuemare, P., Colleges parisiens, 442. Loofs, P., Dogmengeschichte, 475: Kirchengeschichte, 4 1 3. Loofs, F., Nestorius, 376. Loomis, L., Book of the popes. 949 note; Greek renaissance, 306; Medi- eval hellenism, 412. Lo Porco, P., Petrarca, 310. Lorenz, F., Alcuin,. 367. Lorenz, O., Deutsche Geschichte, 288 ; Deutschlands Geschichtsquellen. 30 : Genealogisches Handbuch, 269 : Ge- schichtswissenschaft, 106; Lehrbuch der Genealogie, 268. Lorenzo the Magnificent, 294, 296, 300. INDEX 523 Lorraine, 165, 168. Lorris, W., and Clopinel, J., Romance of the rose, 455. Loserth, J., Geschichte des spateren Mittelalters, 347 ; Husitische Bewe- gung, 275; Huss, 273. Lot, F., Abbaye de Saint- Wandrille, 153; Dernier Carolingiens, 168; Fideles, 162; Histoire bretonne, 167; Hugues Capet, 168; Invasion nor- mande, 153 ; Migrations saxonnes, 111. Lot, F., and Halphen, L., Charles le Chauve, 167. Loth, J., L'emigration bretonne, 363. Lotharingia, 165, 168. Loubier, J., Mittelalterlichen Biicher, 466. Louergan, W., Churches of Paris, 389. Louis I, the Pious, 165. Louis VI, 241, 244. Louis VII. 202, 206, 242, 244. Louis VIII, 242, 244. Louis IX. Saint, 202, 204, 207, 242, 243, 245. Louis XI, 278, 279, 284. Louis of Bavaria, 286, 289. Louisy, M., Livre, 465. Louvain, university of, 439, 444. Love letters of Abelard and Heloise, 393. Lowell, H., Joan of Arc, 279. Lowell. J., Essav on Dante, 480. Lozzi, C., Bibliotheca della Italia, 39. Luard, H., Boberti Grosseteste epis- tolae, 241. Lubbock.. J., Coins and currency, 254. Lucas, H., Savonarola, 300. Luce, S., Du Guesclin, 263 : Guerre de cent ans. 280 : Jacquerie, 281 ; Jeanne d'Arc, 283 ; Jeunesse de Ber- trand du Guesclin, 281. Luchaire, A., Communes frangaise, 252 ; Innocent III, 215; Institutions monarchiques, 168; Louis VI, 244; Louis VII, 244: Manuel des institu- tions franchises, 530; Melanges d'histoire du moven age, 926; Social France, 243 ; University de Paris, 441. Lucius, E., Heiligenkult, 356. Luck, E., Life of St. Benedict, 118. Ludlow, J.. Crusades, 204; Epics of the middle ages, 792. Ludwig, F., Reisegeschwindigkeit, 255. Liibke. W., History of art, 473. Liittich, R., Ungarnziige, 159. Liitzow. F., Bohemia, 702 : Historians of Bohemia, 702 note; Hussite wars, 274; John Hus, 270; Prague, 702 note. Lull, Raymund, 203, 208, 235, 240, 411. Lumby, J., Greek learning, 363. Lundgreen, F., Wilhelm von Tyrus, 208. Lundius, B., Vagantenlieder, 449. Lungo, J., Bonifazio VIII, 271. Lunt, W., Financial system of papacy, 235; Papal annates, 238; Papal tax- ation, 238. Luquet, G., Aristote, 397; Hermann 1'Allemand, 399. Luschin von Ebengreuth, A., Grundriss der osterreichischen Reichgeschichte, 594 note; Miinzkunde, 293: Oester- reichische Reichgeschichte, 594. Lux, C., Papst Silvester II, 172. Luxeuil, 126. Luzzatto, G., Storia del commercio, 255. Lybyer, A., Ottoman Turks, 255. Lvle, E., English bishop, 237. Lyte, H., Oxford, 443. Ma>asen, F., Canoni§ches Recht, 425. Mabilleau, L., Atomistik, 433. Mabillon, J., Annales, 119; De re dip- lomatica, 238 ; Etudes monastiques, 760 note. Macaulav, G., Capture of a council, 215: Chronicles of Froissart, 279. McCabe, J., Abelard, 393 ; Crises in the history of the papacy, 450 : Em- presses of Constantinople, 678 ; St. Augustine, 340. Maccarrone, N., Vita in Sicilia, 199. McClellan, G., Venice, 298. McClure, E., Historical church atlas, 128. McCracken, W., Swiss republic, 288. Macdonald, D., Muslim theology, 376. Macdonald, J., France, 515. Mocdonell, A.. Sons of St. Francis, 228; Words of Saint Francis, 225. McHardy, G., Savonarola, 300. Macherl, P., Karl der Grosse, 142. Machiavelli, N., Florence and The Prince. 297. Macken, T., Canonisation of saints, 239. Mackenzie, J., Castles, 263. Mnckie. J., Pope Adrian IV, 217. McKilliam, A., Chronicle of the popes, 449. Mackinnon, J., French monarchv, 525. McLaughlin, E., Mediaeval life, 795. Maclear, G., Apostles ; Conversion of northern nations ; Conversion of Slavs: Christian missions, 178. Mac Murdo, E., Portugal, 640. 524 INDEX Mac Neal, E., Minores, 163. Mndan, F., Books in manuscript, 465; Palaeogrnphv, 235. Madelaine, Histoire de saint Norbert, 227. Magic, 426, 430. Magnin, M., LVglise wisigothique, 129. Magnum oecumenicum Constantiense concilium, 275. Magnus, L., Armament of Igor, 331. Magnusson, E., and Morris, W., Vol- sunga saga, 152. Magyars or Hungarians, 157, 159. Mahrenholtz, A., Jeanne Dare, 283. Maigne d'Arnis, W., Lexicon manuale, 448. Maillet, H., L'^glise et I'hgresie, 403. Mainz, Pragmatic Sanction of, 268, 274. Maitland, F., Anglo-French, 453; Eng- lish law, 164; Political theories, 580: Roman canon law, 423. Maitland, S., Dark ages, 760. Maftre, L., Ecoles £piscopales, 366. Major, R., Prince Henrv, 322. Making of the nations, 322. Malagola, A., Tommaso d'Aquino, 462. Malagola, C., I rettore dello studio bolognese, 442 ; Studio bolognese, 442. Male. E., I/art du moyen age, 478 ; L'art religieux de la fin du moyen aere, 472 ; Religious art in France, 472. Malevssie, C., Jehanne d'Arc, 283. Malfatti, B., Imperatori e papi, 141. Mallet, C., Theodora, 115. Malnory, A., St. Cesaire, 361. Malo, H., Renaud de Dammartin, 245. Malsch, R., Heinrich Raspe, 219. Manacorda, G., Scuole in Italia, 443. Mancini, G., Valla, 312. Mandeville, Sir John, Travels, 241. Mandonnet, P., Albert le Grand, 408 ; Crise scolaire, 385; Dominicains dans universite de Paris, 441 ; Dominici, 273; Ecrits de S. Thomas d'Aquin, 408; Ide'es cosmographiques, 434; Ordo de Poenitentia, 230 ; Roger Bacon, 428 ; Roger Bacon et le Spec- ulum, 432 ; Roger Bacon et les trois opus, 432; Siger de Brabant, 398. Manegold of Lautenbach, 380, 382. Manfred of Sicily, 213, 219. Manfroni, C., II dominio del Mediter- raneo, 360; Marina italiana, 610. Manichaeism, 334, 337. Manitius, M., Aldhelm und Beda, 364; Bibliothekskatalogen. 414; Deutsche Geschichte, 911-1125, 171; Gedichte des Archipoeta, 450 ; Geschichte der lateinischen Literatur des Mittelalters, 787; Horaz im Mittelalter, 414; Romisehe Dichter, 414; Romische Prosaiker, 414. Mann, H., Lives of the popes, 439 : Nicholas Breakspear, 217. Manser, G., Scholastik, 407. Mansfield, M., Castles, 262. Mansi, J., Sacrorum conciliorum col- lectio, 962. Mantellier, P., Marchands de Loire, 255. Mantever, G., Provence, 168. Manuscripts, 4 note, 5, 212-237, 463, 466-467. Manutius, Aldus, 304, 307, 312. Manzikert, battle of, 186. Manzoni, L., Bibliografia storica Bo- lognese, 445. Map, Walter, 446, 449-451 ; De nugis, 451 ; Latin poems, 450. Marcais, G., Arabes en Berberie, 209. Marcais, W., Monuments arabes, 379. Marcel, Etienne, 277, 281. Marcel. H., Bibliothe'qne nationale, 469. Marcellin de Civezza, R., Missions franciscaines, 240. Marchal, L., Roger Bacon, 431. Marchand, J., Faculty des arts, 442. Marchesi, C., Due grammatici latini, 448; L'Etica Nicomachea, 399. Marco Polo. 248, 249. Marczali, H., Enchiridion, 159. Marechaux, D., Saint Benoft, 120. Margoliouth, D., Mohammed, 146; Mo- hammedanism, 148. Mari, G., I trattati di rithmica, 420; John Garland's Parisiana, 420. Mariana, J., Espana, 625. Marichalar, A., and Manrique, C., Legislaci6n de Espana, 633 note. Mariejol, J., Ferdinand et Isabelle, 322. Marietan, J., Classification de sciences, 407. Marignan, A., Civilisation franchise, 360. Marigo, A., Cultura letteraria e preu- manistica, 413. Marin, E., De Studio, 177; Moines de Constantinople, 177. Marin, P., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Mariotti, C., S. Francesco, 483. Markham, C., Book of the knowledge of all the kingdoms, 249. Marquand, A., and Frothingham, A., Sculpture, 307. Marquart, I., Osteuropaische Streifziige, 680 note. Marriage, M. and E., Sculptures of Chartres, 472. INDEX 525 Marsh, F., English rule in Gascony, 252. Marshall, G., Genealogist's guide, 280. Marsigli of Florence, 304, 311. Marsiglio of Padua. 286-290, 292; De- fensor pacis, 292. Martene, E., and Durand, V., Thesau- rus novus, 951 : Veterum scriptorum . . . collectio, 952 ; Voyage Iitt6raire, 799. Martens, W., Gregor VII. 182. Martin, A., Colluccio Salutatis, 311; Mittelalterliche Weltanschauung, 311. Martin, C., L'art gothique, 476 ; L'Art roman, 475. Martin, Mrs. C., St. Jerome. 337. Martin, C. T., Record interpreter, 244. Martin, E., Saint Columban, 130. Martin, H., Charlemagne, 142 ; France, 510. Martin, H. M., Peintures de manuscrits, 466. Martin, .T., Snint Augustin, 342. Martin, P., Texte Parisien de la Vul- gate, 416; Vulgate, 416. Martin. Saint, of Tours, 117. Martinez, F., Asceticisme, 356. Martinez Alcubilla, M., C6diges de Espafia, 322. Martinez Marina, F.. Legislaci6n de Le6n y Oastilla. 633 note. Martinez, Vigil R., Predicadores, 231. Martinu, J.. Waldesier, 274. Martroye, F., Genseric, 112; L'occi- dent, 111. Marty, A.. Jeanne d'Arc, 283 ; Notre- Damp de Paris, 389. Marucchi, O., Epigrafia cristiana, 223. Marx, J., Inquisition, 403. Marx, L., Gesta Normannorum, 200. Mascetta-Caracci, L., Dante e Petrarca, 310. Masius, H., Erziehung, 844. Maskus, C., Otto I von Bamberg, 221. Mas-Latrie, L., Trait£s de paix, 150; Trpsor de chronologie, 256. Mnson, A., St. Augustine, 129. Mason, E., French mediaeval romances, 455. Mason, W., Cistercian order, 224. Maspon, A., Gerson, 273. Masson, G., Earlv chronicles: France, 968 note; Medieval France, 526. Masterman, J., Mediaeval Europe, 379. Masters in art, 314. Mater, A., L'eglise catholique, 405 note. Mathematics, 349, 350, 427, 428, 436; Mohammedan, 373, 375, 377. Mathew, A., Hildebrand, 182. Mathews, S., Mediaeval documents, 388. Mathias I (Corvinus), 324, 326, 329. Matilda of Tuscany, 180, 184. Matrod, H., Guillaume de Rubrouck, 240. Mau, G., Kaiser Julian, 338. Maubach, J., Kardinale, 236. Maugis, E., Parlement de Paris, 246. Maulde la Claviere, A., Juifs, 882. Maurer, G., Frohnhofe, 162; Stadte- verfassung, 252. Maurer, K., Bekehrung des norwe- gischen Stammes, 178; Vorlesungen, 719. Maurice, C., Bohemia, 699. Maury, L/., Croyances, 356. Maiisbach, J., Ethik des Augustinus, 342. Mavor, J., Russia, 681 note. Mawer. A., Vikings, 152. Maximilian I, 287, 291. Mayer, E., Italienische Verfassungs- geschichte, 608 : Mittelalterliche Ver- fassungsgeschichte, 584. Mayer, F., Geschichte Oesterreichs, 592. Maver-Homberg, E., Die frankischen Volksrechte, 536. Mayors of the palace, 134, 136. Maywald, M., Lehre von der zwei- fachen Wahrheit, 408. Mazzatinti, G., Archivi della storia d'ltalia, 5 note; Inventari dei mano- scritti, .5. Mazzoni, G., Rinascimento, 309. Meaux, C., Ecole de Salerne, 443. Mediaeval towns series, 251. Medici family, 294, 300. Medicine, 427, 428, 434. Mediterranean, 360-361. Medley, D., Church and empire, 181. Meier, G., Bticher, 465; Sieben freien Kiinste, 351. Meier, P., Ausgewahlte Schriften, 367. Meinsma, K., Bibliotheken, 468. Meister, A., Deutsche Verfassungsge- schichte, 582 ; Grundriss der Ge- schichtswissenschaft, 331. Meitzen, A., Ausbreitung der Deutschen, 220; Siedelung und Agrarwespn, 158. Melanges d'arche'oloeie et d'histoire de 1'Ecole de Rome, 887 note: d('dip>s & G. Monod par Prou, 939; Fitting, 937; offerts h M. Charles Bemont, 934: offerts a M. Emile Chatelain, 935; Paul Fabre, 936. Melillo, E., Poste italiene, 297. Meltzing, O., Bankhaus der Medici, 254. Mely, F., Exeuviae, 211. Mf'inoires et documents, commerce en France, 255. 526 INDEX Mendicant friars, 222-223; in univer- sity of Paris, 438, 441 ; artistic his- tory of, 475. Menendez Pidal. K., Primera cr6nica general, 322. Menendez y Pelayo, M., Antologfa de poetas castellanos, 321; Heterodoxos espanoles, 321. Mengozzi. G.. Citta italinna, 168. Menorval, E.. Paris, 388 : Promenades a travers Paris, 388. Menzel, V., Lehnswesen, 162. Meo. A.. Regno di Napoli, 301. Merbach, H., Slawenkriege, 158. Merrier, C., Leper houses, 436. Mercier. E., Afrique septentrionale, 148. Meric. E., Sorhonne, 441. Merime>, P., Don Pedre Ier, 320. Merivale, C., Conversion of northern nations, 178. Merkt, J., Wundmale des Franziskus, 230. Merlet. L., Lettres de saint Ives. 381. Merovingians, 132-138; learning of, 357. 359, 360. Merrill, W.. Latin hymns, 452. Merriman. R., Cortes, 318. Merrvweather, F., Bibliomania. 468 : Glimmerings in the dark. 755. Merten, A., Bnehmalerei. 467. Mesnage. J., Afrique chretienne, 343; Christianisme en Afrique, 343. Messer. A., Codice araponese, 301. Method, historical. 64-67. Methodius. 156, 158. Meunier. L.. Medecine, 434. Meyer, A., Weihnachtsfest. 239. Merer, C.. Aberglaube, 430. Meyer, E., Mormonen und Islam, 148. Mever, E. v., Chemie, 433. Mover, G., Jahrbiicher, Heinrich TV, 183. Meyer, H., Bibliotheksordnungen, 469. Mever, K., Aberglaube, 356. Meyer. K., Learning in Ireland, 362. Mever, P., Alexandre le Grand, 456. Meyer, R.. Mittelalter. 107. Mever, W., Bernhard gegen Abalard, 395: Carmina burana, 450: Frag- menta burana, 450; Gedichte des Primas. 450: Ludus de Antichristo, 356: Rvthmik. 449. Mever-Lubke. W., Die romanischen Sprachen. 306. Meyers Historischer Handatlas. 121 note: Konversations-Lexicon. 102. Meyers, P.. Mediaeval and modern his- torv. 375. Mezieres, A., Petrarque, 310. Michael Angelo, 305, 314. Michael, E., Culturzustande des deutschen Volkes, 779; Salimbene, 460. Michael Scot, 396, 398. Michaud, E., Guillaume de Champeaux, 395. Michaud, J., Bibliotheque de croisades, 210; Croisades, 205. Michaud, J., and Poujoulat, P., Nou- velle collection des memoires, 970. Michel, A., Histoire de 1'art, 473; L'art Gothique, 472. Michel, F., Ecossais en France, 281 ; Portugais en France, 642. Michel, M., Origines d'Isidore, 351. Michel, W., Das Teuflische, 355. Michelet, J., France, 512; Jeanne d'Are, 283 Michell, R., and Forbes, N., Chronicle of Novgorod, 327. Middle ages as a period, 105-107. Middleton, J., Illuminated manuscripts, 466. Mierow, C., Chronica of Otto of Frei- sing, 460; Origin of Goths by Jor- danes, 110. Migne, J., Patrologia, 953. Mignon, A., Hugues de Saint-Victor, 395. Mijatovich, C., Constantine, 330. Miklosich, F., and Miiller, J., Act* et diplomata graeca, 330. Milan, 293, 298. Milburn, J., University life, 440. Milkau, F., Bibliotheken, 465. Millard, E., Les Beiges, 553. Miller, K., Ebstorfkarte, 259; Mappae mundi, 259; Tabula Peutingeriana, 135. Miller, W., Balkans, 706; Genoese in Chios, 326; Latins in the Levant, 657; Serbian empire, 714 note. Millington, E., Christian iconography, 474. Millot-Carpentier, Medecine, 435. Mills, J., Great days of Northumbria, 130. Milman, H., Latin Christianity, 424. Miltoun, F., Cathedrals of northern France, 476. Milyoukov, f., Russische Kulturge- schichte, 737. Minasi, G., Cassiodoro, 343. Minerva: Handbuch, 84; Jahrbuch, 83. Minocchi, S., San Francesco, 229. Mirabilia Romae, 346. Miracles and mysteries, 353, 356. Mirbt, C., Publizistik, 183; Quellen, 953 note; Wahl Gregors VII, 183. Miron, E., Queens of Aragon, 320. INDEX 527 Mirot, L., Insurrections urbaines, 251 ; Les inventaires d'archives, 25 note; Politique pontiflcale, 272; Tentative d'invasion, 282. Mirza Muhammad Haidar, Moghuls of central Asia, 328. Miscellanea antiqua Anglicana, 432 ; Francescana, 231. Misch. G., Autobiographic, 460. Missalek, E., Polnische Geschichte, 158. Missionaries in eastern Germany, 213, 220; in the north and east, 174, 178; mendicant, 223, 228, 231; Slavic, 156, 158. Missions, 126, 235. 236, 240. Mithraism, 334, 337. Mitteilungen aus der historischen Lit- eratur, 153: der Gesellschaft fur deutsche Erziehungsgeschichte. 182: des Instituts fur osterreichische Ge- schichtsforsehung. 166: zur Ge- schichte der Medizin. 435—436; zur vaterlandischen' Geschichte, St. Gall. 987 note. Moddermann, W., Rezeption des ro- mischen Rechts, 424. Mohler, J., Kirchengesehichte, 404. Moeller, C., Moven age, 356. Moeller, E., Elendenbriiderschaften, 239. Moiler, N., Johannes Scotus, 372. Moeller, R., Ludwig der Baver, 289. Moeller, W., Christian church, 395. Moeser, H., Villehardouin, 206. Moffat, D., Complaint of nature, 451. Mohammed, 144, 146, 148. Mohammedans, 144—150; and the By- zantine empire, 185, 189; and cul- ture, 375-379. Mohl, F., Latin vulgaire, 336. Mohler, L., Calonna, 271. Moiraghi, P., Lanfranco, 382. Moisant, J., Prince Noir, 281. Moisson, L., Sainte Claire, 230. Molinier,' A., Geographic f^odale de Languedoc, 163; Gesta Ludovici, 246; Louis IX, 245; Manuscrits, 366; Obituaires franchises, 548; Sources de 1'histoire de France, 21 ; University de Toulouse, 442. Molinier, C., He're'sie et la persecu- tion, 382 ; Inquisition, 403. Moll, W., Kerkgeschiedenis van Neder- land, 461 note. Mollat, G., Papes d'Avignon, 271. Mollat, G., and Samaran, C., FiscalitS pontiflcale, 274. Molmenti, P., Venice, 298. Moltrnann, J., Theophano, 172. Mombert, J., Charles the Great, 140; Crusades, 204. Mommsen, T., Apollinaris Sidonius, 337; Ostgothische Studien, 111; Reden und Aufsatze, 337. Monaci, E., Archivio paleografico, 233. Monarchies, beginnings of, 165-169. Monarchy and feudalism, 161. . Monastery schools, 368, 371. Monasticism, 50, 479-487, 964; in sixth century, 117—121; in eleventh to thirteenth centuries, 222-233. Mone, F., Hymnen, 452 ; Schauspiele, 253. Money and banking, 247, 254. Mongols, in Russia, 323, 326, 328. Monnier, F., Alcuin, 367. Monnier, M., Quattrocento, 309; Re- naissance, 309. Monod. B., Pascal II, Philippe I, 183. Monod. G., Bibliographie de 1'histoire de France, 22 ; Melanges dediees &, 939; Nationality, 167; Normandie, 198; Renaissance carolingienne, 366; Role de Paris, 386; Sources de 1'his- toire carolingienne, 143. Monographien zur deutschen Kultur- geschichte, 775; zur Weltgeschichte, 326. Monographs on artists, 314. Monro, C., Digest, 425. Monroe, P., Cyclopedia of education, 117; Source book, history of educa- tion, 335; Syllabus on the history of education, 59 note. Monroe, W.. Bohemia, 703. Monstrelet, E., Chronicles, 279. Montalembert, Monks of the west, 479. Monte Cassino, 118, 119, 145, 195, 200. Montelatici, G., Letterature Bizantina, 802. Montelius, O., Kultur geschichte Schwedens, 153; Sveriges historia, 727. Montgomery, W., St. Augustine, 342. Montpellier, university of, 439, 444. Mont-Saint-Michel, 194, 197, 470, 472. Monnmenta conciliorum, 275; domini- ationis pontiflcae, 960 note; Fran- ciscana, 232 ; Germaniae historica, 978; Germaniae paedagogica, 1012; Germaniae selecta, 983 note; his- toriae Bohemica. 986 note; historiae patriae, 991 ; Hungariae historica, 1006; medii aevi historiae res gestas Poloniae illustrantia, 1004: ordinis Fratrum Praedicatorum historic®, 232: Poloniae historica, 1004 note; spectantia historiam Slavorum, 1 006 note. INDEX Monumentos arquitectfinicos de Espafia, 378. Moore, C., Church architecture of Eng- land, 472 ; Gothic architecture, 472. Moore, E., Dante and his early biogra- phers, 481 ; De monarchia of Dante, 482; Studies in Dante, 480; Tutte le opere di Dante, 483. Moors, 144-150; expulsion of, from Spain, 315, 316, 322. Moraleda, Q., El rito mozarabe, 321. Morand, S., Sainte Chapelle, 389. Moravia, 700. 703. 156, 158. Mordtmann, A., Esquisse topographique de Constantinople, 663 note; Kon- stantinopel, 330. Morey, W., Roman law, 422. Morf, H., Die romanischen Literaturen, 306. Morflll, \V., Poland, 694: Russia, 683; Slavonic literature, 814 note. Morgan, J., Catalogue of manuscripts, 467. Morgan, M., Ten books on architecture by Vitruvius, 307. Morin, P., Saint Francois, 229. Morin, Q., Chant gregorien, 125; Etudes. textes, d^couvertes, 437 ; L'ide'al monastique, 485. Morison, E., Basil, 120. Morison, J.. St. Bernard, 393. Morison, M., Time-tables, 73. Morley, E., Kurd's letters on chivalry, 263. 0 Morley, H., Mediaeval tales, 447. Moroni, G., Dizionario de erudizione, 114. Morris, W., Old French romances, 455. Mortet, V., Cathedrale de Paris, 389; F£odalit4, 161: Institutiones de Cas- sidore, 343 : Melanges d'archeologie, 474 ; Recueil de textes relatif s a 1'histoire de 1'architecture, 473. Mortier, R.. Freres Prechenrs, 231. Mortreuil, J., Bibliotheque de St. Victor, 468. Mortreuil, T., Bibliotheque nationale, 469. Moscato, G., Musulmani in Calabria, 149. Moses Maimonides, 373, 376, 379; Guide to the perplexed, 379. Mosher, J., Exemplum, 451. Moslems or Muslims, 144-150. Mourret, F., Histoire de l'£glise, 398. Movie, J., Institutes, 425. Moyne de la Borderie, A., Bretange, 541. Miihlbacher, E., Deutsche Geschichte, 141; Regesten, 143. Muhlbrecht, O., Wegweiser, 60. Muelbe, W., Darstellung des jungsten Gerichts, 477. Miildener, W., Gedichte von Walther von Lille, 451. Miiller, A., Griechischen Philosophen, 399; Islam, 147; Orientalische Bibli- ographic, 379. Miiller, A., Das heilige Deutschland, 238. Miiller, C., Altgermanische Meeresherr- schaft, 153. Miiller, C., Fragmenta historicorum Graecorum, 1 002 note. Miiller, E., Peter von Prezza, 461. Miiller, J., Vereine und Gesellschaften, 211. Miiller, J., Diozesanbeho'rden, 237. Miiller, J. v., Eidgenossenschaft, 290. Miiller, I.. Handbuch, 330 note. Miiller, K., Christentum und Kirche, 406 note; Kampf Ludwigs des Bay- ern, 289; Kirchengeschichte, 406; Minoriten-orden, 228 ; "Waldenser, 403. Miiller, M., Averroes, 379. Miiller, S., Nordische Altertumskunde, 153. Miiller-Mann, G., Otto II, 172. Munch, W., Fiirstenerziehung, 264. Miinchener Archiv fiir Philologie des Mittelalters, 447. Miintz, E., Art pendant la renaissance, 312; Arts a la cour des papes, 312; Cour d' Avignon, 271 : Le'gende de Charlemagne, 143 ; Leonardo da Vinci, 314; Pr^curseurs, 312; Re- naissance en Italic, 312. Miintz, E., and Fabre, P., Bibliotheque du Vatican, 468. Miinz, J., Moses ben Maimon, 376. Muir, R., Atlas, 121 note. Muir, W., Caliphate, 147; Goran, 148; Mohammed, 146. Mullinger, J., Cambridge, 443 : Founda- tion of libraries, 465; Schools of Charles the Great, 365. Munk, S., Guide des egares, 379; Philosophic juive, 376. Munoz, A., Iconografia della Madonna, 357. Munro, D., Attitude towards classics, 350; Children's crusade, 207; Mid- dle ages, 376 : Renaissance of twelfth century, 384; Speech of Ur- ban II, 204. Munro, D., Pnitz, H., and Diehl, C., Essays on the crusades, 209. Mnnro, D., and Sellery, G., Mediaeval civilization, 359. INDEX 529 Muratori, L., Annali d'ltalia, 612; An- tiquitates Italicae, 989 ; Rerum Itali- carum scriptores, 988. Murko, M., Sudslawischen Literaturen, 158. Murray, H., Chess, 264. Murray, J., Oxford dictionary, 308. Murray, T., Jeanne d'Arc, 280. Musatti, E., Venezia, 298. Musee de sculpture du Trocadero, 477. Museums, 3, 5 note, 83-85. Music, history of, 125, 471, 477-478. Muyden, B. van, Nation suisse, 290. Muzzey, D., Spiritual Franciscans, 230. Mystakidis, B., Byzantinisch-deutsche Beziehungen, 190. Mystery plays, 247, 253. Mvsticism, 392, 395, 405, 409. Myths, 356. Naegle, A., Kirchengeschichte Bohmens, 46 1 note. Nagl, A., Gerbert, 372. Nagl, J., and Zeidler, J., Deutsch- osterreichische Literaturgeschichte, 805. Nansen, F., Northern mists, 154. Napier, H., Florentine history, 300. Naples, 294, 301 ; and humanism, 304, 311. Narbey, C., Roger Bacon, 431; Suppl6- ment aux Acta sanctorum, 963 note. Nardi, B., Sigieri di Brabante, 482. Nature, feeling for, 426, 429. Navarre, 315, 320. Neale, J., Mediaeval preachers, 450. Neale, J., and Webb, B., Symbolism, 356. Neander, A., Heilige Bernhard, 394. Neander, J., Christian religion, 399. Neckam, Alexander, De naturis rerum, 427. Negri, G.. Giulinno 1'Apostata, 338. Neilson. G., Trial by combat, 161. Nemecek, O., Samo, 158. Neo-platonism, 334, 337. Neo-scholasticism, 406, 409. Nestorius, 376. Netherlands, 46, 461 note, 557-559, 256. Neuburger, M., Medizin, 434. Neudecker, K., Das Doctrinale, 449. Neumann, C., Bernhard von Clairvaux, 394: Bvzantinische Kultur, 308: Greichische Geschichtschreiber, 205; Weltstellung des byzanti n i s c h e n Reiches, 191. Neumann, K., Orientalische Sprach- studien, 415. Neumark, D., Jiidische Literatur, 863 note; Jiidische Philosophie, 866. New international encyclopaedia, 97; medieval library, 454 ; Palaeograph- ical Society: facsimiles, 230; Schaff- Herzog encyclopedia, 1 06. Newman, cardinal, Antichrist, 355. Nicene and post-Nicene fathers, 954 note. Nichol, J., Tables, 74. Nicholas I, pope, 173, 176, 177. Nichols, F., Mirabilia urbis Romae. 346. Nicholson, R., Literary history of- Arabs, 378. Nicolai de Bibera, Carmen satiricum, 416. Nicolas, N., Agincourt, 280. Niedling, A., Biicherornamentik, 467. Niedner, F., Islands Kultur, 153 ; Turnier, 264. Niehues, B., Kaiserthum und Papst- thum, 457. Nield, J., Historical novels, 78. Niemann, A., Augustins Geschichts- philosophie, 343. Niese, H., Gesetzgebung, 198. Niethe, F., Azincourt, 280. Niortet, Maurice de Sully, 237. Nitsch, F., Scholastik, 398. Nitzsch, K., Geschichte des deutschen Volkes, 573; Gottesfrieden, 163. Noack, L., Johannes Scotus, 372. Nobili-Vitelleschi, F., Storia del papato, 136. Nobles, 277, 161; life of, 260-264. Noel, L., Louvain, 444. Noel, O., Commerce, 255. Noldeke, T., Leben Muhammed's, 148; Qoran, 148. Nolan, E., and Hirsch, S., Greek gram- mar of Roger Bacon, 416. Nolhac, P., Petrarch and the ancient world, 306; P£trarque, 310. Nomads, Asiatic, 155-159, 323, 326, 328. Noorden, C., Hincmar, 177. Norden, E., Antike Kunstprosa, 786 ; Lateinische Literatur, 350. Norden, W., Otto der Grosse, 172; Papsttum und Byzanz, 447 ; Vierte Kreuzzug, 206. Nordenskiold. A., Facsimile atlas, 259; Periplus, 259. Nordi. L., and Orioli, E., Chartularium studii Bononiensis, 444. Nordisk Tidskrift for Bok- och Bibli- oteksviisen, 468. Normand, C., Guide artistique de Paris, 388. 530 INDEX Normandy, 986 note, 194, 197; dukes of, 911-1204 A.D., 196. Normans, 180, 186, 194-201; kings of, in the Two Sicilies, 1130-1250 A.D., 196. Norroena, 154. Northcote, J., and Brownlow, W., Roma sotterranea, 347. Northern Europe, 1007-101 1; 323- 331. Northmen, 150-155. Norton, A., Readings: universities, 440. Norton, C., Church building, 475; Di- vine comedy, 481 : New life of Dante, 482; St. Louis, 245. Norway, 723-725. 1009. 325. 327.330. Notices et extraits, 4 note, 885. Notitia [of Rome], 346. Notre Dame de Paris, 386, 387, 389- Nott, C., Hymns, 452. Nottrott, L., Wendenmission, 221. Nouveau Larousse illustre', 99 note. Nouvelle collection des memoires, 970. Novakovic, S., Problemes serbes, 7 1 6 note. Novati, P., Carmina medii aevi, 450: Epistolario of Coluccio, 314; Pensiero latino, 758: Rapports litteraires, 449. Noyen, A., Inventaire des Merits the- ologiques, 410. Noves, E., Ferrara, 302 ; Milan, 298. Niibling, E., Ulm's Handel, 257. Nueva colecci6n de documentos ineditos, 997. Numismatics, 292-298. Nuova rivista storica, 161 note. Nuovo bullettino di archeologia cristi- ana, 348. Nyrop, K., Grammaire, 455. Oberhummer, E., Constantinopolis, 669 note. Obituaries. 548. Ockam, William of, 405. Odo, count of Paris, 165, 167. Odq, of Cluny. 759 note, 173, 178. Odovacar, 108. Oechsli, \V., Eidgenossenschaft, 290; Quellenbuch der Schweizergeschichte, 292 : Schweizergeschichte, 290. Oechsli-Baldamus "Wandkarte zur Schweizergeschichte. 288. Oehl. W., Mystiker, 409. Oehler, M., Danemark, 330 ; Deutsche Ritterorden, 221. Oelsner, L., Jahrbiicher, 136. Oesterley, H., Historisch-geographisches "Worterbuch, 134; Wegweiser, 20. Oesterreichische Geschichtquellen, 986. Ogden, C., Orosius, 341. Ogg, F., Source book, 389. O'Hagen, J., Song of Roland, 454. Ohnesorge, W., Slawen, 158. Ohr, W., Karolingische Gottesstaat, 141. Oidtmann, H., Glasmalerei, 477. Okey, T., Avignon, 271; Paris, 386; Venice, 298. Oldham, J., Renaissance, 305. Oliphant, M., Francis of Assisi, 229; Jeanne d'Arc, 283; Makers of Flor- ence, 300; Makers of Venice, 298. Oliveira Martins, J., Civilizaci6n iberica, 321; Historia de Portugal, 636 note; Prince Henry the Navigator, 318. Olleris, A., Cassidore, 343 ; Oeuvres de Gerbert, 372. Olrik, A., Nordisches Geistesleben, 153. Olschki, L., Bibliotheca Savonaroliana, 303 ; Ideale Mittelpunkt Frankreichs, 386; Paris, 386. Oman, C., Art of war, 115; Byzantine empire. 646: Dark ages, 329 note; England, 152. Ommiads, 145. Omont, H., Bibliotheque de Beauvais, 468 : Listes des recueils de fac- similes, 467; Reproductions de manu- scrits, 467. Oncken, W., Allgemeine Geschichte, 313. Opd-cke, L., Courtier by Casjiglione, 308. Opladen. P.. Stellung der Konige, 227. Ordericus Vitalis, Historia ecclesiastica, 457. Orders of monks, 222, 226. Ordonnances des rois de France, 975 note; du Louvre, 975 note. Oriens christianus, 120. Original narratives: Northmen, 155. Origines Islandicae, 154. Orleans, schools of, 411, 412. Ormsby, ,T., Poem of the Cid, 318. Orosius, History against pagans, 341. Orr, M." Dante and astronomers, 483. Orsi, P., L'anno mille, 370; Paure del finimondo, 370; Signorie, 297; Storia d'ltalia, 994. Ortega y Rubio, J., Visigodos, 112. Orton, C., House of Savoy, 168. Orvis, J., Poland, 693. Oschinsky, H., Ritter, 264. Oseberg ship. 150, 154. Osebergfundet, 154. Ostrogoths, 108, 111, 113; kings of, 493-553 A.D., 109. Othloh of St. Emmeran, 380, 382. Ott, A., Thomas von Aquin, 228. INDEX 531 Ott6, E., Scandinavian history, 717 note. Ottendorff, H., Tancred und Wilhelm III, 199. Ottenthal, E., Regesten, 919-1024 A.D., 169. Otto I, 169-173. Otto II, 170, 172. Otto III, 170, 172, 174. Otto IV, of Brunswick, 212, 213, 218. Otto of Freising, 458, 460-461; Gesta Friderici, 216. Otto, H., Rudolf von Habsburg, 289; Streben nach der romischen Kaiser- krone, 538 note. Ottoman court, learning in, 368-372. Ottoman Turks, 324, 327, 329. Oulmont, C., Le verger, 409; Podsie franchise, 457. Overmann, A., Mathilde, 184. Owen, J., Skeptics, 312. Oxford English dictionary, 308 ; history of music, 477. Oxford school, the, 411, 426, 428; uni- versity of, 438, 443, 445. Ozanam, A., Civilisation au cinquieme siecle, 336; Civilisation chr6tienne, 360; Dante, 482; Documents inedits, 346; Ecoles en Italie, 371; Oeuvres completes, 360; Poetes Franciscains, 231. Pace, B., I barbari e i byzantini in Sicilia, 189. Pachomius, 117, 119. Padagogischer Jahresbericht, 58 note. PaPtow, L., Arts course, 412 ; Battle of the seven arts, 413. Paganism, end of, 334, 335, 338. Page, R., Alcuin, 367. Pagel, J., Medizinische Kulturgeschichte, 434. Paget, V., Euphorion, 312; Renaissance fancies, 312; Revelations of the monk of Evesham Abbey, 354. Paguelle de Follenav, Abbe1, Ecole epis- ropale de Notre-Dame-de-Paris, 441. Pahncke, H., BischSfe Ttaliens, 178. Painting, renaissance, 305, 307, 313. Palacky, F., Bohmen, 700 note; Formel- bucher, 419; Husitenkriege, 274. Palaeographical societv: facsimiles, 230.. Palaeography, 212-237, 365, 366, 463, 464. Palaeologi, 324. 325, 327, 330. Palermo, F., San Tommaso, Aristotile, e Dante, 483. Palestine pilgrims text society, 210. Palgrave, F., Normandy, 198. Palgrave, R., Dictionary of political economy, I 1 5. Palhories, G., Saint Bonaventure, 409. Palmarocchi, R., Montecassino, 200. Palmer, E., Koran, 147. Palmer, J., Pestilences, 249. Palomes, A., Nurmanni, 199. Palomes, L., S. Francesco, 229. Palustre, L., L'architecture, 313. Panfilo la Magliano, S. Francesco, 229. Pannier, L., Lapidaires, 430. Pantenius, T., Geschichte Russlands, 686. Pantheon, 85. Papacy, 439-454, 956-961; in sixth century, 121—125; and the Normans, 195, 200; curia of, 233, 236; finances of, 274; in later middle ages, 293-295; and humanism, 304, 311. Papers of the American society of church history, 493. Paoli, C., Paleografia, 213. Papencordt, F., Rom, 347. Paravicini, A., Senato romano, 347. Pardo Bazan, San Francisco de Assis, 229. Pargoire, J., L'eglise byzantine, 116. Paris, in the middle ages, 385-391; libraries in, 4 note, 469 ; university of, 438, 440-442, 444. Paris, G., Esquisse de la litterature franchise, 454 ; Histoire poetique de Charlemagne, 366; L6gendes, 456; L'estoire de la Guerre sainte, 209 ; Litte'rature franchise, 454 ; Melanges, 456; Po£sie, 456. Paris, G., and Langlois, E., Chresto- mathie, 456-457. Paris, Matthew, Chronica, 216, 328. Parish priests, 234, 235, 237. Parisot, R., Lorraine, 168. Parker, E., Tartars, 158. Parker, H., Seven liberal arts, 350. Parker, ,T., Works of Dionysius, 354. Parlement of Paris, 242, 246. Parmentier, A., Album historique, 187. Parrot, A., Roger Bacon, 431. Parsy. P., Saint Eloi, 361. Pascal, C., Letteratura latina, 414. Pascheu, J., Jacopone de Todi, 450. Pastor, L., Papste, 269. Patarini, 180. Pater, W., Renaissance, 312. Patetta, F., Le ordalie, 164. Patrick, Saint, 126, 128. Patrologia orientalis, 121. Patrologiae cursus completus, 953. Pattison, R., Leading figures, 927. Paul, H., Grundriss, 307. 532 INDEX Paul the Deacon, Langobards, 116; Vita Gregorii, 125. Paul of Thebes, 117. Pauli, G., Alfred the Great, 341. Paulinus of Kola, 334, 338. Paulsen, P., Bildungswesen, 847 ; Uni- versitaten, 444. Paulus, N., Weltliche Benife, 262. Payne-Gallwey, R., Crossbow, 262. Paz y Melia, A., Espafia, 319. Peace of God, 161-163. Pears, E., Capture of Constantinople, 327; Fall of Constantinople, 206. Peck, H., Classical philology, 785 note. Peddie, R., British Museum reading room, 3 note. Pedrick, G., Heraldry, 289. Peiser. G., Investiturstreit, 183. Pennell, E., French cathedrals, 474. Pepin, 134, 136. Pepper, C., Portugal, 321. Percival, E., Foundation statutes of Merton, 443. P^rez Pujol, E., Espafia goda, 112. Paries. G., Faculty de droit, 424. Periodicals, 8-11, 147-186. Periods of European history, 329. Perkins, C., Spain, 632. Pernice, A., L'imperatore Eraclio, 190. Pe>ouse, G., Cardinal Louis Aleman, 274. Perrens, F.. Civilisation florentine, 311 ; Democratic en France, 281 ; Etienne Marcel, 281; Florence, 299; Savona- rola, 301. Perret, P., Venise, 299. Perrier, J., Scholastic philosophy, 407. Perrot, E., Cas royaux, 246. Perrot, M., University de Paris et les mendiants, 441. Perry, F., Saint Louis, 243. Pertbech, M., Statuten des deutschen Ordens, 221. Perthes, J., Geschichts- Atlas, 121 note. Fertile, A., Diritto italiano, 605. Pertz, G., Hattsmeier, 136; Monu- menta Germaniae historica, 978. Perugi, G., Note tironiane, 227. Perugia, 302. Peruzzi, S., Storia del commercio, 254. Peschek, Formelbiicher, 419. Peschel. O., Erdkunde, 434; Zeitalter der Entdeckungen, 258. Pessard. G., Dictionnaire de Paris, 388. Pestilence. 247, 253. Peter I, the Cruel, 316, 317, 320. Peter Lombard, 405, 406, 407, 408, 410: Sentences, 407, 410. Peter of Maricourt, 426, 432. Peter the Hermit, 201, 209. Peter the Venerable, 392, 395. Pe'tiet, R., Ordre de Saint-Lazare, 208. P6tis de la Croix, F., Genghizcan, 329. Petit, E., Dues de Bourgogne, 168; Philippe le Hardi, 284. Petit de Julleville, L., Jeanne d'Arc, 283 ; Langue et litte'rature franchise, 454. Petit-Dutaillis, C., Louis VIII, 244. Petit-Dutaillis, C., and Collier, P., Bre'- tigny, 281. Petit Larousse illustre, 99 note. Petitot, C., and Mommerque', M., M6- moires, 969. Petrarch, F., 303, 306, 307, 310, 314, 315; Letters, 306, 307, 314; Love songs, 307; Secret, 307; Triumph, 307. Petrie, W., Migrations, 111. Petrovitch, G., Scander-beg, 329. Petzoldt, J., Anzeiger fur Bibliogra- phic, 466; Bibliotheca Bibliograph- ica, 2. Peyrat, N., Albigeois, 403. Pfahler, P., Bonifacius, 131. Pfeifer, F., Scholastik und Naturwissen- schaft, 408. Pfeilschifter, G., Theodorich, 110. Pflster, C., Alsace, 137; Bapteme de Clovis,.136; Charlemagne, 142; Rob- ert le Pieux, 168. Pfleiderer, O., Das deutsche National- bewusstsein, 586. Pfleiderer, R., Attribute der Heiligen, 357. Pflugk-Harttung, J., Acta pontificum, 960; Great migrations, 110; Irish, 130; Konrad II, 172; Papstwahlen, 182; Weltgeschichte, 318. Pftind, T., Hrotsvitha Gedicht, 171. Philip II, of France, 202, 206, 242, 243, 244. Philip II of Swabia, 212, 213, 218. Philip III, of France, 242, 245. Philip IV, 242, 245. Philip V, 243, 246. Philipp, H., Etymologiae des Isidorus, 352. Philippe, J., Lucreee, 367. Philippi. A., Kunst der Renaissance, 312: Renaissance, 308. Philippson, M., Heinrich der Lowe, 218. Philipson, D., Jewries, 869. Phillimore, J., St. Paulinus of Nola, 338. Phillips, D., Libraries of Wales, 468. Phillips, W., Poland, 695. Philology, 304-309. Philosophisches Jahrbuch, 56. INDEX 533 Philosophy, 56-57, 181, 822-835, 405- 410. Phranza, T., Fall of Constantinople, 328. Physicians, 435. Physics, 433. Piat, C., Aristotle, 397. Picarda, E., Hanse Parisienne, 390. Picavet, F., Abelard, 394; Editions de Roger Bacon, 432 ; Essais, 407 ; Ger- bert, 176; Guillaume de Champeaux, 395; Moyen age, 107; Oeuvres de Roger Bacon, 432 ; Esquisse des philosophies medievales, 828 ; Pierre de Maricourt, 432 ; Roscelin, 382 ; Science experimentale, 433 ; Thomas d'Aquin et Bacon, 431. Pichler, A., Kirchliche Trennung, 177. Pichon, R., Litterature latine, 337; Pan£gyristes, 337. Pico della Mirandola, Ausgewiihlte Schriften, 314. Picot, G., Documents relatifs aux etats ggneraux, 246; Etats generaux, 246. Picotti, G., Execrabilis, 274. Pictorial works, 187-207. Pidoux, P., Jehan de Gand, 284. Pierling, P., Russie, 690. Pierre d'Ailly, 267, 273, 275. Pietschmann, R., Das Buch, 464. Pigeonneau, H., Commerce de France, 255; Le cycle de la croisade, 209. Pijoan y Soteras, J., Historia del arte, 473. Pijper, F., Slavery, 163. Pilgrim life, 234, 238. Pilgrimages to Jerusalem, 201, 204, 205. Pillion, L., Sculpteurs franc.ais, 476. Pingaud, L., Gregoire le Grand, 124. Pinton, P., Donazioni ai papi, 142. Piper, O., Abriss der Burgenkunde, 263 ; Burgenkunde, 263 ; Oesterreich- ische Burgen, 263. Pirenne, H., Belgian democracy, 550: Belgique, 549; Bibliographic de Bel- gique, 45; Constitutions urbaines, 251 ; Soulevement de la Flandre, 281 ; Villes, 255. Pirson, J., Latin de formules mero- vingiennes, 360. Pisa, 302; council of, 267, 273. Pisko, J., Scanderbeg, 329. Piton, C., Lombards, 255. Piur, K., Briefwechsel des Cola di Rienzo, 302. Pius II, 295, 296. Pizzi, I, Letteratura araba, 378. Plaine, B., Colonisation de 1'Armorique, 363. Plaine, F., L'an mille, 370. Planche, J., Cyclopaedia of costume, 193. Piano Carpini, John of, 235, 240, 241. Plath, K., Konigspfalzen, 137 ; Nim- wegen, 367. Plattner, W., Freistaat, 290. Playfair, R., Mediterranean, 107. Pliny, Natural history, 351. Ploetz, C., Epitome, 68. Plummer, C., Alfred the Great, 152; Bedae Opera historica, 363; Church of the early fathers, 418; Churches in Britain, 128. Plunket, L, Isabel of Castile, 319. Poschl, A., Bischofsgut, 237. Poete, M., L'enfance de Paris, 386; Repertoire des sources manuscrits de 1'histoire de Paris, 391 ; Sources de 1'histoire de Paris, 386. Poetry, Latin, 446, 447, 450, 451. Poggio Bracciolini, 303, 310. Pohler, J., Bibliotheca historico-mili- taris, 61. Poland, 47, 693-698, 1004-1005, 156, 323. Poletti, G., Notariato a Bergamo, 419. Political economy, 115-116. Political thought, 457-462; of Dante, 482. Politics, bibliography of, 60. Pollak, J., Arabische Philosophie, 376. Pollock, F., and Maitland, F., English law, 164. Polyptique de I'abb6 Irmion, 164. Pometti, F., Decretum di Graziano, 425. Pompili-Olivieri, L., Senate romano, 347. Pomptow, M., Altromische Vorstell- ungen vom Staat, 461. Pons Boigues, F., Historiadores arabigo- espanoles, 378. Pontificum Romanorum vitae, 96 1 note. Poole, A., Henry the Lion, 215. Poole, L., Moors in Spain, 146. Poole, R., Atlas, 122; Exchequer, 436; Mediaeval thought, 815; Papal chan- cery, 240 note; University archives, 445; Wycliffe, 269. Poole, S., Coins, 297; Egypt, 148; Mo- hammedan dynasties, 148 ; Saladin, 206; Speeches of Mohammed, 147. Poole, S., Turkey, 327. Poole's index, 8. Popes and Hohenstauf en, 211-221 ; lists of, 440-604 A.D., 122; 604-816 A.D., 127; 816-1054 A.D., 175: 1124-1276 A.D., 214; 1276-1503 A.D., 268. Por6e, A., Abbaye du Bee, 382. 534 INDEX Portalie, E., Abelard, 394. Porter, A., Lombard architecture, 475 ; Medieval architecture, 472. Porter, O., Biographical works in Brit- ish Museum, 3 note. Porter, W., Knights of Malta, 208. Portolani, 248, 259. Portugal, 636-642, 1001, 317, 318, 321. Portugaliae monumenta historica, 1001. Potter, A., Library of Harvard, 211. Pottet, E., Sainte-Chapelle, 476. Potthast, A., Bibliotheca historica: Wegweiser, 18; Regesta pontificum Romanorum, 957. Pouchet, F., Sciences naturelles, 430. Pound, R., Readings in Roman law, 425. Poupardin, R., Bourgogne, 168;Chartes de Saint • Germain - des - Pres, 390 ; Provence, 168. Pouzet, T., Succession de Charlemagne, 167. Powicke, F., Loss of Normandy, 198. Poznanski, S., Hebraieche Grammatik, 416. Pragmatic Sanctions of Bourges and Mainz, 268, 274. Prague, 702 note. Prantl, K., Logik, 833. Preaching, 235, 238. Preger, W., Mystik, 409; Waldesier, 403. Preiswerk, E., Basler Konzil, 274. Premonstratensians, 222. Prentout, H., Caen, 198; Dudon de Saint-Quentin, 197; Normandie, 197. Prescott, W., Ferdinand and Isabella, 319. Presland, J., Belisarius, 115. Preston, H., Kingdom of Jerusalem, 206. Preuss, H., Antichrist, 355. PreVost, G., L'eglise et campagnes, 237. Primat of Orleans, 446, 449. Primera cr6nica general, 322. Printing, invention of, 305, 307, 462. Prior, E.. English mediaeval architec- ture, 474. Priot, E., and Gardner, A., Figure sculpture, 477. Priscian, Institutionum grammaticorum, 349, 352. Probst, J., Raymond Lulle, 240. Procopius, Works, 116. Proctor, J., Triumph of the cross by Savonarola, 297. Prologo, A., Andrea de Barulo, 424. Prost, A., L'immunite, 162. Protois, P., Pierre Lombard, 408. Prou, M., Gaule merovingioi I . Melanges, dt'-dii'ps a, 939: I';; phie, 214; Politique monetain-. 'JKi; Urbain V, 282. Provence, 165, 168. Provisions, papal, 237. Prussia, 595-596. Prutz, E., Briefe Jeanne d'Arcs, 283 ; Fnlsche Jungf rau von Orleans, 284 ; Jungfrau von Orleans, 284. Prutz, H., Friedrich I, 217; Heinrich der Lowe, 218; Jacques Coeur, 282; Kulturgeschichte der Kreuzziige, 209 ; Preussische Geschichte, 596 ; Ritter- orden, 207; Staatengeschichte des Abendlandes, 343 ; Templerherren- orden, 208. Prutz, H., and Pflugk-Harttung, J., Geschichte des Mittelalters, 344. Psellos, Michael, 380, 381, 396. Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals, 173, 177. Publications de la Soci6t6 de 1'histoire de France. 966: de la SocietS de 1'histoire de Normandie, 966 note. Publishers' weekly, 8. Publikation des osterreichischen histor- ischen Institute in Rom, 900. Puschel, A., Deutsche Stadte, 220. Puschmann, T., Handbuch der Medizin, 434. Putnam, G. H., Books and their mak- ers, 464; Censorship, 464. Putnam, G. P., Tabular views, 72. Putnam, R., Alsace and Lorraine, 598 : Charles the Bold, 279. Putzger, F., Schulatlas, 121 note. Puyol y Alonso, J., Hermandades, 321. Quadro elementar . . . Portugal, 1 00 1 note. Quarterly journal of the Historical as- sociation, 185. Quellen der Religionsgeschichte, 953 note; und Forschungen aus italien- ischen Archiven, 41 ; und For- schungen zur Geschichte des Domi- nikanerordens, 231 ; nnd Forschungen zur Sprach- und Kulturgeschichte, 731 ; und Untersuchungen zur Philo- gie des Mittelalters, 447 ; zur Ge- schichte der mittelalterlichen Ge- schichtsehreibung, 460; zur Ge- schichte des Papsttums, 953 note; zur Schweizer Geschichte, 987. Quellensammlung fur den geschicht- lichen Unterricht, 949 note; zur deutschen Geschichte, 980 ; zur Ge- schichte der deutschen Reichsverfass- ung, 985 note. Quentin, H., Martyroloees. 356. INDEX 535 Quetif, J., and Echard, J., Scriptores ordinis praedicatorum, 232. Qui etes-vous '? 95 note. Quicherat, J., Apercus nouveaux sur Jeanne d'Arc, 283; Histoire du cos- tume, 199; Proces de condemnation de Jeanne d'Arc, 285 ; Rodrique de Villandrano, 282. Quintilian, Institutes, 335. Quoidbach, T., Charlemagne, 142. Rabanus Maurus, 368, 371. Racinet, A., Costume, 191. Ragey, P., St. Anselme, 382. Ragg, L., Dante, 480. Ragnisco, Abelardo, 394. Rahn, J., Psalterium aureum, 367. Raine, J., Historians of the church of York, 367. Rait, R., Life in the mediaeval univer- sity, 439. Ralston, W., Early Russian history, 158. Rambaud, A., Civilisation franchise, 762: Constantin Porphyrogenete, 190; Etudes sur 1'histoire byzantine, 676; Russia, 682. Ramin, H., Paris, 388. Rand, E., Boethius' Consolatio, 343 ; Classics, 412; Johannes Scotus, 371. Rand, E., and Wilkins, E., Dantis Alagherii operum latinorum con- cordantiae, 483. Ranieri da Perugia, Ars notaria, 420. Ranke, L., Preussische Geschichte, 595 ; Savonarola, 301 ; Weltgeschichte, 316. Rapport . . . Archives nationales, 25 note. Rashdall, H., Compendium of Bacon, 437; Universities, 439. Rastoul, A., Grand schisme, 272 ; Tern- pliers, 208. Riitzel, F., Anthropo'geographie, 107; History of mankind, 158. Ratzinger, G., Franziskus, 230. Rauers, F., Handelsstrassen, 257. Raumer, P., Hohenstaufen, 216. Raure, L., Figures franciscaines, 228. Rauschen, G., Griechisch - romische Schulwesen, 337; Legende Karls des Grossen, 143. Ravenna, 114. Rawnsley, canon, Sacrum commercium, 225. Raynaud, G., Bibliographie des chan- sonniers francais, 457 ; Motets fran- cais, 477; Soci£te en France, 264. Raynerius of Perugia, 417, 420. Reade, W., Moral system of Dante, 483 ; Political theory of Dante, 482. Readers' guide, 9. Real academia de la historia, Madrid, 907. Reale academia dei Lincei, 906. Realencyklopadie fur protestantische Theologie, 112. Reason and faith, 380, 382, 395. Reber, F., Karolingische Palastbau, 367. Recesse der Hansetage, 258. Reckendorf, H., Mohammed, 148. Records of civilization, 949. Recueil de chroniques de la Flandre, 977 note; de fac-similes a 1'usage de 1'Ecole des chartes, 231 ; de travaux d'erudition dedies a la memoire de Julien Havet, 938 ; de travaux . . . Universite de Louvain, 893 ; de voy- ages, 259; des historiens des croi- sades, 210; des historiens des Gaules et de la France, 967 ; general des anciennes lois frangaises, 975 note. Redlich, O., Rudolf von Habsburg, 289. Redtenbacher, R., Architectur, 313. Reeb, W., Russische Geschichte, 689. Reeve, H., Petrarch, 306. Reeves, W., Life of Columba, 131. Reference books, 63-2 I I . Reformation and renaissance, 309. Regesta chartarum Italiae, 993 ; diplo- matica historiae Danicae, 1008 note; imperil, 985; pontificum Romanorum, by P. Jaffe, 956; pontificum Roman- orum, by. P. Kehr, 958; pontificum Romanorum, by A. Potthast, 937. Regesten zur Geschichte de_r Juden, 1013. Regn6, J., Juifs, 878. Reich, E., Select documents, 390. Reichert, B., Monumenta Fratres Prae- dicatorum, 232. Reichling, D., Das Doctrinale, 448. Reinach, S., Apollo, 266; Orpheus, 394. Reinaud, M., Sarrazins en France, 149. Reinelt, P., Paulinus von Nola, 338. Reinhold, P., Emporung Konig Hein- richs, 219. Rpinstadler, A., Elementa philosophiaa scholasticae, 407. Reisner, W., Einwohnerzahl deutscher Stadte, 252. Reitzenstein, J., Schiesspulver, 263. Relics, 353, 356. Religion and humanism, 304, 312. Re'musat, C., Ab61ard, 394; Saint An- selme, 382. Renaissance, 303-315. Renaissance library, The, 309. 536 INDEX Renan, E., Averroes. 376: Etudes d'his- toire religieuse, 419: Influence of in- stitutions, 339: L'lslainiKine et la sci- ence, 374 : Philippe le Bel, 245. Repertoire bibliographique des revues franchises. II note; des travaux his toriques, SOB note. Repertorium diplomaticum regni Danici, 1008. Rerum Britannicarum medii aevi scrip- tores, 995 : Gallicarum et Franci- carum scriptores, 967 ; Italicarum scriptores, 988. Rettberg, P., Kirchengeschichte, 131. Reumont. A., Geschiohte der Stadt Rom, 442 : Ix>renzo, 300. Reusens, E., Elements de paleographie, 215. Renter, H., Augustinische Studien, 342 ; Geschichte Alexanders des Dritten, 217; Geschichte der religiosen Auf- kliiriMiir. 817. Reutter, L., Medicaments, 435. Reverdy, G., Childebert II et Byzance, 189. Review of books. 87-88. Reville, A., Diable, 355. Revista de archives, 163; italiana di filosofia neo-scholastica, 410; storica italiano, 161. Revival of learning, 303. Revue critique d'histoire et de litt£ra- tnre, 159; de 1'art ancien et mod- erne, 478 ; de 1'art chreiien, 478 ; de 1'histoire des religions, 180; de 1'his- toire litteraire de France, 171; de svnthese historique, 1 58 ; d'histoire eccle'siastique, 178; des etudes his- toriques, 156 note; des questions his- toriques, 157: historique, 156; n6o- scolastique, 409 ; Thomiste, 409. Rev, G., Colonies franques, 206; Monu- ments des croisades, 209; Normans in Syria, 200. Rev, R., Louis XI, 284. Reynaud, L., Influence franchise en Allemagne, 765. Revnier, G., Vie universitaire dans 1'ancienne Espagne, 444. Rheims cathedral, 470, 476. Rhetoric, 417. Rhoen, C., Karolingische Pfalz zu Aachen, 367. Riant, P., Catalogue de la bibliotheque de, 211; Excuviae, 211; Pglerinages, 205 ; Quatrieme croisade, 207. Riat, G., Paris, 388. Ribeiro, J., Dissertagoes sobre a his- toria de Portugal, 637. Ribera, J., Bibli6filos en la Espafla muMilmana, 378; Ensefianza i-ntn- los Musulmanes, 378; Justicia Mayor, 320. Ricci, C., Studio bolognese, 442. Richard de Bury, Philobiblon, 465. Richard, E., German civilization, 771. Richard, J., Thierri d'Hirecon, 251. Richard the Lion-Hearted, 202, 206. Richardson, A., Doges of Venice, 298. Richardson, E., Medieval library, 465. Richardson, J., Mystic bride, 272. Richemont, F., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Richental, U., Conciliumbuch, 275. Richomme, C., University de Paris, 440. Richter, A., Kirchenrecht, 424. Richter, G., Annalen, 135. Richter, G., and Kohl, H., Annalen der deutschen Geschichte, 57 I . Richter, O., Bnseler Konzil, 274; Monu- menta conciliorum, 275. Richterich, J., Nikolaiis I, 177. Rickaby, J., Scholasticism, 835. Riemann. H., Musikgeschichte. 477. Rienzo, Cola di, 293, 295, 297, 302. Ries, J., Bernhard, 394. Rieunier, A., Medecine, 435. Riezler, S., Wiedersacher der Papste, 289. Rigaud, Registrum visitationum, 240. Rigg, J., S. Anselm, 381. Riguet, 1'abbe, Saint Patrice, 128. Rilov, A., Athos, 120. Rilliet, A., Confederation suisse, 291. Rinaudo, D., Studi storici, 460. Ringholz. O.. Odilo von Cluny, 178. Ripley, W., Races of Europe, 107. Ritter, M., Christlich-mittelalterliche Geschichtschreibung, 458. Rivoira, G., Lombardic architecture, 475. Robert de Sorbon, De consciencia, 441. Robert, G., Ecoles, 385. Robert Guiscard, 195, 199. Robert, U., Signes d'infamie, 872. Roberts. M., Catherine of Siena, 272. Robertson, A., Regnum Dei, 340. Robertson, J., Christian church, 424 note; History of free thought, 742. Robey, H., Justinian's Digest, 422. Robinson, G., Life of Boniface, 129; Life of Saint Severimus, 335. Robinson, J., History of western Eu- rope, 377 note: Intellectual history, 335; Medieval and modern times. 377; New history. 106: Petrarch's Confessions, 310: Readings, 391. Robinson, J., and Rolfe, H., Petrarch, 306. INDEX 537 Robinson, P., Franciscan literature, 232; Life of Saint Clare, 225; B. Bacone, 431; Rule of St. Clare, 230; Writings of St. Francis, 225. Rocafort, J., Paulin de Pella, 338. Rochegude, marquis de, Guide & travers Paris, 387. Rocholz, E., Tell, 291. Rockhill, W., Journey of William Ru- bruk, 241. Rockinger, L., Ars dictandi, 418 ; Briefsteller, 418 ; Briefsteller in Deutschland, 419; Formelbiicher, 419. Rocquain, F., Cour de Rome, 236; Nic- olas Ier, 177; Papaute, 451. Rodd, R., Princes of Achaia, 207. Rodenberg, A., Innocenz IV, 219. Rodin, A., Cathedrales, 476. Rodocanachi, E., Boccace, 310; Cola di Rienzo, 297 ; Monuments de Rome, 348; Renaissance, 309: Roman capi- tol, 348: Rome au XIVC siecle, 297; Sainte-Sifege et les juifs, 870. Rodwell, J., Koran, 147. Rohricht, R., Beitrage Kreuzziige, 209; Fiinfter Kreuzzug, 207 ; Geschichte des ersten Kreuzzuges, 205; Kinder Kreuzzug, 207; Konigreich Jersualem, 206; Kreuzfahrt Friedrich II, 207; Kreuzpredigten, 208 : Kreuzziige, 205 ; Regesta regni Hierosolymitani, 210. Rohricht, R., and Meisner, H., Deutsche Pilgerreisen, 210. Romische Quartalschrift, 179. Roepell, R., Geschichte Polens, 696. Roersch, A., Humanisme, 309. Rosier, A., Johannes Dominici, 273. Rosier, M., Erziehung in England, 363. Rossler, O., Geschichte Roms, 347. Roger Bacon essays, 428. Roger, M., L'enseignement, 192. Rogers, J., Agriculture, 250 : Economic interpretation, 251: Holland, 558; Work and wages, 251. Rohde, H., Sizilien, 301. Rohner, A.. Schopfungsprohlem, 408. Rolf or Rollo, 151, 153. Rolland, R., Michaelangelo, 314. Rolls series, 995. Roloff, G., Frankisches Heer, 137. Roman, J., Manuel de sigillographie, 246. Roman Question, 139, 141. Romances of chivalry, 260, 264. Romania, 456. Romanic review, 456. Romanin, S., Venezia, 298. Romanische Bibliothek, 456. Romano, G., Dominazioni barbariche, 168. Rome, 440-442, 870-871; transforma- tion of, into a medieval city, 344- 348 ; and the Mohammedans, 145, 146, 149; in later middle ages, 293, 295, 297; and humanism, 304, 311. Romey, M., Espagne, 624 note. Romuald, 174, 179. Romulus Augustulus, 107. Roncesvalles, 138. Roos, W., Swedish part in viking ex- peditions, 153. Rooseboom, M., Scottish staple, 256. Root, R., Publication, 464. Rope, I., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Ropp, G., Deutsche Kolonien, 220 ; Sozialpolitische Bewegungen, 251. Roscelin, 380, 382. Roscoe, W., Lorenzo, 300. Rose, E., Cathedrals of northern France, 476; cathedrals of the Isle de France, 476. Rose, V., Ars notaria, 419; Liicke im Diogenes Laertius, 399; Ptolomaus, 399. Rosenberg, A., Kostiim, 196. Rosenmund, R., Diplomatik, 238 note. Rosenstock, E., Kb'nighaus in Deutsch- land, 171. Rosi. Smith, K., Dictionary of dates. 70 note. Smith, F., Klorentinischo Verfassungs- ucschichte, 300. Smith, G. B., Guide to the study of tin- Christian religion, 405 note. Smith, G. G., Transition period, 309. Smith, I., Christian monasticism, 119. Smith, J. A., and Ross, W., Aristotle's works, 398. Smith, J. H., Troubadours, 454. Smith, J. R., Earliest lives of Dante, 481. Smith, L. M., Cluny, 177. Smith. M., Paris, 387. Smith, R., Mohammed, 148. Smith, T., Mediaeval missions, 178. Smith, W., and Cheetham, S., Diction- ary of Christian antiquities, 108. Smith, W., and Wace, H., Dictionary of Christian biography, 94. Snell, F., Fourteenth century, 309; Handbook to the works of Dante, 483. Snopek, F., Konstantinus, 158. Snqrro Sturleson, Heimskringla, 152. Social England, by Traill, 735. Society Dantesca Italiana, 483. Soci&e1 de 1'histoire de France, 886, 966, 974: de 1'histoire de Normandie, 966 note; de 1'histoire de Paris, Bulletin, Memoires, and Documents, 387; de 1'Orient latin, Publications, Archives, and Revue, 210; des anciens textes frangais, 456; franchise pour la pub- lication des livres & miniature, 467 ; Internationale d'etudes Franciscaines, 231. Societies, learned, 885-907. Sohm, R., Church history, 412; Insti- tutes, 422; Kirchenrecht, 424; Stadtewesen, 252. Soldan, W., Hexenprocesse, 404. Sommerard, L., Anne Comnene, 205. Sommerfeldt, G., Romfahrt Heinrichs VII, 289. Sommerlad, T., Lebensbeschreibung Severins, 339; Wirthschaftliche Thii- tigkeit der Kirche, 178. Songeon, R., Bulgarie, 710. Sonnenschein, W., Best books, 7. Sorbonne, 438, 441. Sorel, A., Jeanne d'Arc, 283. Soresina, A., Banco Giro di Venezia, 299. Sortais, G., Philosophic ancienne, 407. Souchon, M., Papstwahlen, 271 ; Papst- wahlen in der Zeit des Schismas, 272. Source books, 383-393. INDEX 543 Sources, collections of original, 949— 1013. Southey, R., Chronicle of the Cid, 319. Souttar, R., Mediaeval peoples, 351. Spain, 42, 467-468, 622-635, 813, 907, 997-1000; Visigoths in, 108, 110; Moors in, 145, 146, 149; Vik- ings in, 151, 153 ; Normans in, 195, 197: in the later middle ages, 315— 323 ; universities in, 439, 444. Spangenberg, H., Can Grande della Scala, 302 ; Lehntsaat zum Stande- staat, 292. Speaknian, E., Mediaeval hospitals, 436. Specht, F., Unterrichtswesen, 846. Speculum regale, 327, 331. Spence, L., Dictionary of mediaeval romance, 457. Spence-Jones, H., Early Christians in Rome, 348. Sperry, E., Clerical celibacy, 239. Sphragistics, 246-247 Spiegel, N., Vagantenpoesie, 449 Spingarn, J., Literary criticism, 309. Spirgatis, M., Personalverzeichniss, 466. Spiritual Franciscans, 223, 230. Spooner, S., Biographical dictionary of fine arts, 473. Sports of nobles, 260, 264. Sprenger, A., Mohammad, 148. Springer, A., Kunstgeschichte, 473 ; Nachleben der Antike, 352; Paris, 386. Spruner, K., and Menke, T., Hand- atlas, 125. Stadler, H., Albertus Magnus, 430. Stained glass, 471, 477. Staley, E., Guilds of Florence, 300. Stanley, A., Eastern church, 190. State and church, 455-459. Statuts et privileges des universites franchises, 444. Staudenmaier, F., Johannes Scotus, 372. Stead, M., Manegold of Lautenbach, 184. Steele, F., Hildegarde, 409. Steele, R., Huon of Bordeaux, 455; Medieval lore, 429 ; Mirror of per- fection, 225; Opera hactenus inedita of Bacon, 437; Renaud of Montau- ban, 455 : Roger Bacon, 437 ; Story of Alexander, 455. Steenstrup, J., Danmarks riges historic, 720; tformannerne, 152. Stefansson, J*., Denmark and Sweden, 717; Viking Club, 155. Steffens, F., Lateinische Palaographie, 216; Proben aus Unndschrifton, 216 note. Steiger, A., Bernhard von Clairvaux, 394. Stein, H., Bibliographic generate des cartulaires frangais, 24 ; Manuel de bibliographie, I. Stein, H., Architects des cathedrales, 475. Stein, W., Hanse, 257; Kaufleute zu Brugge, 256. Steinacher, H., Griechische Sprachkent- nisse, 336. Steinberg, A., Juden, 879. Steindorf, E., Jahrbiicher, Heinrich III, 172. Steinhausen, G., Archiv fur Kulturge- schichte, I 69 ; Geschichte der deutsch- en Kultur, 768 ; Geschichte des deutschen Briefes, 780 ; Kaufmann, 257 ; Kulturgeschichte, 777 ; Mono- graphien zur Kulturgeschichte, 775; Privatbriefe, 780 note. Steinmann, E., Rom in der Renais- sance, 311. Steinschneider, M., Al Farabi, 377 ; Arabischen Uebersetzungen, 377; Ge- schichtsliteratur der Juden, 865; Hebraischen Uebersetzungen, 864; Speculum des Albertus, 430 ; Ueber- setzungen aus dem Arabischen, 3,77. Stengel, E., Den Kaiser macht das Heer, 505. Stenography, 228-229. Stephen, J., France, 544. Stephen, L., and Lee, S., Dictionary of national biography, 89. Stephens, H., Portugal, 638. Stephens, W., Hildebrand, 182. Stephenson, A., Roman law, 422. Stern, M., Stellung der Papste zu den Juden, 881. Sternfeld, R., Ludwigs des Heiligen Kreuzzug, 207. Stevenson, E., Marine world chart, 259. Stevenson, F., Robert Grosseteste, 430. Stevenson, J., Expulsion of the Eng- lish, 285; Wars of English in France, 285. Stevenson, W., Crusaders, 204. Stewart, A., Buildings of Justinian, 116. Stewart, B., Cyprus, 209. Stewart, C., Mulfaz al Timury, 328. Stewart, H., Boethius, 343. Sticker, G., Die Pest, 254. Stieda, W., Handelsstatistik, 259; Hansisch-Venezianische HandelsUe- ziehungen, 256. Stieglitz, L., Marsilius von Padua, 289. Stieve, F., Ezzelino von Romano, 219. 544 INDEX Stiglmayr, J.. Kichenvater, 351 ; Pseudo- dionysischen Schriften, 357. Stigmata of St. Francis, 223, 230. Stilte, C., Studies, 930. Stobbe, O., Juden, 880. Stockmayer, O., Nnturgpfiihl, 429-430. Stockvis, A., Manuel de ge'ne'alogip, 270. Stoddard, A., Francis of Assist, 229. Stoddard, E., Bertrand du Ouesclin, 279. Stockl, A., Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters, 834. Stolzle, R.. Abaelards de unitate et trinitate divina, 395. Stokes, E., Kingdom of ends, 342. Stokes, G., Celtic church, 129; Greek in Ireland, 363. Stokes, M., Three months in forests of France, 130; Six months in Apen- nines, 130. Stone, J., Reformation and renaissance, 309. Storia della letteratura italiana, 811; politica d'ltalia, 599. Storrs, R., Bernard of Clairvaux, 393. Story of the nations, 321. Straccali, A., Goliardi, 449. Strakosch-Grassmann, G., Mongolen, 328. Strange, J., Dialogus miraculorum of Caesar of Heisterbach, 451. Strasburg oaths, 165, 167. Strnthman, H., Askese, 356. Straubinger, J., Kreuzzauffindungs- legende, 209. Strauss, R., Juden, 877 ; Juden in Sizilien, 199. Street, G., Gothic architecture in Spain, 476. Streit, L., Vierte Kreuzzug, 206. Strieder, J., Kapitalistische Organisa- tionsformen, 250. Strunz, F., Naturforschung, 427; Na- turwissenschaften, 427. Strutt, J., Sports, 264. Strzvgowski, J., Cimabue und Rom, 311 ; Orient oder Rom, 474. Stuart, D.. Stage decoration, 253. Stubbs, W., Canon law in England, 423; Cyprus, 209: Constitutional history of England, 578 note; Euro- pean history, 93 1 ; Germany in the early middle ages, 576 : Germany in the later middle ages, 577 ; Literature and learning at court of Henry II, 447 : Select charters, 578 note ; Sev- enteen lectures, 932. Studi e memorie, university de Bologna, 443. Studi medieval!, 173. Studien Benediktinerordens, 120; urd Darstellungen aus dem Gebietc m r Geschichte, 898; und MitteihuiL-< n der theologischen Fakultat zu Wien, 494 ; zur Geschichte der Medizin, 434 ; zur Geschichte der Theologie, 496. Stiibe, R., Tschinghizchan, 328. Stuhlfath, W., Gregor I, 124. Sturgis, R., Dictionary of architecture, 474; European architecture, 474. Sturgis, R., and Frothingham, A., His- tory of architecture, 474. Sturgis, R., and Krehbiel, H., Bibliog- raphy of fine art, 478. Stutz, U., Benefizialwesen, 163 ; Rechts- geschichte, 424. Suchier, H., and Birch-Hirschfeld, A., Franzosische Literatur, 455. Sudendorf, H., Berengarius Turonen- sis, 383. Sudhoff, K., Anatomic, 435; Astrono- mie, 433 ; Medizingeschichte, 434. Suger, abbot of Saint-Denis, 241, 241, 457; Gesta Ludovici, 246; Oeuvres completes, 246. Sullivan, J., Marsiglio of Padua, 289. Surgeons, 435. Suter, H., Araber, 375; Mathematik, 436; Mathematiker der Araber, 377. Sutler, C., Buoncompagno, 418. Sutterer, J., Letzte Romer, 343. Sven Hedin, Central Asia, 158. Svenskt diplomatarium, I 01 I. Swan, C., Gesta Romanorum, 447. Sweden, 48, 726-727, 1010 ION. Sweetser, S., Theology and free im quiry, 392. Swift, F., James the First, 318. Switzerland, 43-44, 987, 286, 288, 290, 292. Sybel, H., Entstehung des deutschen Konigthums, 136; Geschichte des ersten Kreuzzuges, 205. Sybel, H., and Sickel, T., Kaiserur- kunden, 249. Svdow, O., Tancred, 200. Sykes, M., Caliph's last heritage, 329. Symbolism, 353; in Gothic art, 471, 472. Symon, J., and Bensusan, S., Renais- sance, 308. Symonds, J., Boccaccio, 310; Dante, 480 ; Life of Cellini, 308 ; Renais- sance, 306; Short history of the re- naissance, 305 ; Wine, women and song, 447. Symonds, M., and Gordon, L., Perugia, 302. Synge, M., Book of discovery, 258. INDEX 545 Syria and the Normans, 200. Syrians in Gaul, 357, 359. Table chronologique des dip!6mes, 975 note. Tables of events and date, 68-76. Tacitus, Germania, 110. Tafel, G., Komnenen, 200. Tafel, G., and Thomas, G., Urkunden: veneto - byzantinische Beziehungen, 330. Taine, H., Philosophic de 1'art, 312. Talamo, S., Aristotelismo, 398. Tamassia, N., Lanfranc, 382 ; Saint Francis, 224. Tamerlane, 324, 328. Tanered of Hauteville, sons of, 196. Tangl, M., Briefe des Bonifatius, 129; Taxenwesen, 238. Tanner, T., Notitia monastica, 226, Tanon, L., Inquisition, 403. Tappan, E., Feudal times, 264. Tardif, A., Droit canonique, 425. Tardif. J., Etymologies d'Isidore, 359; Institutions de la France, 137. Tarducci, F., Francesco d'Assisi, 229. Tarducci, T., Gregorio Magno, 124. Tavenor-Perry, J., Didanderie, 477. Taylor, A., Aristotle, 397. Taylor, H., Antecedents of the quattro- cento, 384; Classical heritage, 334; Medieval mind, 756. Taylor, I., Transmission of. books, 466. Taylor, W., History of education, 59 note. Tenchers, periodicals for, 184—186. Tell legend, 286, 288, 291, 292. Templars, 202, 208, 243. Temple-Leader, G., and Marcotti, G., Giovanni Acuto, 298. Ten Brink, B., and Scherer, W., Quell- en und Forschungen, 731. Tennyson, A., St. Simeon Stylites, 118. Terry, C.. History of Europe, 380. Terry, S.. Financing the Hundred Years' War, 280. Tertiaries of St. Francis, 223, 230. Tessier, ,T., Etienne Marcel, 281; Quatrieme croisade, 206. Testa, G., Communes of Lombardy, 217. Tpuffpl, R., Persohnlichkeitsschilderung} 460. Teiiffpl, W., Riimische Literatur, 336. Teulet. A., Lavettes, 164. Teutonic Knights, 202, 207, 213, 221. Textbooks, 354-357. 362-382. 405- 416. 428-432, 562-569, 629-631. Textual criticism in thirteenth century, 411, 413, 415. Thall6czy, L., Geschichte Bosniens und Serbiens, 716. Thaner, F., Abalard, 394. Thatcher, O., Adrian IV, 217; Latin sources of first crusade, 205. Thatcher, O., and McNeal, E., Source book, 392. Thatcher, O., and Schwill, F., Europe in the middle age, 381. Thayer, J., Evidence, 161. Thayer, W., Venice, 296. Theiner, A., Codex diplomaticus, 960 note. Theiner, A., and Miklosich, F., Monu- menta spectanta ad uniorum ecclesi- arum, 330. Theloe, H., Ketzerverfolgungen, 403. Theocracy, ideas about, 458, 459. Theoderic of Freiburg, 427, 432. Theodora, 113-115. Theodore of Tarsus, 127, 361, 364. Theodoric, the Ostrogoth, 108-111, 132. Theodoricus de Niem, De schismate, 275. Theodoricus Teutonicus, De iride, 433. Theodulf, bishop of. Orleans, 759 note, 364, 367. Theologischer Jahresberieht, 55. Theology, and science, 739-748 ; and philosophy, 405—410. Theophano, 169, 172. Theremin, W., Kirche und Staat, 272. Thesaurus linguae latinae, 309; novus anecdotorum, 951. TheVenin, M., Textes, 164. Thibault, M., Louis XI, 284. Thiel, J., Bernhard von Clairvaux, 394. Thieme, TJ., and Becker, F., Lexikon der bildenden Kunstler, 473. Thierry, A., Attila, 159; Re'cits de 1'histoire romaine, 110; Re'cits de temps me'rovingiens, 137; Recueil du tiers £tat, 258; Tiers elat, 251. Thimme, W., Augustin, 342; Augustins geistige Entwickelung, 342. Thirteenth century in history of culture, 384. Thode, H., Franz von Assisi, 230; Michelangelo, 314. Thoemes, N., Albertus Magnus, 408. Thomas, E., Philobiblon of Richard de Bury, 465. Thomas, G., Florence, 299. Thomas, P., Morceaux choisis, 451. Thomas a Kempis, De imitatione Christ!, 409. Thomas Aquinas, 405-410, 458, 462 ; Of God and his creatures, 407; Opera omnia, 410 ; Suinmn theologica, 407. 546 INDEX Thomas of Eccleston, De adventu Frat- rinii minorum, 226. Thommen, R., Schmitz-Kallenberff, L., and Steinacker, H., Urkundenlehre, 240 note. Thompson. A., English monasteries, 227: English parish church, 236; Military architecture. 262. Thompson. E., Handbook of palaeogra- phv, 212: Illuminated manuscripts, 466; Introduction to palaeography, 212. Thompson. J., Commerce of France, 255: German church, 220; Louis VI, 244: Missi dominici, 167: Refer- ence studies. 210: Vergil, 351. Thompson, S.. Rose of the winds, 258. Thompson. T., Aristotle, 399. Thompson, V., Russia and Scandinavia, 154. Thorhecke. A.. Cassiodorns, 343 ; Hei- delberg, 444. Thorndike. L., Adi-lard of Bath, 428: Conceptions of magic, 430; Magic in intellectual history, 430: Medieval Europe. 381 note: Medieval thought. 266; Natural science. 427: Roger Bacon and experimental method, 428; Roger Bacon and gunpowder, 263 ; True Roger Bacon, 428. Thousand and one nights tales. 379. Thoyts, E.. How to decipher old manu- scripts. 212 note. Thubert. E.. Northmen, 153. Thudichum. F., Papsttnm. 270. Thurot. C.. De Alexandri de Villa Dei, 448 : Doctrines grammaticales, 448 ; Universite de Paris, 440. Ticknor, O., Spanish literature, 813 note. Tiede. C., Beziehungen Carls des Grossen zu Ost-Rom, 190. Tilemann, H.. Franziskus von Assisi, 229. Timur, 324, 328; Mulfaz al Timury, 328. Tinti. L., Odorico, 240. Tiraboschi, G., Letteratura italiana, 81 I. Tironian notes. 226-229. Tixeront. J.. History of dogmas, 473. Tocco, F.. Eresia, 402. Toeche. T., Heinrich VI. 218. To'plv, R., Anatomie, 435. Tomassetti, G., Campagna romana. 348. Tomek, E., Reform der Kloster, 227. Tomek. W., Johann Zizka. 274. Tommasini, O., Roma, 347. Toniolo, G.. Potenza economics di Firenze. 256. Tonna-Barthct, A., Juana de Arco, 283. Torre, A. della, Accademia platomrn, 311. Torreanaz, conde de, Consejos del rey, 319. Tosti, L., Bonifazio VIII, 271; Con- cilio di Constanza, 273 ; San Bene- detto, 120. Totila, 113. Touflet, J., Millenaire de la Normandie, 198. Tougard, A., Helli'-nisme, 415. Toulouse, manuscripts in, 236: uni- versity of, 439, 442. Toustain and Tassin, Nouvoau traitu de diplomatique, 238 note. Tout, T., Empire and papacy, 329 note; Firearms, 263. Toutey, E., Charles le Teine>aire, 284. Towns, 247, 251-253. Toynbee, P., Dante Alighieri, 480; Dante studies, 480 ; Dictionary of Dante, 483. Tozer, H., Church and eastern empire, 190; Franks in the Peloponnesus, 326; Greek-speaking population of Italy, 415. Trail, F., Italian literature, 309. Traill, H., Social England, 735. Transactions of the Royal historical sociotv, 903. Transition period 400-600, types of the, 339-344. Translations and reprints, 393. Translations from the Arabic, 373,377; of Aristotle, 396, 399. Trappists. 222, 227. Traub, E., Kreuzzugsplan Heinrichs VI, 206. Traube, L., Lateinische Philologie, 397; O Roma nobilis, 346 : Perrona Scot- torum, 363; Zur Palaographie, 218. Trench, R., Lectures on church his- tory. 438. Trevelyan, G., Wveliffe, 273. Troels-Lund. T., Himmelsbild, 821. Troeltsch, E., Augustin. 342 ; Renais- sance, 308: Soziallehren, 816 note. Trollope, T.. Florence, 299. Troubadours, 453, 454, 456. Trova. C., Storia d'ltalia, 614; Studi agli Annali del Muratori, 612 note. Truce of God. 161, 163. Tschackert. P., Peter von Ailli, 273. Tiirnau, D., Rabanus Maurns, 371. Tuetey, A.. Ecorcheurs, 282. Tunison, 8.. Dramatic traditions, 253. Turks, Seljuk, 186, 191; Ottoman, 324, 327, 329. Turmel, J., St. Jerdme, 337. INDEX 547 Turner, S., Charlemagne, 140; Ger- manic constitution, 162. Turner, W., History of philosophy, 822 note; Irish teachers, 366; John the Scot, 369. Tuttle, H., Prussia, 596 note. Twelfth and thirteenth centuries in history of culture, 384. Two Sicilies, Kingdom of, 195, 197, 199, 212-213, 218-219. Uebersicht der staatswissenschaftlichen Literatur, 60 note. Ueberweg, P., History of philosophy, 822. Ughelli, F., Italia sacra, 464. Uhde. C., Baudenkmaler in Spanien, 379. Uhlhorn, G., Conflict of Christianity, 338; Liebestatigkeit, 239. Uhlirz, K., Jnhrbiicher, Otto II und Otto III, 172. Underbill, E., Mvsticism, 409. Undset, I., Viking ship, 154. Universities. 83-84. 437-445. Unsere religiosen Erzieher, 417. Unwin, G., Gilds, 253. Urban II and the first crusade, 201, 204. Urban life, 247, 251-253. Urbat, R., Latein der Historia Fran- corum, 360. Urquhart, W., Francesco Sforza, 298. Usener, H., Anecdoton Holderi, 343. Usher, A., Grain trade, 256. Usiiisrer, R., Deutsch-Danische Ge- schichte, 330. Uspenski, M., Russie et Byzance, 158. Vacandard, E., Abelard, 394; Arnauld de Brescia, 218: Divorce de Louis le Jeune, 244 ; Etudes de critique et d'histoire religiouso, 420; Inquisi- tion. 401; L'idolatrie en Gaule, 359; St. Bernard, 393 ; Saint Bernard et la royaute, 244; Saint Ouen, 361; Scola du palais, 359. Vacant, A., Morale a Nieomaque, 399. Vacant, A., and Mangenot, E., Diction- naire, 109. Valdarnini, A., Esperienza in Bacone, 432. Valenti, .T.. Roger Bacon, 431. Valentin, L.. Saint Prosper, 336. Valin, L., Due de Xormandie, 198. V:illa, Laurentius, 304, 312, 314; De f;ilso Donationo Constantini, 314. VaHance, A.. Colleges of Oxford, 443. Vallet de Viriville, A., Charles VII, 282. Vallombrosians, 222. Valois, N., Conseil du roi, 281 ; De arte scribendi epistolas, 419; France et le grand schisme, 272 ; Guillaume d'Auvergne, 441 ; Jean de Jandun, 289; Pape et le concile, 272; Prag- matique Sanction de Bourges, 274 ; Rythme des bulles pontificales, 419. Vambery, A., Central Asia, 158j Hun- gary, 704; Magyaren, 159; Tiirken- volk, 330. Van Cauwenbergh, P., Moines d'Egypte, 119. Vandals, 108, 112, 113. Van den Gheyn, J., Charles Martel, 136. Van der Essen, L., Belgium, 555; Vitae des saints, 360. Vanderkindere, L., Artevelde, 281 ; Principautes beiges, 552. Van der Linden, H., Histoire de Bel- gique, 551 ; Normands, 153. Van der Linden, H., and Obreen, H., Album historique, 205. Van Dyke, J., Painting, 307. Van Dyke, P., Renascence, 269; Re- nascence portraits, 308. Van Milligen, A., Byzantine Constanti- nople, 663. Van Weddingen, A., St'. Anselme, 382. Varangians, 151. Varese, C., Genova, 299. Vasari, G., Lives, 307. Vast, H., Bessarion, 311; Prise de Constantinople, 327. Vatican, 5 note. Vaucelle, E., Collegiale de Martin de Tours, 361. Vaughan, E., English universities, 443. Vaughan, R., Mystics, 409; Thomas of Aquin, 406. Vedel, W., Heldenleben, 262. Venantius Fortunatus, 358, 360. Venice, 294, 296, 298, 302, 303. Venturi, A., Arte italiana, 473 ; Pit- tura veneziana, 313. Verdun, treaty of, 165. Vere, G., Lives of Vasari, 307. Vergangenheit und Gegenwart, 186. Vernet, Cathares, 403. Veroffentlichungen aus dem kirchen- historischen Seminar zu Munchen, 496. Verona, 302. Verri, P., Storia di Milano, 298. Vespasiano da Bisticci, Uomini illustri, 314. Vetault, A., Charlemagne, 142. Veterum scriptorum et monutnentorum amplissima collectio, 952. 548 INDEX Vetusta monuments, 202 note. Viard, J., Philippe de Valois, 281. Viard, P., Dime eccle'siastique, 238. Vicini, Modena, 302. Victorines, 222. Vidal, J., Inquisition, 403 ; Jean Gal- land, 403. Vidal de la Blache, P., Atlas, 126; Geographic de la France, 146. Vidier, A., Repertoire methodique, 165 note. Vieillard, C., Gilles de Corbeil, 435. Vigener, F., Geschichtschreiber, 460. Vigfusson, G., and Powell, F., Corpus poeticum, 154; Origines Islandicae, 154. Vigna, L., San Anselmo, 382. "Vignati, C., Lega Lombarda, 217. Vikings, 150-155. Vildhaut, H., Quellenkunde, 31. Villani, G., Chroniche, 296. Villari, P., Barbarian invasions, 615; Florentine history, 296; Machiavelli, 295; Mediaeval Italy, 616; Savona- rola, 296; Storia politica d'ltalia, 599. Villari, P., and Casanova, E., Prediche e scritta di Savonrola, 302. Villehardouin, Chronicle of fourth cru- sade, 204, 458. Villemain, A., Gregoire VII, 182. Vincent, J., Municipal problems, 251. Vincent, J. H.. Historical research, 67. Vincent, M., Hildebrand, 182. Vincent of Beauvais, 411, 412, 414, 426, 435, 458. Vinogradoff, P., Roman law, 422. Viollet, P., Droit public, 529: Etablis- sements de Saint Louis, 246 ; His- toire du droit frangais, 529 note. Viollet-le-Duc, E.. Annals of a fortress, 261 : Cit6 de Carcassonne, 262 ; Dic- tionnaire de 1'architecture, 475; Dic- tionnaire du mobilier, 477 : Discourses on architecture, 475; Military archi- tecture, 262. Visconti family, 293, 298. Visigoths, 108, 110, 111, 126, 129, 132; kings of, 415-711 A.D., 109; faith, morals and learning of, 357— 361. Visitations, episcopal, 233, 240. Vitruvius, Ten books of architecture,, 307. Vitry, P., and Briere, G., Sculpture frangaise, 477. Vittorino da Feltre. 304. 306. Vitzthum, G., Pariser Miniaturmalerei, 466. Vivell, C., Gregorianische Gesang, 125. Vizantijskij vremenik, 175. Vizantijskoe obozri^nie, 175 note. Vladimir, the "Clovis" of Russia, 156. Vlasto, E., Derniers jours de Con- stantinople, 330. Vogelin, J., Atlas der Schweiz, 288. Vogel, E., Armarius, 468. Vogel, M., and Gardthausen, V., Griech- ische Schreiber, 415. Vogel, "W., Normannen, 153'; Seeschif- fahrt, 256. Vogl, S., Physik Roger Bacos, 431. Vogt, A., Basile I", 190. Vogt, F., and Koch, M., Deutsche Lit- er at ur, 806. Voigt, E., Lesebuch des Triviums, 448. Voigt, G., Enea Silvio, 296; Wieder- belebung, 306. Voigt, H., Adalbert von Prag, 221; Brun von Querfurt, 221. Voigt, J., Hildebrand, 183. Volk, O., Kreuzzugsidee, 209. Volpe, G., Comuni italiani, 217. Volsunga saga, 152. Vom Mittelalter zur Reformation, 750. Vorreformationsgeschichtliche Forsch- ungen, 270. Vossler, K., Frankreichs Kultur, 766; Gottliche Komodie, 482. Voyage litteraire de deux Benedictines, 799. Vuitry, A., Regime financier de la France, 245. Vulliemin, L., Confederation suisse, 291. Vulliety, H., Suisse, 290. Waal, Kirchengeschichtliche Festgabe, 421. Wace, H., and Piercy, W., Dictionary of Christian biography, 94 note. Wadding, L., Annales Minorum. 228 ; Scriptores ordinis minorum, 232. Wadstein, E., Eschatologische Ideen- gruppe, 356. Wachter, A., Verfall des Griechentums, 327. Waern, C., Mediaeval Sicily, 197. Wagner, A., Normannen, 200. Wagner, P., Messe, 239. Wailly, N., Paleographie, 222. Waitz, G., Jahrbiicher, Heinrich I, 168; Lehnwesen, 162; Vassalitat, 162; Verfassungsgeschichte, 578. Walafrid Strabo, 368, 371, 372. Waldensians, 400, 403. Waliszewski, K., Litterature russe, 814 note. Walker, W., Philip Augustus, 244. INDEX 549 Wallon, H., Jeanne d'Arc, 283 ; Saint Louis, 245. Walser, E., Christentum und Antike, 312; Poggius, 310. Walsh, J., Churchmen in science, 429 ; Education: how old the new, 435; Makers of medicine, 435; Popes and science, 429; Thirteenth, greatest of centuries, 385. Walter, F., Fontes iuris ecclesiastic!, 425. Walter, J., Lexicon diplomaticum, 245. Walter, J. v., Franz von Assisi, 229; Robert von Abrissel, 227. Walter of Henley, Husbandry, 258. War, bibliography of, 61. Ward, C., Church vaulting, 475. Warfare, 185, 189, 190, 209, 260- 263. Warner, G., Reproductions from illu- minated manuscripts, 467. Warr, C., Writings of St. Francis, 225. Watson, C., Jerusalem, 209. Watson, J., Christianity and idealism, 354. Wattenbach, W., Deutschlands Ge- schichtsquellen, 29; Germanisierung der Grenzmarken, 220 ; Iter Austria- cum, or Briefsteller, 419; Palaeo- graphie, 212 note; Profaner Ryth- mer, 449 ; Schriftwesen, 464. Watterich, J., Pontificum Romanorum vitae, 961 note. Watts, H., Christian recovery of Spain, 318. Watts, W., Confessions of St. Augus- tine, 341. Waxed tablets, 462, 468. Way, A., Song of Roland, 454. Webb, C., John of Salisbury, 412; Policraticus of John of Salisbury, 416; Scotus Erigena, 371; Studies in natural theology, 8 1 5 note. Weber, G., Weltgeschichte, 317. Weber, M., Handelsgesellschaften, 255. Wechssler, E., Frauendienst, 263. Wedgewood, E., Memoirs of the lord of Joinville, 204. Wegele, F., Historiographie, 106. Weil, G., Chalifen, 148. Weimann, K., Sittliche Begriffe in Gregor von Tours, 360. Weingarten, H., Zeittafeln zur Kirchen- geschichte, 416. Weinhold, K., Deutsche Frauen, 263. Weise, G., Konigtum und Bischofswahl, 178. Weiss, A., Aeneas Sylvius, 296. Weissenborn, F., Gerbert, 372. Welch, A., Anselm, 381; Six mediaeval women, 370. Wellhausen, J., Arabisches Reich, 147; Muhammed in Medina, 150. Wells, C., Charlemagne, 140. Welschinger, H., Strasbourg, 168. Weltanschauung, edited by W. Dilthey, 818. Weltanschauung, medieval, 8 1 4-82 I , 352-357. Welter, J., Exempla, 451. Weltgeschichte, by Helmolt, 315; bj J. v. Pflugk-Harttung, 318. Weltgeschichte in Karakterbildern, 327. Wenck, K., Bonifaz VIII, 271; Franz von Assisi, 229; Heilige Elizabeth, 272; Heinrich VII, 289; Konrad von Gelnhausen, 273. Wendland, P., Hellenistisch-romische Kultur, 339. Wendt, G., Germanisierung, 220. Wenzel, 287, 291. Wenzelburger, K., Niederlande, 559. Wergeland, A., Slavery, 163 ; Working classes, 250. Wer ist's? 95 note. Werken uitgegeven door het Historisch Genootschap te Utrecht, 977 note. Werminghoff, A., Deutsche Orden, 221; Kirchenverfassung, 463; National- kirchlich Bestrebungen, 274; Ver- fassungsgeschichte der deutschen Kirche, 463 note. Werner, A., Bonifacius, 131. Werner, K., Alcuin, 367; Beda, 364; Duns Scotus, 409; Gerbert, 372; Roger Baco, 432. Wernle, P., Renaissance, 308. Werunsky, E., Karl IV, 291. Wessely, J., Ikonographie Gottes, 357. Wessenberg, J., Kirchenversammlungen, 272. West, A., Alcuin, 350. West, G., Gothic architecture, 476. West, W., Modern world, 382. Westcott, R., Dionysius the Areopagite, 354. Westermann, W., Economic basis of de- cline of ancient culture, 334. Westlake, N., Portraiture of St. Francis, 231. Weston, J., Romance cycle, 143. Westwood, J., Palaeographia sacra pic- toria, 467. Wetzer, H., and Welte,, B., Kirchen- lexikon, 113. Wheeler, C., Divine comedy, 481. Wheeler, E., Women, 482 note. Wherry, E., Quran, 147. 550 INDEX Whetham, W. and C., Science and the human mind, 745. Whewell, W., Inductive sciences, 429. Whishaw, B. and E., Arabic Spain, 379. Whitcomb, M., Source book of the re- naissance, 307. White, A., Warfare of science with the- ology. 739. White, H., Vulgate, 416. Whitwell. R., Italian bankers, 254. Who's who, 95. Wiart, R., Precaria, 162. Wickersheimer, E., FacultS de m£decine, 435; Medecins, 435. Wickhoff, F., Illuminierten Hand- schriften, 467. Wioksteed, P., Chroniche of Villani, 296; Convivio of Dante, 481; Dante and Aquinas, 480; Early lives of Dante, 481; Paradiso, 481. Wiolif, 267, 273. Widukind, 138. Wieck, H., Die Teufel, 355. Wiedemann, E., Alchemie bei den Ara- bern, 377; Chimie bei den Arabern. 377; Geschichte des Kompasses, 377; Naturwissensehaften bei den Arabern, 377. Wiel, A., House of Savoy, 302; Navy of Venice, 296; Verona, 302. Wieschoff, J., Bettelorden, 228. Wiesener, W., Kirche in Pommern, 221. Wietersheim, E., Volkerwanderung, 111. Wilde, A., Ecoles du palais, 359; Learn- ing in Gaul, 359. Wilken, F., Kreuzziige, 205. Wilkins, T., Niederlandische Handel, 256. Willard, J., English universities, 443. Willemaers, Le Cid, 319. Willert, P., Louis XI, 284. Willett, H., Robert Grosseteste, 431. William, E., Lombard towns, 218. William of Champeaux, 391, 395. William of Conches, 759 note. William of Jumieges, Gesta Norman- norum, 200. William of Ockam, Works against the papacy, 292. Williams, H., Christianity, 129. Williams, H. S., Manuscripts, 234. Williamson. J., St. Boniface, 131. Willibald, Life of Boniface, 129. Willis, R. and Clark, J., Cambridge, 443. Willmann. O., Didaktik, 837. Willson, T., Church in Norway, 725. Wilmans, R., Jahrbiicher, Otto III, 172. Wilser, L., Germanen, 111. Wimmer, E., Adelheid, 172. Wimmer, J., Pflanzenleben, 430. Winckler, A., Gregor VII und die Nor- mannen, 200. Windelband, W., History of philosophy, 823. Wink(>lmann, E., Angelsachsen, 313 note; Friedrich II, 219; Philip]) von Schwaben, 218. Winkler, A., Hnnse, 257. Winter, F., Cistercienser, 227; Pra- monstratenser, 227. Winterfeld, P., Hrotsvithae opera, 372; Hrotsvits Stellung, 372. Wirth, A., Geschichte Asiens, 680. Wisbaum, W., Gregor der Grosse, 124. Wishart, A., Short history of monks, 480. Wislicenus, W., Chronologic, 264; Der Kalender, 265. Wissenschaft und Bildung, 948. Witch persecutions, 401, 404.' Witelo, 427, 432. Withingtoh. TS7, Medicine, 434. Witigis, 113. Witte, H., Germanisation unseres Os- tens, 220. Witte, K.. Essays on Dante, 480. Wittmann, M., Avencebrol, 376; Thomas von Aquin, 408. Witzel, P., De Fr. Rogero Bacon, 415. Wolfflin, H., Klassische Kunst, 312. Woermann, C., Geschichte der Kunst, 473. Worterbuch der Volfeswirtschaft, 116 note. Wolf, G., Studium der neueren Ge- schichte, 66. Wolf, R., Astronomic, 433. Wolff, M., Valla, 312. Wolff, O.. Mongolen, 328. Wolfsgruber, C., Augustinus, 342 ; Gregor der Grosse, 124. Wolkan, R., Aeneas Sylvius, 314. Wollschack, T., Gregor I, 124. Woltmann, A. and Woermann, K., His-. tory of painting, 313. Women of chivalry, 260, 268. Wood. A., Oxford, 443. Woodcock, C., Saint Anthony of Padua, 228. Woodhouse, F., Military orders, 208; Monasticism, 486. Woods. F.. Heredity in rovaltv. 282. Woodward. E., Christianity and nation- alism, 116. Woodward. .T. and Burnett, G., Her- aldry, 286. Woodward. W.. Studies in education. 306; Vittorino da Feltre, 306. I INDEX 551 Wooley, R., Coronation rites, 339. Woolf, C., Bartolus of Sassoferrato, 461. Workman, H., Christian thought, 757; Hus, 273; Monastic ideal, 481. World histories, 3J3-327. World's epoch-makers, 325. Worms, Concordat of, 181, 184. Worsaae, J., Pre-historv of north, 153. Wostry, W., Albrecht II, 291. Wozasek, B., Norbert, 227. Wrangham, D., Liturgical poetry, 451. Wright, C., French literature, 454. Wright, G., Asiatic Russia, 158. Wright, R., Respublica Romana, 176. Wright, T., Anglo-Latin satirical poets, 451; Archaeological subjects, 754: De naturis rerum by Neckam, 427 ; De triumphis ecclesiae of John Gar- land, 451; Domestic manners, 264; Early travels in Palestine, 210; Homes of other days, 264; Latin poems of Walter Mapes, 450 ; Latin stories, 451 ; Popular science, 430 ; Vocabularies, 448. Wright, T. and Halliwell, J., Reliquae antiquae, 933. Wroth, W., Byzantine coins, 191. Wrottlesley, G., Cr6cy, 280. Wiirschmidt, J., Regenbogen of Dietrich yon Freiburg, 433. Wiistenfeld, F., Academien der Araber, 378; Arabische Aerzte, 377; Ge- schichtsehreiber der Araber, 3'78 ; Uebersetzungen arabischer Werke, 377. Wulf, M., History of medieval phil- osophy, 827; Philosophic scholastique dans les Pays-Bas, 825; Scholastic- ism, 406. Wulff, F., Petrarque, 310. Wurm, H., Albornoz, 297; Papstwahl, 453. Wyatt, M., Art of illuminating, 466. Wylie, J., Council of Constance, 269. Xenopol, A., Roumains, 709. Year-book of the scientific and learned societies of Great Britain, 209. Yellin, D. and Abrahams, I., Maimon- ides, 867. Young, G., E«st and west, 349: Medici, 300. Young, K., Passion play, 253. Young, N., Rome, 345. Yriavte. C., Florence, 300. Yule, H., Book of Marco Polo, 249; Cathay, 241. Yver, G., Commerce dans 1'Italie, 256. Zachariae von Lingenthal, K., Geschichte des griechisch-romischen Rechts, 672. Zangemeister, C., Orosius, 341. Zappert, G., Virgil's Fortleben, 351. Zarnke, F., Priester Johannes, 240. Zechbauer, F., Inquisitionsverfahren, 404. Zehetbauer, F., Kirchenrecht, 130. Zeiller, J., Thomas d'Aquin, 462. Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung, 183; fur christliche Kunst, 478 ; fur franz- osische Sprache, 456 ; fur Geschichte der- Erziehung, 1 82 ; fur Kirchenge- schichte, 176; fiir Kirchenrecht, 425; fur Kulturgeschichte, 1 69 note ; fiir romanische Philologie, 456. Zeller, B., L'histoire de France, 976. Zeller, E., Aristotle, 397. Zeller, J., Frederic II, 219; Histoire d'Allemagne, 572 : L'empire german- ique et 1'eglise, 572 ; L'empire ger- manique sous les Hohenstaufen, 216— 217: Otton le Grand, 171. Zeller-Werdmiiller, H., Burganlagen, 263. Zeno, eastern emperor, 108. Zerffi, G., Mathias Hunyady, 326. Zeumer, K., Formulae Merovingici, 164; Goldene Bulle, 291 ; Heiliges rom- isches Reich, 502; Quellensammlung, 985 note; Westgothische Gesetzge- bung, 359. Zeuthen, H., Mathematik, 436. Zharski, E., Slawenkriege, 158. Ziegelbauer. R., Historia rei literariae S. Benedict!, 468. Ziegler, T., Padagogik, 839. Zielinski, T., Antike und wir, 309; Cicero, 351. Zimmer, H., Beriihrungen der Iren, 363; Celtic church, 129; Handelsverbind- ungen Westgalliens mit Irland, 363; Irische Heldensage, 363; Irish ele- ment, 128; Keltische Studien, 363. Zimmer, Helen, Hansa towns, 249. Zimmermann, A., Stenographic, 229. Zimmermann, H., Papstliche Legation, 237. Zimmermann, M., Giotto, 313. Zingerle, J., Geographie, 259. Zinkeisen, J., Osmanisches Reich, 329. Zirbt. C., Bibliografle cesko historic, 47 note. Ziska, John, 268, 274. Zockler, O., Askese und Monchthum, 484; Beziehungen zwischen Theologie und Naturwissenschaften, 748. Ziipf, L., Heiligenleben, 179; Margaretha Ebner, 409. Zoepffel, R., Papstwahlen, 236. 552 INDEX Zoology, 434. Zorn, P., Staat und Kirche in Norwegen, 330. Zotenberg, M., Visigoths et Arabes en France, 149. Zumbini, B., Petrarca, 310. Zur Geschichte der Costume, 195. Zwemer, S., Raymund Lull, 240. Zwiedeneck-Siidenhorst, H., Bibliothek deutscher Oeschichte, 660; Venedig, 298. Zycha, A., Ursprung der Stadte in Boh- men, 700 note. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SYLLABUS SERIES 1. Economics 1. Introduction to Economics. Topical Outline and References. 1905. [Eevised, 1910.] Price, 50 cents. 3. Economics SB. Money. Topics and References. 1906. Price, 50 cents. 6. Economics 43. History of Social Reform Movements. Topics and References. 1907. Price, 50 cents. 7. English IA. Sections I-II. Narration and Description. Outline of the Course. 1908. Price, 10 cents. 11. Mathematics. Syllabus of Mathematics for Engineering Students. 1909. Price, 5 cents. [Revised, 1910.] 12. Anthropology 20. Outlines of Ethnology. 1909. Price, 10 cents. 13. 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