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Full Description
The fourth series of Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Sources (first published in 1964 as Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History) provides a unique venue for scholars to offer fresh readings of evidence from the period 400-1600. This annual is dedicated to the fundamental scholarship of analysis and interpretation led by direct engagement with the sources—written, visual, or material—in any form, from editions, translations, and commentaries to reports, notes, and reflections. By foregrounding the most basic approach of working outwards from the evidence, the annual aims to foster conversations across disciplines, regions, and periods, as well as to become a reference point for original approaches and new discoveries.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. "(Re-)Introducing Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Sources: A New Journal (Series) with an Old Purpose," by Graham Barrett and Louise J. Wilkinson
Part One. Texts and Translations
Chapter 2. "Pseudo-Augustinian Letters to Boniface: A New Critical Edition and Commentary," by Eduardo Fabbro
Chapter 3. "An Overlooked Early Redaction of the Translatio of St. Bartholomew to Benevento (Cambridge, Pembroke College, MS 91, fol. 110r-v)," by Ildar Garipzanov and C. Philipp E. Nothaft
Chapter 4. "Parks, Pleas, and Pastures: The Extents of the Marshal Earls of Pembroke's Lands in England and Wales, ca. 1247," by John Marshall
Chapter 5. "A Letter on King Richard III of England: Diego de Valera's Report to the Catholic Monarchs (1486)," by Michael F. Peters, Jr.
Part Two. Critiques and Commentaries
Chapter 6. "Keeping Up Appearances: Penance and Peace-Making in the Plantagenet Family at the End of the 'War Without Love,' 1174-1175," by S. D. Church
Chapter 7. "Heraldry and the Church in England, ca. 1300," by Bridget Wells-Furby
Chapter 8. "Re-Reading the Florentine Literary Dissent of the Fifteenth Century: The Medici Government and the Imaginary of Exile," by Denise Brazzale
Chapter 9. "Atop the Pyramid: The Queens of Medieval England, Then and Now," by Joel T. Rosenthal
Part Three. Reflections
Chapter 10. "Oxford, 1967-1975: Crucible of Late Antiquity?," by Roger Collins



