Key Figures in Medieval Europe. An Encyclopedia
HUGO VON TRIMBERG (1230/1240–ca. 1313) Documented (1290) as teacher (magister/rector scola- rum) of St. Gangolfstift in Teuersta ...
in preference to a running commentary. In effect, this form signaled a shift away from simply commenting on Lombard’s text to re ...
on the basis of the Italian version, pp. 137–150. The latter is revised, with new introductory material, in Elizabeth Petroff, t ...
I IBN ADRET, SOLOMON (ca. 1233–ca. 1310) Solomon ibn Adret was the most important rabbinical authority in Spain in his period, a ...
IBN DAUD, ABRAHAM ̄ (ca. 1110 – 1180?) Abraham ibn Da ̄ud, who was born in al-Andalus about 1110 or later and died (supposedly a ...
In 1090 the Almoravid invasion broke the sociopoliti- cal stability of Granada, whose Jewish community was devastated for the se ...
philosophical doctrines farthest removed from the truth of Islam, such as the cynics for their rejection of any truth, and athei ...
social organization, and beliefs and use critical judgment in dealing always with all the versions of the past. As such, history ...
themes. His poems, even at their most conventional (the long panegyrics), are well crafted, often playfully evok- ing the conven ...
tion or culled from the sources he consulted in libraries throughout the many countries he visited. Among works attributed to hi ...
IBN ZUHR, ABU MARW ̄^ AN ‘ABD ̄ AL-M^ ALIK (1092?–1161?) ̄ Called Avenzoar in Latin translations, he was one of the most importa ...
again extinguished on earth”). Immanuel responds per le rime (with matching rhymes) in Io, che trassi le lag- rime del fondo (“I ...
claims of his ward, young Frederick II, who ultimately secured the imperial title, in part as a consequence of Innocent’s suppor ...
pope, even though they themselves produced two popes (Innocent IV and later Adrian V) and several cardinals. After studying cano ...
on July 17, 1385. Charles VI had fallen in love with her at their fi rst meeting on July 14 and married her without a marriage c ...
as “Esidre,” he was invoked as a national patron (e.g., three times by Alfonso VI in the Poema de Mío Cid). He was named doctor ...
...
J JACOB VAN MAERLANT (ca. 1230–ca. 1290) A Flemish poet, Maerlant came from Bruxambacht, or, the “Freedom of Bruges” (het Brugse ...
derived his text from his immediate source, the Liber de Natura Rerum (Book of Natural Things) by Thomas of Cantimpré. The besti ...
Among the literary works Joacobus wrote or compiled, the earliest and most famous is a Legenda sanctorum aurea (Golden Legend). ...
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