A Companion to Ostrogothic Italy

(ff) #1

The Heroine and the Historian 315


Searle, E., Predatory Kinship and the Creation of Norman Power, 840–1066, Berkeley
& Los Angeles 1988.
Shanzer, D., ‘Two Clocks and a Wedding: Theoderic’s Diplomatic Relations with the
Burgundians’, Romanobarbarica 14 (1984), 225–58.
Stewart, M.E., “Contests Of Andreia In Procopius’ Gothic Wars,” Parekbolai 4 (2014),
21–54.
Vitiello, M., “ ‘Nourished at the Breast of Rome’: The Queens of Ostrogothic Italy and
the Education of the Roman Elite,’ Rheinisches Museum für Philologie 149 (2006),
398–412.
——— , Theodahad: A Platonic King at the Collapse of Ostrogothic Italy, Toronto 2014.
Wemple, S.F., Women in Frankish Society: Marriage and the Cloister, 500–900,
Philadelphia 1981.
Whately, C., “Militarization, or the Rise of a Distinct Military Culture? The East Roman
Elite in the 6th Century AD”, in S. O’Brien and D. Boatright (eds.), Warfare and
Society in the Ancient Mediterranean: Papers arising from a colloquium held at the
University of Liverpool, 13th June 2008, Oxford 2013, pp. 49–57.
Wolfram, H., History of the Goths, trans. Thomas Dunlap, Berkeley 1999.
Wood, I.N., “Clermont and Burgundy, 511–34”, Nottingham Medieval Studies 32 (1989),
119–25.
Ziche, H., “Abusing Theodora: Sexual and Political Discourse in Procopius”, Βυζαντιακὰ
30 (2012–13), 311–323.

Free download pdf