1888-3931
I Part. The past interrogated and unmasked
- Rewriting the memory. Twenty-fiver years of Navarrese historiography (6th to 12th centuries) / Fermín Miranda García
II Part. The past studied and measured
- Syriac apocalyptic and the body politic: from individual salvation to the fate of the state. Notes on seventh century texts / Pablo Ubierna
- The War of the two Pedros (1356-1366): Aragon's successful administrative strategy of asymmetrical defense / Donald J. Kagay
- The Holy Roman Emperor in the toils of the french protocol : the visit of Charles IV to France / Jana Fantysová-Matejková
- A late medieval knight reflecting on his public life : Hugo de Urriés (C. 1405-C. 1493), diplomacy and translating the classics / Carlos Conde Solares
- Lasting falls and wishful recoveries : crusading in the Black Sea Region after the fall of Constantinople / Alexandru Simon
- "What's taters, precious?" : food in Tolkien's "The lord of the rings" / Paul H. Freedman, Mark Anderson
- Medieval Baltimore : using american medievalism to teach about the european middle ages / Rita Costa Gomes
- La percepció romàntica europea pintoresca i nacionalista de l'Edad Mitjana / Núria Perpinyà Filella
- Pasado y presente de la arqueología de las alquerías / Jorge Alejandro Eiroa Rodríguez
- Les défis de l'historiographie médiévale au Brésil au début du XXIe siècle / Fátima Regina Fernandes
- Consideraçoes sobre o conceito de gens e a sua relaçao com a idéia de identidade nobiliárquica no pensamento de Isidoro de Sevilha (século VII) / Renan Frighetto
- La memoria de los "hombres santos" en el monacato hispano : el caso de la región del Bierzo / Iñaki Martín Viso
- "Patrons e advocats dels nauegants". Els sants i el mar en el gòtic català / Montserrat Barniol López
- El legendario hagiográfico : difusión, pervivencias e influencias en la tradición religiosa de la Edad Media y Edad Moderna / Andrea Mariana Navarro

Tweet