04584nam 22004333 450 991102612180332120250924182110.01-83624-955-11-83624-948-9(CKB)38525957200041(MiAaPQ)EBC32207752(Au-PeEL)EBL32207752(EXLCZ)993852595720004120250819d2025 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierTransregnal Kingship in the Thirteenth Century Jörg Peltzer and Nicholas Vincent1st ed.London :British Academy,2025.©2025.1 online resource (326 pages)Proceedings of the British Academy Series:Themed Volumes of Essays in the Humanities and Social Sciences1-83624-591-2 Cover -- Half-title -- Series information -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Table of contents -- List of Figures -- Notes on Contributors -- Abbreviations -- Preface -- Introduction: Transregnal Kingship -- Transregnal Terminologies -- Impulses and Innovations -- Community versus King -- Instances and Exceptions -- Consequences versus Causes -- Part I: Theory -- 1 Transregnal Kingship in Thirteenth-Century Treatises of Political Thought -- Nature as a Model for Political Communities -- The Empire -- The Augustinian View of Empire -- The Aristotelian View of Unjust Domination, and its Reworking -- A Nuanced View of Expanded Domination -- Unity and Multiplicity -- The Principle of Unity, and its Critics -- Another Definition of Unity -- Empire and Kingdom -- Conclusion -- 2 A Special Case? The Papacy in the Early Thirteenth Century -- The Scholarly Debate: 'Papal Monarchy' and 'Papal Overlordship' -- Papal Authority and Arbitration in International Affairs: The Decretal 'Novit' (X 2.1.13) -- The Perception of Papal Supra-Regnal Authority and Diplomatic Arbitration in the Canonistic Debate over 'Novit' (1206-c. 1250) -- Conclusions -- Part II: Imperium -- 3 Ruling Germany and the Empire: The Thirteenth Century -- I -- II -- III -- IV -- V -- VI -- VII -- 4 'Profitemur imperium nichil prorsus iuris habere in regno Sicilie': Relations between the Empire and Sicily during the Reign of Frederick II -- Strangers in the Kingdom of Sicily -- Elite Exchange and the Transmission of Administrative Structures -- Frederick II as a Transregnal Ruler -- 5 Perceptions of Transregnal Imperial Rule in Thirteenth-Century Germany -- I -- II -- III -- IV -- V -- VI -- Part III: Mediterranean Worlds -- 6 The Fractured Empire of Charles I of Anjou -- 7 Holy Opportunity: Transregnal Lordship in Three Crusading Families -- Three Franco-Mediterranean Families.The Lusignans -- The Briennes -- The Montforts -- French Connections -- Mediterranean Networks -- Crusading Intentions? -- 8 The Many Sicilies? 'Angevin' Architecture at the Turn of the Thirteenth Century, with Notes on Robert Willis' Remarks (1835) -- Part IV: England and France -- 9 The Plantagenet 'Empire' in the Thirteenth Century: Survival, Reorganisation, and Reorientation -- The Territorial Extent of the Angevin 'Empire' (c. 1200-c. 1250) -- The Reorientation of the Angevin 'Empire' (1252-59) -- Connections between the Angevin Lands -- Using the Royal Dynasty -- Landowners and Officials -- Administrative and Fiscal Connections -- The Addition of Ponthieu to the Plantagenet Dominions (1279) -- Conclusions -- 10 Royal Inquests in Western Gascony during the Reign of Henry III (1228-1255) -- Inquests in Gascony: A Little-Used Instrument -- The Inquest of 1236-37 in Retrospect -- Conclusion -- 11 Imposition and Appropriation? Architecture, the Associated Arts, and the Presentation of Rulership in the Shell of the Angevin Empire, 1200-1300 -- Part V: Crowned with Many Crowns -- 12 A Different Path? The Single Crown of Louis IX -- Index.Transregnal Kingship in the Thirteenth Century explores a wide-spread European phenomenon: rulership over multiple kingdoms, or a kingdom in combination with major non-royal lordships elsewhere.Proceedings of the British Academy Series:Themed Volumes of Essays in the Humanities and Social SciencesPeltzer Jörg1975-1848554Vincent Nicholas1294000MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911026121803321Transregnal Kingship in the Thirteenth Century4435677UNINA02904cam2-22003611i-450 99662967250331620250224102458.0978-0-674-99762-220230412d2024----km y0itay5003 baenglatUSy|||||||001yy<<30:>> Fragmentary speechesCiceroedited and traslated by Jane W. Crawford, Andrew R. DyckCambridge (Massachusetts)LondonHarvard University Press2024LXXI, 432 p.17 cm<<The>> Loeb classical library556Testo originale a fronteCicero (Marcus Tullius, 106–43 BC), Roman advocate, orator, politician, poet, and philosopher, about whom we know more than we do of any other Roman, lived through the stirring era that saw the rise, dictatorship, and death of Julius Caesar in a tottering republic. In Cicero’s political speeches and in his correspondence, we see the excitement, tension, and intrigue of politics and the important part he played in the turmoil of the time. Although Cicero’s oratory is well attested—of 106 known speeches, fifty-eight survive intact or in large part—the sixteen speeches that survive only in quotations nevertheless fill gaps in our knowledge. These speeches attracted the interest of later authors, particularly Asconius and Quintilian, for their exemplary content, oratorical strategies, or use of language, failing to survive entire not because they were inferior in quality or interest but due to factors contingent on the way Cicero’s speeches were read, circulated, and evaluated in (especially late) antiquity. The fragmentary speeches fall, like Cicero’s career in general, into three periods: the preconsular, the consular, and the postconsular, and here are presented chronologically, numbered continuously, and their fragments arranged, insofar as possible, in the order in which they would have occurred, followed by unplaced quotations. Each speech receives an introduction and ample notation. This edition, which completes the Loeb Classical Library edition of Cicero, includes all speeches with attested fragments, together with testimonia. Based upon Crawford’s edition of 1994, the sources have been examined afresh, and newer source-editions substituted where appropriate. (Fonte: editore)0010001529812001<<The>> Loeb classical library, 55600100045772001CiceroOrationes(antologie)15520875.01CICERO,Marcus Tullius82411CRAWFORD,Jane W.DYCK,Andrew R.ITcbaREICAT996629672503316V.3. Coll. 9/ 15 30288956 L.M.V.3. Coll.565488V.3. Coll. 9/ 15 30a289783 L.M.V.3. Coll.563450BKUMAOrationes15520UNISA