| Jean Porter - Law - 1999 - 348 pages
...was thinkable only in a society that had no regular procedures for generating and modifymg laws. Even at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, when the consolidation of European society was just getting underway, the deficiencies in... | |
| Richard Philip Abels, Bernard S. Bachrach - History - 2001 - 560 pages
...he finally was released from captivity.24 In addition, from the perspective of contemporary values at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth century, Robert Curthose's younger brother. King Henry I, was to succeed in seizing the duchy... | |
| Max Spoor - Business & Economics - 2004 - 378 pages
...interdependence and complexity of the hydraulic works that began to stretch out beyond the local scale. At the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth century the first public bodies for local and regional water management appeared on the scene... | |
| Mary Stroll - Religion - 2004 - 561 pages
...Spain. He and Henry I of England were the chief patrons of the rebuilding of the great church at Cluny at the end of the eleventh century, and the beginning of the twelfth. 8 Among the Spanish bishoprics that Bernard filled with Cluniac monks during his long reign... | |
| Angelo Di Berardino, Giulio D'Onofrio, Basil Studer - Religion - 1996 - 572 pages
...the senses." There could not be a clearer expression of the contrast between two "ways" that emerged at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth. There was the "way" of the ancients (that is, a speculative and methodological approach),... | |
| Mark Gregory Pegg - History - 2008 - 288 pages
...to charters or faithful men making judgments at once "public" and "just." In the tempestuous decades at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth, long years when the habitual violence inherent in lordship between the Garonne and Rhone became... | |
| Francis Dvornik - Schism - 1948 - 530 pages
...happened that the Council of 869-70 made its semi-official appearance among the oecumenical synods at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth. Ivo's testimony is all the more impressive, as he relies on the famous Liber Diurnus of the... | |
| 644 pages
...twelfth centuries to textbook order one of no small difficulty. The revival of architecture and sculpture at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth is the most remarkable move1 The famous King René was Duke of Anjou, Count of Provence, and... | |
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