Month: August 2013

Articles

The Final Countdown: A Historiographical Analysis on Language in the Year 1000 A.D.

We must now begin to ask ourselves what led to this increase in millenarian belief that the world would end between either 1000-1033 A.D.; 1033 being the 1000th year anniversary of the death of Christ. From the evidence provided in the first hand accounts of religious figures in the early eleventh century, it can be argued that this millenarian idea was not uncommon throughout Europe.

Articles

Western Turks and Byzantine gold coins found in China

In general, before the 1980’s, most scholars treated these finds as evidences for the frequent connection between Byzantine and China, which could be further associated with the seven-times visits of Fulin (Rum) emissaries recorded in Tang literature. However, after the 1980’s, more and more researchers tended to take these gold coins as a result of prosperous international trade along silk road.

Articles

Choice of law in Medieval France

The medieval scholastic when faced with a doctrine he did not like or an authority that stood in the way of his own ideas would simply say “sed distinguo” and remove the opposition from his path, whether it was a phrase from St. John, a comment of St. Augustine, or a constitution of Innocent III. Modern lawyers are very much the heirs to this technique,

Articles

Pre-Raphaelite Painting and the Medieval Woman

Archetypal women fill Pre-Raphaelite paintings—in the examples within of this thesis, the Virgin Mary and two of Shakespeare’s heroines—who offer case studies of women in states of psychological turmoil. The depiction of their stories facilitated the Pre-Raphaelites in creating a prescriptive doctrine of how these women should be viewed.