Concerning Differentia
Contributor(s): Hugh J. Silverman
Concurrence, émulation, espionnage: les Dialoghi d'amore de Léon l'Hébreu et leurs éditions françaises de 1551
Contributor(s): Dorothea Heitsch
In 1551, two French translations of Leone Ebreo’s Dialoghi d’amore were printed in Lyon. By tracing the publishing history of these two texts within their environment, it is possible to shed some light on the printing milieu in Lyon, to determine why both Pontus de Tyard and Denis Sauvage might...
Confession and Social Space in the Decameron
Contributor(s): Katherine A. Brown
This essay argues that confession in the Decameron is a liminal activity, which affords characters and readers a milieu removed from the space of society in which transformation and ultimately a temporary moment of transcendence of the secular world (almost a return to paradise) are achieved. In...
Conflicting Realities and Narrative Experimentation in De Roberto's Ermanno Raeli
Contributor(s): Annamaria Pagliaro
Conflit(s) et public(s) : orientations bibliographiques
Contributor(s): Christian Veilleux
Confraternal Charity, Municipal Poor Relief, and Political Consolidation in 16th Century Bologna. Resumé of the Project
2023-06-02 19:29:41 | Contributor(s): Nicholas Terpstra
Confraternal Gleanings from Post-Tridentine Piacenza: Bishop Paolo Burali d’Arezzo and the Confraternity of the Most Holy Sacrament
Contributor(s): Serena Quagliaroli
This article focuses on the situation in the diocese of Piacenza during the episcopate of Paolo Burali d’Arezzo (r. 1568–1576) by placing his work within the post-Tridentine context. One of the most important objectives of the Church after the Council of Trent was the recovery of a closer...
Confraternal Organisation in Early Modern Malta
Contributor(s): Frans Ciappara
This article analyses how Maltese confraternities were set up, their composition and their internal organization. Most were inclusive and comprised the adult population of the parish, both males and females though a few companies were restricted to the elite or to particular craftsmen. They...
Confraternal Self-Imaging in Marian Art at the Museo del Bigallo in Florence
Contributor(s): William R. Levin
Confraternities & Sodalities in Modern Ireland
Contributor(s): Colm Lennon, Nicholas Terpstra
Confraternities and Brotherhoods in Spain, 1500-1800
Contributor(s): William J. Callahan
Confraternities and Lay Leadership in Sixteenth-Century Liège
Contributor(s): D. Henry Deiterich
Confraternities and Popular Religion in the Kingdom of Navarra during the Ancient Regime
Contributor(s): Gregorio Silanes Susaeta
Confraternities and the History of Mystical Traditions. An Invitation
2023-06-02 19:31:35 | Contributor(s): Kathleen C Falvey
Confraternities and the Plague in Orvieto: 1340–1410
Contributor(s): Alexandra R. A. Lee
Confraternities can be seen as a barometer of social and cultural trends. This article explores the use of confraternity sources as records for the impact of plague. Using Orvieto (Umbria) between 1340 and 1410 as a setting, this article assesses the response to plague by the town’s population...
Confraternities on the Edge: Publications on Borgomanero
Contributor(s): Giles Knox
Confraternities, Memoria, and Law in Late Medieval Italy
Contributor(s): Thomas Frank
Connecting the dots: Integrating modular networks and narrativity in digital scholarship
2022-06-13 19:34:27 | Contributor(s): Amy Robinson, Jon Saklofske, INKE Research Team | https://doi.org/10.25547/49D1-ZJ89
Digital humanities, Game studies
Conrad Celtis and the “Druid” Abbot Trithemius: An Inquiry into Patriotic Humanism
Contributor(s): Noel L. Brann
Conscripting Imagination: The National “Duty” of William Blake’s Art
2022-06-13 19:33:26 | Contributor(s): Jon Saklofske | https://doi.org/10.25547/YVPZ-4K76
Humanities
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