, Brepols, 2024 Paperback, 249 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:6 col., 2 tables b/w., Language(s):English, Greek. ISBN 9782503611723.
Summary Public religious ritual and private devotional practice together occasioned much of the production of Byzantine poetry. This includes not only hymns, an integral part of the liturgy since Late Antiquity, but also versified texts with a specific liturgical function (synaxaria, calendars, metrical prefaces), metrical hagiography, epigrams (inscribed on church buildings, icons, religious objects, books), or poems with a more personal character, such as versified prayers, catanyctic poems (i.e., poems of contrition) and self-addressed poems (eis heauton). These texts often have much in common, well beyond their metrical form: from their contexts of performance and reception to the themes, literary motifs, and rhetorical devices they contain. It was not uncommon for a single author to write in a variety of the aforementioned genres; and yet these texts are rarely studied together (not least due to the specialized nature of the expertise of individual scholars). Later Byzantium offers us a particularly rich spectrum of sacred poetry, which has only recently started to arouse significant interest. While most of its poetic genres have a long history in Byzantine literature, their metamorphoses in this period - connected to changes in socio-political, cultural and religious conditions - deserve closer study. It is the purpose of this volume to propose a broader scholarly approach to the aesthetics of Byzantine poetry, taking into consideration the contexts of religious practice and devotion from c. the 11th to the 15th centuries. TABLE OF CONTENTS Maria-Lucia Goiana & Krystina Kubina, Introduction Stratis Papaioannou, The History of the Kontakion Revisited: And a Plea for the Study of the Byzantine Sacred Song after the Year 1000 Maria-Lucia Goiana & Krystina Kubina, Worshipping Verse: Liturgy as Occasion in Nikephoros Kallistou Xanthopoulos's Poetry Silvia Tessari, 'New Music' in MS Milan, Biblioteca Ambrosiana L 36 sup. (Martini-Bassi 476): With a New Critical Edition of the Set of Megalynaria Ascribed to Patriarch Germanos Maria Tomadaki, A Forgotten Liturgical Poem on the Passion of Christ (BHG 413m) Paraskevi Toma, George Eugenikos's Kanon on Saint Spyridon Dimitrios Skrekas, Neophytos, Bishop of Grevenou, a Lesser-Known Fifteenth-Century Hymnographer and his Hymnographic Activity Ioanna Skoura, Teaching Easter Computus with Verse: A Didactic Poem in Laur. Plut. 87.16
, Brepols, 2020 Hardback, xvii + 329 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:26 b/w, 2 tables b/w., 1 maps b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503587974.
Summary In the region that was to become Moldavia and Wallachia, there are almost no traces of the use of writing for the millennium after the Roman Empire withdrew from Dacia. Written culture surfaces only by the second half of the fourteenth century, after the foundation of state institutions. This book surveys the earliest extant documents, their issuers, and the motives that triggered the development of documentary culture in Moldavia and Wallachia. By the fifteenth century, Moldavians were already accustomed to the use of charters. In Wallachia, noblemen also appealed to written records, but at that stage mainly in extraordinary circumstances. Women could not inherit land, and noblemen requested princely charters confirming a legal fiction that turned their daughters into sons. After the mid-sixteenth century, Wallachia experiences a steep growth in the number of charters issued. In this period of economic and social upheaval, charters proved an extraordinary means for the protection of landed property. Yet neither principality held secular archives - the storage of documents for later use in private hands suggests an early stage in the development of documentary culture. By covering the 'birth' and spread of pragmatic literacy in medieval Moldavia and Wallachia, this book thus fills an important lacuna in what is known about the development of literacy in the later Middle Ages. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface, List of Illustrations, Abbreviations, Abbreviations, Map Introduction 1. Historical Background PART 1. A SURVEY OF THE SOURCES 2. The Evidence: Archives and (Indirect) Sources 3. Documents Issued by the Office of the Prince 4. Diversification of Document Producers 5. Moldavian and Wallachian Chancery Scribes PART II. USE AND DISSEMINATION OF PRAGMATIC DOCUMENTS 6. Records and their Uses 7. Falsification of Charters 8. The Use of Written Evidence in Wallachian and Moldavian Dispute Settlements 9. The Use and Function of Land Charters beyond the Courts 10. The Perception of Land Charters 11. Uses and Functions of Letters and the Status of their Users 12. Uses of Written Documents in the Process of Government 13. The Documentary Culture of the Merchant Milieu Conclusions Appendix: Reigns of the Wallachian and Moldavian Princes (Fourteenth to Sixteenth Centuries) Bibliography Index
, Richter Verlag , 2002 Hardcover, 428 seiten, D, 280 x 215 x 35 mm, mit illustrazionen in farbe und s/w. dustjacket ISBN 9783933807717.
Werke 1965 - 2000 ; [anläßlich der Ausstellung Dan Graham Werke 1965 - 2000 ; Museu de Arte Contemporânea de Serralves, Porto, 13. Januar bis 25. März 2001, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris, 21. Juni bis 30. September 2001, Kröller-Müller-Museum, Otterlo, 25. November bis 10. Februar 2002, Kiasma. Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki, 18. Mai bis 18. August 2002, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, 13. Oktober 2002 bis 5. Januar 2003]
, Brepols, 2021 Hardback, 457 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:27 b/w, 9 col., 2 tables b/w., 3 maps b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503593029.
Summary In this volume, thirteen of the world's leading scholars of medieval France explore some of the most important ideas, events, personalities, and artistic creations of the Capetian world (987-1328). From some of the earliest medieval attempts to make narrative treatments of French history, through the invention of the schools, the creation of Gothic architecture, the practices of chivalry, the practice of statecraft, and the promulgation of law codes, the volume offers a panoramic view of the kingdom and the era that has come to define the medieval world in both the scholarly and popular imaginations. The scholars brought together in this volume share as well a common sense of gratitude and an intellectual debt to Elizabeth A. R. Brown, whose own rigour and brilliance has inspired their work and shaped their sense of the past. Political Ritual and Practice in Capetian France is both a tribute to a scholar of real accomplishment and a collection of original scholarship raised upon on the foundations that Elizabeth A. R. Brown herself set down. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations, List of Contributors Introduction Jay Rubenstein and M. Cecilia Gaposchkin Suger: An Abbot's Fame Rolf Grosse Suger, Orderic Vitalis, and the Vexin: Some Observations on Bibliothèque Mazarine MS 2013 Elisabeth van Houts Countess Blanche, Philip Augustus, and the War of Succession in Champagne, 1201-22 Theodore Evergates 'Those Who Act More Strictly': Monks, Jews, and Capetian Religious Politics in the Bibles moralisées Sara Lipton Eudes of Châteauroux and the Holy Blood of Neuvy-Saint-Sépulchre Nicholas Vincent Philippe of Cahors: Or, What's in a Name? William Chester Jordan Jean d'Acre, Butler of France, Diplomat and High Servant of the Capetian Crown (d. January 8, 1296) Xavier Hélary Louis IX, Heraclius, and the True Cross at the Sainte Chapelle M. Cecilia Gaposchkin Writing and Illustrating History in Thirteenth Century France: The Chronique de l'anonyme de Béthune and Vincent of Beauvais's Speculum historiale Alison Stones Jacob of Santa Sabina Warns Philip the Fair that Boniface VIII is Antichrist by Means of Scripture and the Oraculum Cyrilli Robert E. Lerner The Templar Confessions in Bigorre, December 1307 and March 1308 Sean L. Field The Capetians and the River Seine (Thirteenth-Fourteenth Century) Elisabeth Lalou The Judicial Duel in Later Medieval France: Procedure, Ceremony, and Status Justine Firnhaber-Baker Index
, Gestalten Verlag, 2022 HB, 260 x 209 mm, 288 p, throughout illustrations color.ENG edition. ISBN 9783967040241.
In 2016, the world's oldest existing library reopened in Fes, Morocco. It opened for the first time in the 9th Century. These shrines to the written word date back even further, and continue to be built today. They're a place where some of the oldest written texts are preserved and some of the newest technology connects visitors with vast amounts of knowledge. Libraries are changing, but, as places that are fundamentally free and open to all, they're also staying the same. Libraries of the World explores the most stunning examples, but it also explores how varied the idea of a library can be. It can be a grand Baroque hall with leather-bound tomes or a mid-century masterpiece, but it can just as easily be a few shelves in a repurposed phone booth.
, Brepols, 2024 Paperback, x + 256 pages, Size:152 x 229 mm, Language: English. ISBN 9780888443144.
Summary This volume contains English translations of three Old Norse?Icelandic renderings of French chansons de geste (Elis saga ok Rósamundu, Bevers saga, and Flovents saga), and of one Icelandic chivalric romance (Bærings saga). The French epics translated into Old Norse-Icelandic were composed under the influence of courtly romance and were anonymous narratives subject to revision and recreation. These translations resulted in a new Icelandic genre, the riddarasaga or chivalric saga, of which Bærings saga is the first. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Abbreviations and Conventions Introduction Heroic Epic and Courtly Romance in the Germanic Realm Translating French Epics and Romances The Creation of a New Literary Genre in Iceland Four Old Norse-Icelandic Epics Rendering Old Norse-Icelandic Sagas into English he Romance Epic of Elis and Rosamunda The Romance Epic of Flovent The Romance Epic of Bevers The Romance Epic of Baering Bibliography Index
Guy Trédaniel Editeur 1994 Broché - Couverture glacée illustrée éditeur - 161 pages Bon état 176 g
Borgerhout, Marianne Vanderauwera, 2024 Softcover, 275 pagina's, 21 x 14.5 cm. Nederlandstalige tekst. *Nieuw. ISBN 9789090393384.
Donas, Ianchelevici, Redouté, Grétry, Folon, Gaspar, Martin, Rops, Hergé, Sax
Genève, Jeheber, 1951. In-8°, 304p. Broché.
Traduit de l'anglais par Claude Orlanes.
, Confidential Concepts Int. 2012, 2012 Hardcover, 255 seiten, Deutsche sprache, 170 x 155 mm, im neue zustand. ISBN 9781780423685.
Für seine wohlgeformten, lasziven nackten Frauen berühmt, war Peter Paul Rubens erstes Anliegen die Darstellung der Sinnenfreuden in all ihren Formen. Ein Barockmaler, der in seinem gesamten künstlerischen Schaffen die Freuden und Wunder des Körperlichen feierte, die strikten sozialen Vorschriften zugunsten einer emotionalen und sinnlichen Porträtierung der Nacktheit aufgebend, um die Schönheit des menschlichen Körpers zu zelebrieren, die für den Künstler ebenso natürlich war wie die Landschaften seiner Jugend. In einem üppig illustrierten Bildband entdecken Maria Varshavskaya und Xenia Egorova diesen flämischen Künstler und setzen einen einzigartigen Fokus auf sein Werk.
faux-titre,titre;315 pages,Plon,Nourrit& Cie 1884 édition originale couverture doublée,rousseurs Propositions et contre-propositions;Quelques généralités;Coup d'œil rétrospectif.2-Expériences de curiosité et d'étude: Puységurisme,Phénomènes extérieurs et organes des sens, Huit observations;Pénétration de la pensée;Cas de prévision;Une lettre du docteur X*** .3-Expériences sur le magnétisme en dehors du somnambulismelucide:Le potétisme, Observations diverses;Lettre d'un professeur.4-Expériences philanthropiques:Une lettre du docteur X***;Chapitre médical, observations diverses,Epilepsie,hystérie, complications, résumé.5-Quelques mots sur le spiritisme: Analogies entre magnétisme et spiritisme;Faits matériels démontrant l'existence des esprits;Hypothèses, éclaircissements.
1791 reliure demi velin havane clair in-octavo, dos long décoré or - pièce de titre sur fond rouge, tranches jaspées, illustrations : 11 planches repliées in-fine, 494 pages + 56 pages de table de nombres premiers, 1791 à Firenze Presso Pietro Allegrini,
ouvrage d'expression italienne, traduit du français par Da Stanislao Canovai E Gaetano Del-Ricco - troisième édition, rare - bon état général
, Brepols, 2019 Paperback, 730 pages, Size:190 x 290 mm, Illustrations:227 b/w, 37 tables b/w., Languages: English, French, Italian. ISBN 9782503579603.
Summary This volume presents 34 studies (750p) in English, French, and Italian, assembled as a tribute by friends and former students from around the world to the late Frank Dobbins (1943-2012), distinguished scholar of the French chanson in early modern Europe. The book is built around studies of music in the Renaissance and Baroque periods (which form the core of the book), together with contributions about music composed between the second half of the eighteenth century and the twentieth centuries; these reflect both the wide-ranging variety of Frank's interests, and the range of his friendships. Secular, sacred, vocal, and instrumental music are all treated, while individual essays focus upon codicology, music printing and editing, music analysis, music theory, text-setting, biography, music and literature, music and theology, and both the reception and sociology of music. They include major discoveries about the diffusion of Jacques Moderne's choirbooks, Josquin's music, and musical and archival sources, while a number cast new light on different repertories. Contributors : C. Ballman, I. Bartlett, C. Cavicchi, D. Charlton, A. Coeurdevey, M. Cornaz, E. Corswarem. A. Di Profio, J. Duchamp, M. Egan-Buffet, D. Fabris, I. Fenlon, F. Fitch, M. M. Fontaine, G. Garden, O. Grellety Bosviel, J. Griffiths, L. Guillo, F. Guilloux, M. Ham, R. Jacob, T. Knighton, G. Mc Donald, F. de Médicis, P. Nicolas, L. Sawkins, A. Scarcez, K. Schiltz, M. Talbot, A. Tacaille, S. Thieffry, D. Trottier, H. Vanhulst, O. Wahnon de Oliveira, D. Wright, V. Zara. TABLE OF CONTENTS BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ABBREVIATIONS PREFACE ARTICLES Christine Ballman Le grand deul (B-Br Ms IV 90 et B-Tv Ms 94) : méthodologie d'une tentative de reconstruction Ian Bartlett Thomas Philips, Lord Chesterfield and the Enigma of a Popular Eighteenth-Century Ballad by William Boyce: a New Conspiracy Theory Camilla Cavicchi Sealed in an Envelope: Binchois and Du Fay on a Fragment from Fifteenth-Century Ferrara David Charlton The Politics of Payments: Rameau, Rousseau and the Opéra Inventory, 1749-1757 Annie Coeurdevey Les recueils manuscrits de c.1480 à c.1540 : particularités scripturales et organisationnelles Marie Cornaz La cantate italienne et française au sein de la collection musicale des archives d'Arenberg : nouvelles perspectives Émilie Corswarem La chanson à Liège au XVIe siècle Alessandro Di Profio Mozart suo malgrado. Un proto-Don Giovanni a Parigi (1791) Jean Duchamp Passions lyonnaises : un unicum liturgique de Jacques Moderne Máire Egan-Buffet Music and Musicians in a French Provincial Salon 1922-1948 Dinko Fabris Il libro di liuto di Andrea Falconieri e Giuseppe Antonio Doni : trent'anni dopo Iain Fenlon Jacques Moderne's Choirbooks and the Iberian Trade Fabrice Fitch Du fragment de texte poétique considéré comme « voix lacunaire » : le rondeau d'Ockeghem Se vostre cueur Marie Madeleine Fontaine Musiques, danses et paroles. Leur pratique dans le Printemps d'Yver de Jacques Yver (1572) Greer Garden Mademoiselle de Menetou, 'grande musicienne' of the La Ferté-Senneterre Family, and Her Airs serieux à deux (Paris, 1691) Olivier Grellety Bosviel Mise en livre et négoce des imprimés parisiens de messes polyphoniques au XVIe siècle. Le cas des bi-feuillets de 1568 publiés par Nicolas Du Chemin John Griffiths Heteroclito Giancarli and His Composizioni musicali of 1602 Laurent Guillo et Alice Tacaille Les réponses de Loys Bourgeois aux invectives de Simon Gorlier (Lyon, 1554) Fabien Guilloux Notes d'archives lyonnaises : les Pénitents blancs du Confalon et le Recueil des Psalmes (1610) Martin Ham Attaingnant and the O Antiphons of the Liber septimus Roger Jacob Double-Choir Dialogue as an Expressive Medium in the Sixteenth-Century Eight-Voice French Chanson from Phinot to Lassus Tess Knighton Approaches to Text-Setting in Castilian-Texted Devotional Songs c. 1500 Grantley McDonald The Debate Over Church Music Between Jacob Andreae and Théodore de Bèze at the Colloquy of Montbéliard (1586) François de Médicis 'Une musique secouée de frissons, d'élans, d'étreintes' : les gestes mimétiques dans l'oeuvre lyrique de Jules Massenet Patrice Nicolas La chanson A qui direlle sa pensée et ses dérivés : quelques réflexions à la lumière d'une attribution tardive Lionel Sawkins Some Observations on French Vocal Practice and Technique 1670-1750 Katelijne Schiltz Coins and Crosses: Cruciform Riddles in Cerone's Melopeo Michael Talbot 'Le plus habile compositeur qui soit à Venise': Vivaldi's Reputation in Eighteenth-Century France Sandrine Thieffry La Société Schott Frères et la SACEM : un épisode des relations éditoriales entre la Belgique et la France (fin XIXe- début XXe siècle) Danick Trottier Monumentum pro Gesualdo di Venosa : quand Stravinski s'invite à sa façon dans la re-découverte de la musique ancienne Henri Vanhulst et Alicia Scarcez Les éditions de musique polyphonique de Pierre Attaingnant retrouvées depuis 1969 Olivia Wahnon de Oliveira Léon Jongen et la diffusion de la musique de Joseph Jongen en France David Wright Mechanized Music and the New Market for Musical Journalism Vasco Zara Du faux-bourdon aux tabulæ compositoriæ : René Ouvrard et le secret pour composer en musique INDEX NOMINUM INDEX LOCORUM
, Brepols, 2022 Paperback, 312 pages, Size:178 x 254 mm, Illustrations:11 b/w, 12 col., 10 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503598871.
Summary These eleven essays, all centrally concerned with the intimate relationship between sound, religion, and society in the early modern world, present a sequence of test cases located in a wide variety of urban environments in Europe and the Americas. Written by an international cast of acclaimed historians and musicologists, they explore in depth the interrelated notions of conversion and confessionalisation in the shared belief that the early modern city was neither socially static nor religiously uniform. With its examples drawn from the Holy Roman Empire and the Southern Netherlands, the pluri-religious Mediterranean, and the colonial Americas both North and South, this book takes discussion of the urban soundscape, so often discussed in purely traditional terms of European institutional histories, to a new level of engagement with the concept of a totally immersive acoustic environment as conceptualised by R. Murray Schafer. From the Protestants of Douai, a bastion of the Catholic Reformation, to the bi-confessional city of Augsburg and seventeenth-century Farmington in Connecticut, where the indigenous Indian population fashioned a separate Christian entity, the intertwined religious, musical, and emotional lives of specifically grounded communities of early modern men and women are here vividly brought to life. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Marie-Alexis Colin, Iain Fenlon and Matthew Laube 1. Converting Tondalos: Musical Culture on a Lutheran Spiritual Pilgrimage of the Late Sixteenth Century Martin Christ (University of Erfurt) 2. Catholicising the City: Music, Ritual and Identity in Sixteenth-Century Córdoba Iain Fenlon (King's College, Cambridge) 3. Sound and the Conversion of Space in Early Modern Germany Alexander J. Fisher (University of British Columbia) 4. Music Books for Lima Cathedral and their Social Context in the Early Seventeenth Century: Black Slaves as a Guarantee for Producing a New Plainchant Library María Gembero-Ustárroz (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas) 5. Land and Conversion: New Frameworks for Colonial American Hymnody Glenda Goodman (University of Pennsylvania) 6. Lutheranising through Music: Tracing the Confessional Soundscapes of Early Seventeenth-Century Wolfenbüttel and Braunschweig Inga Mai Groote (Zurich University) 7. Sound Conversion? Music, Hearing and Sacred Space in the Long Reformation in Ulm, 1531-1629 Philip Hahn (University of Tübingen) 8. The Musical Cultures of Dissent and Anti-Catholicism in Counter-Reformation Douai Matthew Laube (Birkbeck, University of London) 9. A Jesuit Ceremony of Spiritual Exercises with Music in the Seventeenth Century: Devotional Connections between Perpignan, Barcelona, Madrid, Granada and Archbishop Palafox Emilio Ros-Fábregas (Institución Milá y Fontanals, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas) 10. Bells, Confessional Conflict and the Dutch Revolt, c. 1566-1585 Andrew Spicer (Oxford Brookes University) 11. Music for an Endless Conversion: A Cycle of Offertories from Jesuit Paraguay Leonardo Waisman (University of Córdoba, Argentina)
, Brepols, 2020 Paperback, 149 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:1 b/w, Languages: French, English. ISBN 9782503584218.
Summary Les rapports entre Judaïsme et christianisme au Moyen Âge ont été souvent présentés comme conflictuels. Or, il n'en a pas toujours été ainsi. Aussi cet ouvrage s'attache-t-il à mettre en évidence la synergie entre Judaïsme et christianisme à cette époque. Des auteurs comme Maïmonide et Eckhart ont, sur ce plan, un rôle décisif. TABLE OF CONTENTS Sylvie Camet, Préface Marie-Anne Vannier, Présentation Daniel Boyarin, Medieval Jews without Judaism : The case of Kuzari Gilbert Dahan, L'utilisation de l'exégèse juive chez les exégètes chrétiens Annie Noblesse-Rocher, Quelques remarques sur l'exégèse d'Ingetus Contardus dans la dispute de Palma de Majorque (1286) David Lemler, Les rationalistes juifs face à l'allégorisme chrétien (XIIe-XIIIe siècles) Israël Yuval, La matsa de Pessach et l'hostie de Pâques au Moyen Âge : relations reconsidérées Markus Vinzent, Presbyterion kreitton ? The re-evaluation of Tradition by Jewish and Christian teachers of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Marie-Anne Vannier, Maître Eckhart et le Judaïsme Jean-Claude Lagarrigue, L'influence de l'exégèse parabolique de Maïmonide sur maître Eckhart Harald Schwaetzer, Der Herabstieg der Weisheit in ihr Haus. Nikolaus von Kuens und das Alte Testament Présentation des auteurs Index Auteurs - Index Thématique
, Brepols, 2020 Paperback, xviii + 527 pages, Size:150 x 250 mm, Languages: French, Latin, Greek. ISBN 9782503592916.
Summary Médecins des textes, médecins des âmes, tel pourrait être le credo d'Adrien Turnèbe (1512-1565) et Guillaume Morel (1505-1564), deux imprimeurs érudits qui ont consacré leur vie à soigner, suturer, réparer les textes du passé pour les transmettre aux hommes de leur génération et des siècles à venir. Associés dès 1551, Turnèbe et Morel agissent tous deux sur leur temps grâce à leurs presses, désirant annihiler la violence par la force de leurs manuscrits. En proposant l'édition de l'ensemble de leurs préfaces, cet ouvrage éclaire d'une lumière nouvelle la complexion de ces savants qui défendent une certaine idée de l'homme, de l'amitié, de la paix en un siècle d'affrontements. TABLE OF CONTENTS Alexandre Vanautgaerden, Préface Marie Barral-Baron, Deux imprimeurs humanistes au miroir de leurs préfaces : Étude introductive Préfaces de Guillaume Morel Préfaces d'Adrien Turnèbe Bibliographie Index
ERPI 2005 1300 pages 21 4x4 2x27 8cm. 2005. Broché. 1300 pages.
Bon état
, Brepols, 2020 Hardback, 365 pages, Size:178 x 254 mm, Illustrations:15 b/w, 18 col., Language: English. ISBN 9782503585321.
Summary On 11 May 1625 Charles I married Henrietta Maria, the youngest sister of Louis XIII of France. The match signalled Britain's firm alignment with France against Habsburg Spain and promised well for future relations between the two countries. However, the union between a Protestant king and a Catholic princess was controversial from the start and the marriage celebrations were fraught with tensions. They were further disrupted by the sudden death of James I and an outbreak of the plague, which prevented large-scale public celebrations in London. The British weather also played its part. In fact, unlike other state occasions, the celebrations exposed weaknesses in the display of royal grandeur and national superiority. To a large extent they also failed to hide the tensions in the Stuart-Bourbon alliance. Instead they revealed the conflicting expectations of the two countries, each convinced of its own superiority and intent on furthering its own national interests. Less than two years later Britain was effectively in a state of war against France. In this volume, leading scholars from a variety of disciplines explore for the first time the marriage celebrations of 1625, with a view to uncovering the differences and misunderstandings beneath the outward celebration of union and concord. By taking into account the ceremonial, political, religious and international dimensions of the event, the collection paints a rounded portrait of a union that would become personally successful, but complicated by the various tensions played out in the marriage celebrations and discussed here. Contributors: R. Malcolm Smuts, Lucinda H. S. Dean, J. R. (Ronnie) Mulryne, Karen Britland, Marie-Claude Canova-Green, Erin Griffey, Margaret Shewring, Sara J. Wolfson, Sara Trevisan, Kevin Laam, Sydney Anglo, Margaret M. McGowan, John Peacock, Gordon Higgott, Ella Hawkins . TABLE OF CONTENTS Contents, List of Illustrations, Contributors, Foreword, Note from the Editors R. Malcolm Smuts Introduction. Festivals, Dynastic Alliances, and Political History: Notes on the History and Historiography of Royal Weddings Lucinda H. S. Dean Chapter 1. 'Keeping Your Friends Close, But Your Enemies Closer'? The Anglo-Franco-Scottish Marital Triangle, c. 1200 to c. 1625 J. R. (Ronnie) Mulryne Chapter 2. Paradoxical Princes: Charles Stuart and Henrietta Maria, Personality and Politics (1600-1625) Karen Britland Chapter 3. A Ring of Roses: Henrietta Maria, Pierre de Bérulle, and the Plague of 1625-1626 Marie-Claude Canova-Green Chapter 4. Love, Politics, and Religion: Henrietta Maria's Progress through France and the Entry into Amiens Erin Griffey Chapter 5. 'All Rich as Invention Can Frame, or Art Fashion': Dressing and Decorating for the Wedding Celebrations of 1625 Margaret Shewring Chapter 6. Divergent Discourses: Multiple Voices in Festival Accounts of the Marriage of Charles I and Henrietta Maria Sara J. Wolfson Chapter 7. The Welcoming Journey of Queen Henrietta Maria and Stuart-Bourbon Relations, 1625-1626 Sara Trevisan Chapter 8. Nebuchadnezzar, Charlemagne, and Aeneas: John Finch's Speech for the King and Queen at Canterbury Kevin Laam Chapter 9. Robert Herrick, Clipsby Crew, and the Politics of the English Epithalamium in 1625 Sydney Anglo Chapter 10. The Festivities that Never Were: 1625-1626 Margaret M. McGowan Chapter 11. 'A French Antique': The Forms of Court Ballets in France, 1621-1627 John Peacock Chapter 12. Inigo Jones between a Spanish Princess and a French Queen Gordon Higgott Chapter 13. 'Mutual Fruitfulness': A Nuptial Allegory on Queen Henrietta Maria's Bedchamber Ceiling at the Queen's House, Greenwich Ella Hawkins (Transcribed and annotated) Appendix 1: A True Discourse of All the Royal Passages, Tryumphs and Ceremonies, observed at the Contract and Mariage of the High and Mighty Charles, King of Britain: The Principal English Festival Book of the 1625 Wedding, Including Two Addresses at Canterbury by John Finch Margaret Shewring (Transcribed and annotated) Appendix 2. A Relation of the Glorious Triumphs and Order of the Ceremonies: An English-Language Version of the French Festival Book Index
, Brepols 2015, 2015 Hardcover, iv + 267 pages, ., 184 col. ills, 220 x 280 mm, English, ISBN 9782503555577.
This publication is the revised, expanded, and updated version of the book in French that appeared in 2010 from the same publisher: Les ducs d?Arenberg et la musique au XVIIIe siècle. Histoire d?une collection musicale. The study explores in depth the development of a music collection created by one of the most influential noble European families under the Ancien Régime ? a family resident in the Spanish and then the Austrian Netherlands, the territory of the future state of Belgium. Today forming an integral part of the private family archives kept at Enghien (in the Hainaut region of Belgium), this exceptional collection of manuscripts and prints from all over Europe began to expand in the last years of the seventeenth century, and grew gradually and continually throughout the eighteenth century. Analysing this collection has afforded a rare opportunity to discover and identify musical sources entirely unknown to us until now; these include works by the Italians Alessandro Scarlatti, Pietro Torri, and Antonio Vivaldi. With the aid of unpublished archival material, it has proved possible also to relate and explain how this important music collection was amassed, and, through the prism of the musical affinities of an aristocratic family, to illustrate the evolution of taste in eighteenth-century Europe. The introduction to the book sets out key milestones in the history of the Arenbergs and their music library. The three chapters that follow trace the development of this collection under Dukes Léopold-Philippe (1690-1754), Charles-Marie-Raymond (1721-1778), and Louis-Engelbert (1750-1820) d?Arenberg, while an Epilogue sheds light on the era of the Prince and composer Paul d?Arenberg (1788-1844). Via music lessons, private and public concerts, operatic performances (not only in Brussels but also in Paris, London, Vienna, and Rome), and contacts with such musicians as Mozart, Paisiello, and Haydn, the Dukes acquired in the region of 1500 music manuscripts and prints, where the above names, as well as those of Lully, Handel, Pergolesi, Grétry, and Salieri, appear alongside those of musical personalities long since fallen into obscurity. Finally, the book tells a hitherto largely untold story of musical life in the former Southern Netherlands and Europe under the Ancien Régime, the family archives shedding particular light on the role played in this by the Dukes of Arenberg as patrons of the Arts. Towards this end, the book makes detailed reference to and reproduces the most significant sources and documents. Review ?The book is beautifully produced and consists of everything a critical reader wishes to find: a fine structure, excellent prose, many full colour reproductions of highest quality, and, above all, a lot of information (?) All in all, this is a lovely book which will easily serve as an adornment on the bookshelves of readers with an interest in western music of the eighteenth century.? (Albert Clement in BMGN, 20/11/2017)
, Brepols, 2019 Paperback, 382 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:21 b/w, 28 col., 4 maps b/w, Languages: French, English. ISBN 9782503582351.
Summary Lyon, capitale des Burgondes (Ve-VIe siècles), avait été marginalisée au temps des royaumes mérovingiens de l'Entre-Seine-et-Rhin, et ses élites décimées par les pouvoirs francs (VIIe-VIIIIe siècles). La création d'un empire par Pépin le Bref puis Charlemagne a changé la donne. Dans une construction politique qui veut unir la Germanie à l'Italie, la Saxe à la Catalogne, Lyon retrouve une place centrale : porte de l'Espagne chrétienne, voie d'accès privilégiée à l'Italie lombarde dont Charlemagne a fait son premier objectif militaire, la ville devient la tête de pont de la présence franque dans le sud de l'Europe. Le pouvoir carolingien cependant ne s'impose pas à Lyon seulement par la force, mais en y relevant le gouvernement épiscopal. Des évêques choisis par les empereurs pour leurs compétences intellectuelles sont placés à la tête de la cité. Leidrade et Agobard, Amalaire puis Amolon assurent le rayonnement durable de Lyon par l'excellence des écoles qu'ils fondent et qui attirent des clercs de l'Europe entière, ainsi que par la profusion des manuscrits qu'ils réunissent dans la bibliothèque cathédrale. L'intense activité culturelle lyonnaise du IXe siècle n'est pas corsetée par le soutien politique initial des Carolingiens. Au contraire, les clercs proposent des politiques alternatives au gouvernement des princes francs ; ils appellent à la création d'une Europe uni?ée par le respect d'une loi unique et la renaissance d'un empire chrétien universel? Des propositions qui tiennent de l'idéalisme et du fondamentalisme biblique, et qui ne seront jamais suivies d'effet. Le présent volume réunit des contributions rédigées à l'occasion du douzième centenaire de l'élection épiscopale d'Agobard à Lyon (816-840). TABLE OF CONTENTS Michel Rubellin, Introduction Jean-François Reynaud, Lyon à l'époque d'agobard (816-840) David Ganz, Les plus anciens manuscrits de Lyon et leurs annotations, témoins des activités culturelles. Avant l'épiscopat de Leydrade Claire Tignolet, Les Hispani À Lyon au temps d'Agobard Cullen J. Chandler, Agobard and Adoptionism. A Controversy Continues Fernard Peloux, Lyon au temps d'Agobard, réceptacle hispanique et laboratoire hagiographique Pierre Chambert-Protat, Des computistes au travail sous Agobard. Pour une archéologie de la vie intellectuelle dans le Lyon carolingien Louis Holtz, La fidélité de Florus envers Agobard. Témoignage de deux manuscrits Caroline Chevalier-Royet, La Bible d'Agobard Claire Dantin, Le manuscrit de Fourvière. Un nouveau manuscrit lyonnais de la Dacheriana Paul Mattei, Les citations de quelques auteurs grecs dans l'Aduersus dogma Felicis d'Agobard de Lyon. Problèmes de critique textuelle Warren Pezé, Florus, Agobard et le concile de quierzy de 838 Kristina Mitalaité, Agobard et la question des images à l'époque de louis le Pieux Michel Jean-Louis Perrin, Agobard et Raban dans la crise des années 830 Philippe Depreux, À l'envers du modèle consensuel. Agobard et la dissension Charlotte Gaillard, Topographie monastique et réforme durant le haut Moyen Âge Olivia Puel, Architecture et topographie monastique à Saint-Martin de Savigny du IXe au Xe siècle Susan Rankin, Agobard's Corrections to the Antiphoner Jean-Paul Bouhot, Agobard et Amolon Marie-Céline Isaïa, Agobard, et après ? La réception d'Agobard à Lyon d'après le manuscrit Paris, BnF, lat. 2853 Jean-Benoît Krumenacker, Pierre Rostaing et la bibliothèque carolingienne de Saint-Jean ou la Renaissance ratée d'Agobard Jean-Louis Quantin, Protestants et parlementaires. La réception paradoxale d'Agobard au XVIIe siècle François Bougard, Agobard et son milieu. Conclusions Index
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, 445 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:1 col., 1 maps color, Language: French. ISBN 9782503597263.
Summary La parrhésia antique idéalisée, cette parole franche qu'autorise et exige la démocratie, devrait disparaître avec l'installation des pouvoirs souverains du Moyen Âge. De fait, la répression légale des paroles sacrilèges signale la naissance de la théocratie pontificale et de l'État moderne au tournant des XIIIe et XIVe siècles. L'absolutisme va de pair avec une réduction de la liberté de parole à un simulacre politique. Entre le VIIIe et le XIIIe siècle cependant, en Occident latin, en Islam et dans l'empire byzantin, des pouvoirs souverains qui disent tenir de Dieu leur autorité voient leurs élites religieuses continuer à revendiquer et à pratiquer une forme de liberté de parole. Ces élites exercent une critique justifiée par leur maîtrise de la tradition écrite et par leur expérience du gouvernement. Elles envisagent la liberté de parole comme un devoir religieux vis-à-vis du prince, en appellent à sa conscience et l'exhortent à être à la hauteur du pouvoir reçu de Dieu. Leurs paroles critiques prennent aussi un public à témoin, dans le cadre d'un rituel politique qui n'est jamais parfaitement contrôlé ni instrumentalisé. Elles contribuent ainsi à associer une large communauté, fondée religieusement, à l'exercice du pouvoir.En comparant la liberté de parole assumée par ces élites médiévales, c'est donc le fonctionnement des empires du Moyen Âge central qu'on analyse - des empires dont l'assise théocratique reste compatible avec la critique et implique la participation sous contrôle d'une partie des populations. Au début de la période, celui qui critique le prince lui donne un gage de fidélité ; il déclare que le pouvoir exercé peut être amélioré. À la fin de la période, le critique fait d'abord valoir son amitié pour le souverain - indice de la réduction de l'assise collective de ces régimes. TABLE OF CONTENTS Avant-propos Introduction Michel Senellart, Le concept chrétien de parrhèsia, de Peterson à Foucault Marie-Céline Isaïa, Point de départ : la liberté de parole, IVe-IXe siècle Porte-paroles Makram Abbès, De la parrhèsia à l'art du conseil. La liberté de parole dans Kalila et Dimna Vincent Déroche, La liberté de parole de Théodore Stoudite (759-826)? Louise Marlow, Les miroirs aux princes et la critique de l'autorité royale dans l'Orient samanide. Concepts et contraintes Maïté Billoré, La parole critique à la cour Plantagenêt. Formes et enjeux d'une pratique politique à travers les lettres de Pierre de Blois? Gisèle Besson, Un regard sur le gouvernement de l'Église dans la Chronique de Salimbene de Adam. Le discours critique d'un franciscain (XIIIe s.)? Communication Mohamed Ben Mansour, Essai sur la parrhèsia poétique à l'époque abbasside? Giacomo Vignodelli, Satire et critique allusive dans l'Europe post-carolingienne? João Vicente de Medeiros Publio Dias, Critique et représentation de soi. Les discours de Jean l'Oxite à Alexis Ier Comnène (1081-1118) en contexte? Leidulf Melve, La liberté d'expression durant la Querelle des Investitures? Vanessa Van Renterghem, L'admonestation (wa??) au souverain selon Ibn al-?awz? (m. 1201). Instrument de critique du pouvoir ou simple topos ?? Politiques Warren Pezé, Vestra fidelis devotio ammonere curabit. La critique du pouvoir au début du règne de Charles le Chauve? Rosa Benoît-Meggenis, La critique politique des moines dans l'empire byzantin (IXe-XIIIe siècle). La liberté de parole au service de l'autorité impériale? Neguin Yavari, Progressive et illibérale: la critique ash'arite de la situation politique du XIe siècle? Benjamin Bourgeois, Quand l'abbé de Skévra nie la royauté du roi d'Arménie. Orientations religieuses et contestation politique dans l'Orient chrétien à la fin du XIIIe siècle? Olivier Brisville-Fertin, La critique de l'alfaqui au roi ou la prépondérance du sabio selon un exemplum en aljamiado? Liberté de parole. Éléments de conclusion, Benoît Grévin et Annick Peters-Custot Index des noms de personnes
, Editions Mergoil, 2003 softcover, 504 pages, illustré, 21cm x 30xm, Texte en Francais. ISBN 9782907303729.
Paris, Editions du Patrimoine et Editions Art Lys, 2000 Softcover, 111 pages, 28.5 x 22 cm, FR. Nombreuses illustrations. *en bon état.
Le monastère royal de Brou, l'église et le musée. Bourg-en-Bresse
, Brepols 2018, 2018 Hardcover, dusjacket, 192 pages., 127 col. ills, 300 x 366 mm, English/Francais, Manuscript. Fine. ISBN 9782503581224.
The collection De main de maître showcases the facsimiles of the most prestigious scores of the Music Department of the National Library of France. Camille Saint-Saëns? extremely long career as a virtuoso, as a brilliant pianist and organist (no fewer than seventy-six years of concerts) and his daunting catalogue of works (close to six hundred are known) have helped shape the image of him as a tutelary figure, omnipresent in the musical landscape of his time, the uncontested master of French music, showered with honours and glory, yet the champion of what was, in the young 20th century, an outmoded aesthetic. Such an image ignores, however, that from the outset of his career, at the end of the 1850s, until the 1890s, Saint-Saëns was, on the contrary, regarded in the artistic world as an agitator, as a propagator of new ideas and as an intermediary between French and Germanic cultures. Republican from his earliest days, he was a major figure in musical life, involved in many concert societies, most notably the Société nationale de musique, which he founded in 1871. He was also a polemicist, whose quill was much feared and who used the press as his vehicle of choice, to disseminate his ideas, attract public attention, and conquer new audiences. Similarly, if the image of the ?official? Saint-Saëns, at home with the stage and the institutions and their etiquette, has endured, that of the ?intimate? Saint-Saëns, known by a faithful few for his sparkling conversation, his sharp humour and taste for puns, has been lost. If there is one work, in all of Saint-Saëns? musical output that supremely captures the disposition so typical of the composer, it is the Carnival of the Animals. Dedicated to the autograph manuscript of Camille Saint-Saëns? famous Carnival of the Animals (1835-1921), this volume sheds a distinctive light on the musician?s personality. Completed in February 1886, The Carnival of the Animals was created for friends and performers close to Saint-Saëns and was performed about fifteen times between 1886 and 1894 to a small audience. Because Camille Saint-Saëns feared that his zoological fantasy would damage his reputation, the work was published in its entirety only after his death. Since then, its immense popularity has continued to grow, so much so that it is now enjoyed by music lovers and the general public alike. Presented by Marie-Gabrielle Soret, a specialist of Camille Saint-Saëns, who provides a detailed description of the work and the context of its creation, the facsimile includes the fourteen pieces of The Carnival of the Animals. It reveals the composer's handwriting, all the performance directions as he noted them, but also to the playful animal drawings with which he decorated his score ? a fish for ?Aquarium?, the skeleton of a dinosaur for ?Fossiles?, the pale blue pencil silhouette of a swan to illustrate the famous Swan
P., Dunod, 1879/1897, 3 ouvrages reliés en un volume in 8, demi-chagrin vert, dos orné de filets dorés (reliure de l'époque), (dos passé)
---- EDITIONS ORIGINALES -- ENVOI DE Georges MARIE ainsi libellé : "Souvenir affectueux de l'auteur à sa très chère Juliette - signé G. MARIE" ---- Bel exemplaire ---- Georges MARIE, ancien élève de l'Ecole Polytechnique, fut ingénieur au chemin de fer de Lyon**P6AR/7361/3531