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Ravenna: its role in earlier medieval change and exchange

In the long-debated transition from late antiquity to the early middle ages, the city of Ravenna presents a story rich and strange. From the fourth century onwards it suffered decline in economic terms. Yet its geographical position, its status as an imperial capital, and above all its role as a connecting point between East and West, ensured that it remained an intermittent attraction for early medieval kings and emperors throughout the period from the late fifth to the eleventh century. Ravenna’s story is all the more interesting because it was complicated and unpredictable: discontinuous and continuous, sometimes obscure, sometimes including bursts of energetic activity. Throughout the early medieval centuries its flame sometimes flared, sometimes flickered, but never went out.

382 pages | 6.4375 x 9.625 | © 2016

Institute of Historical Research


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Table of Contents

Introduction David Bates and Elisabeth van Houts 1. Harness pendants and the rise of armory John Baker 2. The transmission of medical culture in the Norman worlds c.1050–c.1250 Elma Brenner 3. Towards a critical edition of P

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