Tag: Nicholas

Nicholas Trevet’s Commentary on the Psalms, 1317-c.1321 A Publishing History


Free Download Jakub Kujawinski, "Nicholas Trevet’s Commentary on the Psalms, 1317-c.1321: A Publishing History "
English | ISBN: 250360210X | 2024 | 340 pages | PDF | 12 MB
How did medieval authors publish their works in the age before print? This study seeks to achieve new insights into the publishing strategies of medieval authors by focusing on Nicholas Trevet, an English Dominican friar and Oxford master. Shortly after 1317, Trevet was commissioned by his provincial prior to write a literal commentary on the Psalter. He chose as his reference version the less commonly used Latin translation by Jerome from the Hebrew, and delivered his work before 1321/22. The first book-length examination of Trevet’s commentary, this detailed study traces the ways in which the work was circulated by the author and his proxies. Through a combined analysis of codicological, textual, and historical features of the nine extant fourteenth-century manuscripts, this study identifies contemporary efforts to make Trevet’s work available to readers within and without the Dominican Order, in England and on the Continent. Even during the author’s lifetime the commentary was copied in Paris and reached readers in Avignon and likely in Naples.

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Nicholas II Twilight of the Empire


Free Download Nicholas II: Twilight of the Empire by Dominic Lieven
English | 1994 | ISBN: 031210510X | 292 Pages | PDF | 25.7 MB
A biography of Russia’s last monarch provides new insights into his infamous execution in 1918 and goes on to probe his role as a political leader and emperor, the Old Regime’s collapse, and the origins of the Bolshevik Revolution.

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Nicholas I Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias


Free Download Nicholas I: Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias by W. Bruce Lincoln
English | 1978 | ISBN: 025320254X | 424 Pages | PDF | 13.3 MB
This present study, among other things, redresses the balance to some extent in Nicholas’s favor. Certainly it is not intended as an apology for Russia’s firm, sometimes cruel, Emperor. It is, however, an effort to view Nicholas as his contemporaries saw him and, given the distance of some 150 years since his accession, to place him and his policies in a more balanced historical perspective.

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