9 research outputs found

    Desiderii heraldi quaestionum quotidianarum tractatus ; eiusdem Obseruationes ad ius atticum et romanum in quibus Claudii Salmasii miscellae deffensiones eiusque specimen expenduntur

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    Sign. : ~a\p4\s, A-V\p4\s, [estrella]\p4\s, A-Z\p6\s, 2A-2Z\p6\s, 3A-3H\p6\sAntepPort. a dos tintas con esc. xilSegunda obra con port. y pag. propia

    Chapter 2 - Philology’s roommate: hermeneutics, antiquity, and the seminar

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    This chapter starts from the extraordinary historical circumstance that Schleiermacher and Schlegel, a theologian and classical scholar and philosopher, who both had a huge influence on the development of their disciplines and the institution of the university, shared lodgings as students. It explores their relationship, and the importance of it for their subsequent careers, and expands from this to consider how the seminary, as dominant theological educational institution, was overtaken in the university by the seminar – to explore how both educational forums show similar negotiations of the dynamic between personal, affective relationships and methodological rigour. It thus raises questions about how the public and the private, emotion and objectivity became values of scholarship between philology and theology in the universit

    Chapter 2 - Philology’s roommate: hermeneutics, antiquity, and the seminar

    No full text
    This chapter starts from the extraordinary historical circumstance that Schleiermacher and Schlegel, a theologian and classical scholar and philosopher, who both had a huge influence on the development of their disciplines and the institution of the university, shared lodgings as students. It explores their relationship, and the importance of it for their subsequent careers, and expands from this to consider how the seminary, as dominant theological educational institution, was overtaken in the university by the seminar – to explore how both educational forums show similar negotiations of the dynamic between personal, affective relationships and methodological rigour. It thus raises questions about how the public and the private, emotion and objectivity became values of scholarship between philology and theology in the universit

    Tacitus, academic politics, and regicide in the reign of Charles I: The tragedy of Dr. Isaac Dorislaus

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