8,440 research outputs found

    Scribal Crusading: Three New Manuscript Witnesses to the Regional Reception and Transmission of First Crusade Letters

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    The First Crusade is one of the most intensively researched events of the Middle Ages, yet, paradoxically, the manuscript source base for the letters from the expedition is almost entirely unexplored and represents an exciting new avenue of investigation for crusade studies. This article publishes the texts of three new manuscript witnesses of First Crusade letters and explores their regional reception and transmission as a form of “scribal crusading” – that is, monastic participation in the crusades from behind cloister walls. The findings of this article reveal an extremely significant, but previously underappreciated, collective impulse among German monastic communities in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries to participate in the crusading movement through the copying of First Crusade letters

    First Crusade Letters and Medieval Monastic Scribal Cultures

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    The letters of the First Crusade have traditionally been read as authentic and trustworthy eyewitness accounts of the expedition and they contribute greatly to scholarly understanding of the campaign. But new research on them demonstrates that many of the documents are in fact twelfth-century confections produced in the monastic communities of the West as a means of supporting, participating in and engaging with the crusading movement. This article develops new approaches to the letters and new research questions which account for and accept the problematic authenticity of the corpus, pivoting away from traditional methodologies to explore the monastic scribal cultures that produced and consumed First Crusade letters

    How to craft a crusade call: Pope Innocent III and Quia maior (1213)

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    The fame of Quia maior – commonly considered one of the most important medieval papal crusade encyclicals – belies the fact that we actually know little about its composition at the curia of Pope Innocent III in 1213. This article compares a lesser‐known draft of the letter, Quoniam maior, preserved in the chronicle of Burchard of Ursberg, with Quia maior in order to reconstruct the debates and concerns of its authors during the composition process. It seeks to advance our understanding of Innocent’s conception of the crusade and offers new insights into how the papacy crafted crusade calls in the Middle Ages

    The First Crusade Letter Written at Laodicea in 1099: Two Previously Unpublished Versions from Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Clm 23390 and 28195

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    This article analyses the author’s discovery in Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Clm 23390 of a fourth recension of the letter written by the leaders of the First Crusade at Laodicea in September 1099 (Hagenmeyer no. XVIII). A different version of the same letter from the second recension, unearthed in Clm 28195 by Benjamin Kedar in the 1980s, is also analysed and both letters are published for the first time. It is argued that these copies of the letter testify to flourishing interest in the crusading movement in the monastic houses of southern Germany and Austria in the period between the Third Crusade and the Crusade of Frederick II. The letters were probably copied as part of a celebration and commemoration of German participation in the crusades, which culminated in the recovery of Jerusalem by Frederick II in 1229. The present article also contends that greater attention should be given to the regional manuscript traditions of the letters of the First Crusade, so as to reveal more about their popularity and transmission in the Middle Ages

    Counting cell number in situ by quantification of dimethyl sulphide in culture headspace.

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    A novel, non-invasive technique is reported for determining the numbers of cells in a culture by quantifying dimethyl sulphide (DMS) in the culture headspace as produced by the cellular enzymatic reduction of dissolved dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO). Measured DMS concentrations, as performed using selected ion flow tube mass spectrometry (SIFT-MS), in the headspace of 2D and 3D cultures of four cell lines, viz. HEK293 (kidney), MG63 (bone), hepG2 (liver) and CALU-1 (lung), linearly correlate with starting cell number. Clear differences in the rates of production of DMS by the four cell types in both the 2D and 3D situations are seen. This novel analytical technique for cell enumeration offers a significant contribution to quality assessment across cell-based research and industry, including analysis of large scale culture systems, and for routine cell biology research
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