The Medieval Prison: A Social History. By G. Geltner (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008. xviii plus 197 pp.)
In: Journal of social history, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 1084-1086
ISSN: 1527-1897
90 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Journal of social history, Band 43, Heft 4, S. 1084-1086
ISSN: 1527-1897
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 109-120
ISSN: 1479-2451
Arguably, with respect to religious practice, the United States Constitution sought to metamorphose what had been restricted practices of religious toleration into what we more commonly and with more generous spirit call religious tolerance. The provisions of toleration laws, making legal concessions under the aegis of an official religion, were better than burning heretics at the stake, a practice that after the bloody Thirty Years War in Europe (1618–48) usually caused more trouble than it was worth. Still they extended only a grudging permission to "dissenters." The category "dissenter" did not include all religious minorities, and it placed the tolerated minorities at a disadvantage in almost all civil capacities. Religious toleration before the end of the eighteenth century gave some religious believers license to be wrong, but it carried no pledge of respect.
In: A journal of church and state: JCS, Band 47, Heft 1, S. 159-160
ISSN: 2040-4867
In: A journal of church and state: JCS, Band 46, Heft 4, S. 889-890
ISSN: 2040-4867
In: Journal of church and state: JCS, Band 46, Heft 4, S. 889-890
ISSN: 0021-969X
Moore reviews A History of Israel and the Holy Land edited by Michael Avi-Yonah.
In: Social work: a journal of the National Association of Social Workers, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 558-561
ISSN: 1545-6846
In: Boundaries of Clan and Color; Routledge Advances in Social Economics
In: Review of social economy: the journal for the Association for Social Economics, Band 58, Heft 3, S. 339-360
ISSN: 1470-1162
In: Modern Asian studies, Band 31, Heft 3, S. 583-601
ISSN: 1469-8099
Although they still differ considerably in their willingness to acknowledge it, specialists in the history of north-western Europe in the eleventh and twelfth centuries CE are increasingly treating it as that of the emergence of a new civilization in what had previously been a peripheral region of the Mediterranean-based civilization of the classical west, rather than as a continuation or revival of that civilization itself. In this light Europe, or Latin Christendom as it saw itself, offers a number of striking resemblances to the developments which Lieberman discusses. The most dynamic regions of the new Europe—north-western France, Flanders and lowland England, north-eastern Spain, northern Italy, southern Italy and Sicily—were all peripheral, though in various senses, both to the long-defunct classical civilization and its direct successors, the Byzantine and Abbasid Empires, and to the transitional and much more loosely based ninth-and tenth-century empires of the Franks and Saxons (Ottonians). To this one might add that by the end of the twelfth century the remaining rimlands of the Eurasian continent in a purely geographical sense—Scandinavia, including Iceland, and still more the southern coast of the Baltic and the areas dominated by the rivers which drained into it—were developing very rapidly indeed.
In: Modern Asian studies, Band 31, Heft 3, S. 583-602
ISSN: 0026-749X
In: The journal of developing areas, Band 31, Heft 4, S. 515
ISSN: 0022-037X
In: Social justice: a journal of crime, conflict and world order, Band 24, Heft 3
ISSN: 1043-1578, 0094-7571
Enumerates factors restricting access to the outdoors and discusses social and environmental aspects of the changing ecology of childhood. Calls for a new sense of child-biosphere relations and points to the international conventions and other venues where this theme is being taken up.
In: Journal of business communication: JBC, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 93-94
ISSN: 1552-4582
In: Modern Asian studies, Band 19, Heft 4, S. 876-876
ISSN: 1469-8099
In: British Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century, S. 65-84