Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle
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The Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle brings together the latest research in chronicle studies from a variety of disciplines and scholarly traditions. Chronicles are the history books written and read in educated circles throughout Europe and the Middle East in the Middle Ages. For the modern reader, they are important as sources for the history they tell, but equally they open windows on the preoccupations and self-perceptions of those who tell it. Interest in chronicles has grown steadily in recent decades, and the foundation of a Medieval Chronicle Society in 1999 is indicative of this. Indeed, in many ways the Encyclopedia has been inspired by the emergence of this Society as a focus of the interdisciplinary chronicle community.
The online version was updated in 2014, 2016 and 2021.
Subscriptions: See Brill.com
Pace di messer Iacopo da Certaldo
(287 words)
Pachymeres, Georgios
(471 words)
Packington, William
(196 words)
Page, John
(636 words)
Page, John
(636 words)
Pagliarini, Giovanni Battista
(188 words)
Paleja
(726 words)
Palencia, Alfonso Fernández de
(447 words)
Palmieri, Matteo
(240 words)
Palmieri, Mattia
(461 words)
Pane, Ogerio
(414 words)
Panholz, Leonhard
(237 words)
Panodorus
(163 words)
Papoušek, Jan, of Soběslav
(111 words)
Parenti, Marco
(220 words)
Parenti, Piero di Marco
(234 words)
Parfues, Jakob
(218 words)
Parian Marble
(171 words)
Parisius de Cereta
(262 words)
Parleberg, Johannes
(260 words)