Citations:Middle Ages

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word Citations:Middle Ages. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word Citations:Middle Ages, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say Citations:Middle Ages in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word Citations:Middle Ages you have here. The definition of the word Citations:Middle Ages will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofCitations:Middle Ages, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

English citations of middle age, Middle Ages, and Middle Age

  • 1780, James Harris, Philological Inquiries (pages 385–539), in The Works of James Harris, Esq., with an account of His Life and Character, by his son, The Earl of Malmesbury., Oxford: printed by J. Vincent for Thomas Tegg, 73, Cheapside, London, published 1841, epistle dedicatory to Edward Hooper, Esq. (pages 387–388), page 388:
    The third and last part will be rather historical than critical, being an essay on the taste and literature of the middle age.
  • 1818, Henry Hallam, View of the State of Europe during the Middle Ages, third edition, volume II, London: John Murray, published 1822, chapter vi: “History of the Greeks and Saracens.”, page 172, footnote †:
      † Several very recent publications contain interesting details on Saracen literature ; Berington’s Literary History of the Middle Ages, Mills’s History of Mohammedanism, chap. vi. Turner’s History ot England, vol. i. Harris’s Philological Arrangements is perhaps a book better known ; and though it has since been much excelled, was one of the first contributions, in our own language, to this department, in which a great deal yet remains for the oriental scholars of Europe. Casiri’s admirable catalogue of Arabic MSS. in the Escurial ought before this to have been followed up by a more accurate examination of their contents than it was possible for him to give. But sound literature and the Escurial ! — what jarring ideas !
  • 1925, Frank Davis Halsey, “The Ninth Century” (chapter II, pages 26–55), in Medieval Cities: Their Origins and the Revival of Trade, third Princeton Paperback printing (1974), Princeton: Princeton University Press, translation of Les Villes du Moyen Âge: Essai d’histoire économique et sociale by Henri Pirenne (in French), →ISBN, →LCCN, pages 26–27:
    There is obviously more than mere coincidence in the simultaneity of the closing of the Mediterranean by Islam and the entry of the Carolingians on the scene. There is the distinct relation of cause and effect between the two. The Frankish Empire was fated to lay the foundations of the Europe of the Middle Ages. But the mission which it fulfilled had as an essential prior condition the overthrow of the traditional world-order. The Carolingians would never have been called upon to play the part they did if historical evolution had not been turned aside from its course and, so to speak, “de-Saxoned” by the Moslem invasion. Without Islam, the Frankish Empire would probably never have existed and Charlemagne, without Mahomet, would be inconceivable.
    This is made plain enough by the many contrasts between the Merovingian era, during which the Mediterranean retained its time-honored historical importance, and the Carolingian era, when that influence ceased to make itself felt. These contrasts were in evidence everywhere: in religious sentiment, in political and social institutions, in literature, in language and even in handwriting. From whatever standpoint it is studied, the civilization of the ninth century shows a distinct break with the civilization of antiquity. Nothing would be more fallacious than to see therein a simple continuation of the preceding centuries. The coup d’état of Pepin the Short was considerably more than the substitution of one dynasty for another. It marked a new orientation of the course hitherto followed by history.
     — French text from Wikisource, la bibliothèque libre
  • 2014, John L. Brooke, “The Global Dark and Middle Ages, AD 542–1350” (chapter 9, pages 350–392), in Climate Change and the Course of Global History: A Rough Journey (Studies in Environment and History), New York: Cambridge University Press, →DOI, →ISBN, →LCCN, page 351:
    Climate and disease made Brown’s Late Antiquity a tough time in both hemispheres, perhaps a “Dark Age.” The climatic Middle Ages also have some global coherence, with an early Middle Age running from 900–1275 seeing an optimum in some places, in others quite the reverse, followed by a late Middle Age running to 1550 and encompassing the entering phases of the Little Ice Age.
  • ibidem:
    Very broadly and diffusely, the end of a global classical antiquity was shaped in some measure by a climatic global Dark Age running from roughly AD 400 to AD 900. This reversal was coherent in many parts of the world, but it did not have the reach and consequences of the two Hallstatt minimum/Siberian High epochs that bracketed both classical antiquity and the Middle Ages. Rather than a strong Siberian High at work, these climatic Dark Ages were marked in a cold northern hemisphere by a round of North Atlantic ice rafting, and by ENSO variation in the Pacific tilting toward the El Niño mode, with erratic floods and droughts along the Andean coast.