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Variorum Collected Studies


About the Series

The first title in the Variorum Collected Studies series was published in 1970. Since then over 1000 titles have appeared in the series, and it has established a well-earned international reputation for the publication of key research across a whole range of subjects within the fields of history. The history of the medieval world remains central to the series, with Byzantine studies a particular speciality. Other major strands include Islamic studies and the histories of philosophy, science and medicine.  

Each title in the Variorum Collected Studies series brings together for the first time a selection of articles by a leading authority on a particular subject. These studies are reprinted from a vast range of learned journals, Festschrifts and conference proceedings. They are an essential resource making available research that is scattered or inaccessible in all but the most specialized libraries.

For further information about contributing to the series please contact Michael Greenwood at [email protected]

685 Series Titles

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Magic, Memory and Natural Philosophy in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

Magic, Memory and Natural Philosophy in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries

1st Edition

By Stephen Clucas
April 28, 2011

This collection of Stephen Clucas's articles addresses the complex interactions between religion, natural philosophy and magic in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe. The essays on the Elizabethan mathematician and magus John Dee show that the angelic conversations of John Dee owed a ...

Learning and Culture in Carolingian Europe Letters, Numbers, Exegesis, and Manuscripts

Learning and Culture in Carolingian Europe: Letters, Numbers, Exegesis, and Manuscripts

1st Edition

By John J. Contreni
March 28, 2011

Nine of the ten essays in this collection appeared first between 1995 and 2005. Centered in the Carolingian age, they explore how the seventh-century Visio Baronti was read in the ninth century and how social and cultural imperatives transformed the life of scholarship, schools and learning in ...

Muhammad the Prophet and Arabia

Muhammad the Prophet and Arabia

1st Edition

By Uri Rubin
March 28, 2011

This volume comprises articles dealing with qur'anic and post-qur'anic aspects of the Prophet Muhammad's image and religious environment. The pieces in the first section analyse Muhammad's prophecy as reflected in the Qur'an and the post-qur'anic sources of sira (Muhammad's biography), tafsir (...

Emergent Elites and Byzantium in the Balkans and East-Central Europe

Emergent Elites and Byzantium in the Balkans and East-Central Europe

1st Edition

By Jonathan Shepard
February 28, 2011

According to Byzantium's leaders, their imperial order anchored in Constantinople was the centre of excellence - spiritual, moral, material and aesthetic. They rewarded individuals willing to join, and favoured outside groupings prepared to cooperate militarily or politically. Interactions with ...

From the Old Academy to Later Neo-Platonism Studies in the History of Platonic Thought

From the Old Academy to Later Neo-Platonism: Studies in the History of Platonic Thought

1st Edition

By Harold Tarrant
December 28, 2010

This volume collects a set of papers on ancient Platonism that span the nine centuries between Plato himself and his commentator Olympiodorus in the 6th century, many of them less easy to obtain. Much of the work is at the intersection of philosophy and literature, and a recurrent aim is to ...

Numerals and Arithmetic in the Middle Ages

Numerals and Arithmetic in the Middle Ages

1st Edition

By Charles Burnett
December 28, 2010

This volume, the third by Charles Burnett in the Variorum series, brings together articles on the different numeral forms used in the Middle Ages, and their use in mathematical and other contexts. Some pieces study the introduction of Hindu-Arabic numerals into Western Europe, documenting, in more ...

Turks and Khazars Origins, Institutions, and Interactions in Pre-Mongol Eurasia

Turks and Khazars: Origins, Institutions, and Interactions in Pre-Mongol Eurasia

1st Edition

By Peter B. Golden
November 28, 2010

This second collection of studies by Peter Golden continues his explorations of the Türk Empire (mid-sixth to mid-eighth centuries), the stateless polities that appeared after its collapse, and of the Khazar Qaghanate (mid-seventh century to ca. 965-969), its imperial successor state in the ...

Mesopotamia, Iran and Arabia from the Seleucids to the Sasanians

Mesopotamia, Iran and Arabia from the Seleucids to the Sasanians

1st Edition

By D.T. Potts
October 28, 2010

This volume focuses on the period between the conquest of the Achaemenid empire by Alexander the Great and the advent of Islam, dominated in the central regions of the Near East by the Seleucid, the Parthian and the finally the Sasanian dynasties. Historiographically speaking, these periods have ...

Philip Melanchthon, Speaker of the Reformation Wittenberg's Other Reformer

Philip Melanchthon, Speaker of the Reformation: Wittenberg's Other Reformer

1st Edition

By Timothy J. Wengert
September 28, 2010

The studies in this volume illuminate the thought and life of Philip Melanchthon, one of the most neglected major figures in Reformation history and theology. Melanchthon was one of the most widely published and respected thinkers in his own day, who authored some of the sixteenth-century's most ...

Biblical Interpretation from the Church Fathers to the Reformation

Biblical Interpretation from the Church Fathers to the Reformation

1st Edition

By Karlfried Froehlich
August 28, 2010

The history of biblical interpretation has attracted considerable attention in recent decades. This is particularly true in the field of medieval exegesis where much effort has been spent on making primary materials available and advancing their interpretation. One area of research in which even ...

Rhetoric and Philosophy from Greek into Syriac

Rhetoric and Philosophy from Greek into Syriac

1st Edition

By John W. Watt
August 28, 2010

Shortly after 500 CE, the Syriac-speaking priest and physician Sergius of Resh'aina, who had studied in Alexandria, wrote the first known exposition of Aristotle in a Semitic language. About four centuries later, Abu Bishr Matta, an alumnus of the monastic school of Dayr Qunna in Iraq, completed ...

Mamluks and Crusaders Men of the Sword and Men of the Pen

Mamluks and Crusaders: Men of the Sword and Men of the Pen

1st Edition

By Robert Irwin
July 28, 2010

Mamluks and Crusaders: Men of the Sword and Men of the Pen brings together a series of studies, based mainly on medieval Arabic sources, of Middle Eastern history and society in the late Middle Ages. Several of these studies deal with the confrontation between the Mamluks and the Crusaders. Others ...

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