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Your search for posts with tags containing Article found 819 posts
Melissa Figueroa, “Passing as Morisco: Concealment and Slander in Antonio Mira de Amescua’s El mártir de Madrid,” The Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 20/4 (2020).
Olli-Pekka Vainio continues the Finnish interest on Luther and deification. See his abstract above and the full article at https://doi.org/10.1111/ijst.12518 In the most general terms, deification means participation in the divine nature, which starts...
Around noon on 30 January 1889 Austria’s official newspaper Wiener Zeitung in Vienna reported that 30-year-old Crown Prince Rudolf, heir to the fraying and fractious Austro-Hungarian Empire, husband of Princess Stéphanie of Belgium, had died that morning...
: Andrea Ballesteros Danel, “Ideas about Trans-Pacific Origins and Voyages in Early Spanish Chronicles from the Americas,” Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research 27/1 (2021)
BOOK REVIEW: Daniel Shays’s Honorable Rebellion: An American Story by Daniel Bullen (Yardley, PA: Westholme, 2021) There is truth to the adage that history is told... The post Daniel Shays’s Honorable Rebellion appeared first on Journal of the American...
Journal of Medieval Iberian Studies 13/3 (2021): Francois Soyer, “Jews and the child murder libel in the medieval Iberian Peninsula: European trends and Iberian peculiarities.” Tiago João Queimada e Silva, “Aristocratic neo-Gothicism in fourteenth-century...
Published in November by the Nationalmuseum, with a selection of eighteenth-century topics listed below: The Art Bulletin of Nationalmuseum Stockholm is a journal devoted to art history. It is published in English twice a year with a content that ranges...
The Historical Journal 64/5 (2021): Kaarlo Havu, “Erasmus and Juan Luis Vives on Rhetorical Decorum and Politics.” Claudia J. Rogers, “Malintzin as a Conquistadora and Warrior Woman in the Lienzo de Tlaxcala (c. 1552).”
Francesco Caprioli, “The ‘Sheep’ and the ‘Lion’: Charles V, Barbarossa, and Habsburg Diplomatic Practice in the Muslim Mediterranean (1534-1542),” Journal of Early Modern History, Oct 2021.
Giuseppe Marino, “‘Y si los españoles tuviesen en Japón algún pueblo … ’: una utopía hispano-nipona en las Crónicas del Lejano Oriente (1599),” Bulletin of Spanish Studies 98/7 (2021).
Would Mary Shelley have conceived of Frankenstein without the work of Italian scientist Luigi Galvani? Looking back at its creation, she recalled long conversations with Lord Byron and her husband about Galvani’s ideas. “Perhaps a corpse would be...
Nelson Fernando González Martínez, “Communicating an Empire and Its Many Worlds: Spanish American Mail, Logistics, and Postal Agents, 1492-1620,” Hispanic American Historical Review 101/4 (2021).
The way George Soper told it, it might have been a case for Sherlock Holmes. “The typhoid epidemic that broke out in the Summer home of Mr George Thompson at Oyster Bay was a puzzling affair,” he told the New York Times. It was 1906 and typhoid was...
The eighteenth century in October’s issue of The Burlington . . . I know that Rado’s article is not an eighteenth-century essay, but she is a HECAA member, and she briefly frames the material in terms of a longer history; the theme for the October...
Thomas Glesener, “Gouverner la langue arabe: Miguel Casiri et les arabisants du roi d’Espagne au siècle des Lumières,” Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 76/2 (2021).
Histoire de l’art, 87 : Humanités numériques : de nouveaux récits en histoire de l’art ?, 2021/1 VARIA Claire Betelu et Dorothée Lanno Avec Claire Gerin Pierre et Johanna Salvant Entre discours et matérialité : une étude des paysages de Jean-Baptiste...
Histoire de l’art, 87 : Humanités numériques : de nouveaux récits en histoire de l’art ?, 2021/1 PERSPECTIVES Mathias Blanc Numériser les regards portés sur les œuvres. Un enjeu épistémologique pour l’histoire de l’art ? Numériser les...
José Javier Ruiz Ibáñez and Gaetano Sabatini, “Alliés, voisins et ennemis du roi d’Espagne: La puissante faiblesse de la Monarchie hispanique (1580-1620),” Annales, Histoire, Science Sociales 75/1 (2020).
By 216BC, Hannibal’s Carthaginian army in the Second Punic War had already won victories against the Romans at Trebia and Lake Trasimene. But then came Cannae. According to Polybius, the Senate, terrified by Hannibal’s successes, sent eight legions...
Daniel Hershenzon, “Objets captifs: Les artefacts catholiques en Méditerranée au début de l’époque moderne,” Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 76/2 (2021).
Notes on Post Tags Search
By default, this searches for any categories containing your search term: eg, Tudor will also find Tudors, Tudor History, etc. Check the 'exact' box to restrict searching to categories exactly matching your search. All searches are case-insensitive.
This is a search for tags/categories assigned to blog posts by their authors. The terminology used for post tags varies across different blog platforms, but WordPress tags and categories, Blogspot labels, and Tumblr tags are all included.
This search feature has a number of purposes:
1. to give site users improved access to the content EMC has been aggregating since August 2012, so they can look for bloggers posting on topics they're interested in, explore what's happening in the early modern blogosphere, and so on.
2. to facilitate and encourage the proactive use of post categories/tags by groups of bloggers with shared interests. All searches can be bookmarked for reference, making it possible to create useful resources of blogging about specific news, topics, conferences, etc, in a similar fashion to Twitter hashtags. Bloggers could agree on a shared tag for posts, or an event organiser could announce one in advance, as is often done with Twitter hashtags.
Caveats and Work in Progress
This does not search post content, and it will not find any informal keywords/hashtags within the body of posts.
If EMC doesn't find any <category> tags for a post in the RSS feed it is classified as uncategorized. These and any <category> 'uncategorized' from the feed are omitted from search results. (It should always be borne in mind that some bloggers never use any kind of category or tag at all.)
This will not be a 'real time' search, although EMC updates content every few hours so it's never very far behind events.
The search is at present quite basic and limited. I plan to add a number of more sophisticated features in the future including the ability to filter by blog tags and by dates. I may also introduce RSS feeds for search queries at some point.
Constructing Search Query URLs
If you'd like to use an event tag, it's possible to work out in advance what the URL will be, without needing to visit EMC and run the search manually (though you might be advised to check it works!). But you'll need to use URL encoding as appropriate for any spaces or punctuation in the tag (so it might be a good idea to avoid them).
This is the basic structure:
http://emc.historycarnival.org/searchcat?s={search term or phrase}
For example, the URL for a simple search for categories containing London:
http://emc.historycarnival.org/searchcat?s=london
The URL for a search for the exact category Gunpowder Plot:
http://emc.historycarnival.org/searchcat?s=Gunpowder%20Plot&exact=on
In this more complex URL, %20 is the URL encoding for a space between words and &exact=on adds the exact category requirement.
I'll do my best to ensure that the basic URL construction (searchcat?s=...) is stable and persistent as long as the site is around.