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The chronicon pictum
The chronicon pictum











  1. #THE CHRONICON PICTUM CODE#
  2. #THE CHRONICON PICTUM PLUS#

(Early 13th century modern Hungarian translations)

#THE CHRONICON PICTUM PLUS#

Reports of Friar Julianus, plus a letter on "How the Tartars Live." Revised text of the Golden Bull (1231 modern Hungarian translation) (At the end of 1214 modern Hungarian translation)Īvailable as an English translation with minor exclusions - see pages 129-130. Letter of King Andrew II to Pope Innocent III Letters, reports and other papers documenting the life of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, also known as Saint Elizabeth of Thuringia.Ĭhronicle of the deeds of the Hungarians. (At the end of 1199 modern Hungarian translation) (1192-1195 medieval Hungarian & modern Hungarian translations) The oldest source document in Hungarian for its length (Between 11 modern Hungarian translation) Report on the Death of a Hungarian Student Studying in Paris Tudósítások egy Párizsban tanuló magyar diák haláláról.(3 September 1138 modern Hungarian translation)

#THE CHRONICON PICTUM CODE#

King Kálmán's so-called First Code of Law (1077-1092 modern Hungarian translations) (1074-1075 modern Hungarian translations) Pope Gregory VII's Letters to King Salomon Gergely pápa levelei Salamonhoz és Gézához 1040 - 1050 modern Hungarian translation) (1031 parallel Latin & modern Hungarian translation) German version found HERE (1018 Latin facsimile) (1000-1301 mostly modern Hungarian translations)īy Bishop Thietmar von Merseburg, a chronicle including Saxon emperors as well as information of the Slavs east of Elbe River, the Hungarians and the Poles Source website for documents through 1301 listed below. (early 11th century modern Hungarian translation) King/Saint Steven's Admonitions to Prince Imre

  • Szent István király intelmei Imre herceghez.
  • (700-1204 English-language transcriptions)
  • Translations from Byzantine Sources: The Imperial Centuriesīyzantine and Medieval sources in English translation.
  • Priscus describes the court of Attila king of the Huns Dining With Attila the Hun (448 English translation) He received a very different impression of the people from the fearsome pictures given earlier by Ammianus Marcellinus." "The Greek writer Priscus actually visited the Huns and conversed with Attila. On the "war-hungry" Pannonians Compiled by Lacus Curtius (7 BC English translations) Section focusing specifically on Mysia, Dacia, and the Danube Greek traveler Strabo’s encyclopedia on the ancient world as he knew it. Made available by Topos Text (antiquity English translation) "People" filter can be removed for wider search results. Authors include Ovid, Augustus, Strabo, etc. Sources on Pannonia, Region/tribe and Roman province (what is now NW Serbia, W Hungary, Slovakia, etc.). (Antiquity through 212 AD maps and facsimile images)

    the chronicon pictum

    Geographic and thematic approaches available in nine languages. (Includes data on former Roman provinces now found in Austria, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Netherlands, Romania and Slovakia) Maps and images of transformations as seen through cultural artifacts. Transformation:The Emergence of a Common Culture in the Northern Provinces of the Roman Empire from Britain to the Black Sea up to 212 AD.(Beginnings to 1526 Czech and Slovak language facsimiles) Archiv starých česko-slovenských listínĪrchive of Old Czech and Slovak Documents.EuroDocs > History of Hungary: Primary Documents > Hungary: From Antiquity to 1526













    The chronicon pictum