Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
(Update)
The Medieval and Early
Modern Iberian World
(formerly Medieval Iberian Peninsula)
Editors
Larry J. Simon, Western Michigan University
Gerard Wiegers, Radboud University Nijmegen
Arie Schippers, University of Amsterdam
Donna M. Rogers, Dalhousie University
Isidro J. Rivera, University of Kansas
VOLUME 45
By
Alberto Ferreiro
LEIDEN • BOSTON
2011
Cover illustration: Front: detail of the church of Salvatierra de Tormes, Salamanca
Back: San Pedro de la Nave, Zamora
© Photographs by Pablo C. Díaz, Universidad de Salamanca
Ferreiro, Alberto.
The Visigoths in Gaul and Iberia (update) : a supplemental bibliography, 2007-2009 / by
Alberto Ferreiro.
p. cm. — (The medieval and early modern Iberian world, ISSN 1569-1934 ; v. 45)
Includes index.
ISBN 978-90-04-21222-0 (hardback : alk. paper)
1. Visigoths—France—Bibliography. 2. Visigoths—Spain—Bibliography. I. Title. II. Series.
Z2177.F48 2011
[DC62.2.V57]
016.946’01—dc23
2011035775
ISSN 1569-1934
ISBN 978 90 04 21222 0 (hardback)
ISBN 978 90 04 21538 2 (e-book)
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in
a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
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Fees are subject to change.
Dedicado a mi amigo y colega,
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................ xi
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................. xiii
PERIODICAL ABBREVIATIONS .................................................. xv
REFERENCE ...................................................................................... 1
(A) Bibliographies ............................................................ 3
(B) Historiography ........................................................... 4
(C) Personalia ................................................................... 7
GENERAL STUDIES ........................................................................ 9
(A) Iberian Peninsula ...................................................... 11
(B) Regional Studies ........................................................ 13
INVASIONS ....................................................................................... 15
(A) Germanic .................................................................... 17
(B) Muslim ........................................................................ 20
SOCIAL – POLITICAL – ECONOMIC ........................................ 25
CIVIL LAW ....................................................................................... 37
LITERARY CULTURE ...................................................................... 45
(A) Literature .................................................................... 47
(B) Chronicles .................................................................. 48
(C) Linguistics .................................................................. 49
PALEOGRAPHY ............................................................................... 51
ECCLESIASTICAL ............................................................................ 63
(A) General Studies ......................................................... 65
(B) Canon Law ................................................................. 71
(C) Councils ...................................................................... 72
(D) Heresy ......................................................................... 76
(E) Monasticism ............................................................... 77
(F) Organization .............................................................. 79
LITURGY ....................................................................................... 81
(A) Mariology ................................................................... 86
(B) Music ........................................................................... 87
PATRISTICS ....................................................................................... 89
Studia Generalia ................................................................ 91
Apringius Pacensis ............................................................ 92
Avitus Bracarensis ............................................................. 93
viii contents
Bachiarius ........................................................................... 94
Braulionis Caesaraugustanus ........................................... 95
Egeria in Gallecia Mon .................................................... 96
Eugenius Toletanus I, II, III ............................................ 99
Fructuosus Bracarensis ..................................................... 100
Gregorius Illiberitanus ...................................................... 102
Hagiographica .................................................................... 103
Ildefonsus Toletanus ......................................................... 106
Iohannes Biclarensis .......................................................... 110
Iulianus Toletanus ............................................................. 111
Leander Hispalensis .......................................................... 113
Licinianus Cartaginensis .................................................. 115
Pacianus Barcinonensis .................................................... 116
Potamius Olisiponensis .................................................... 117
Prudentius .......................................................................... 118
Sisebutus Rex ..................................................................... 130
Taio Caesaraugustanus ..................................................... 131
Valerius Bergidensis .......................................................... 132
Miscellanea Patristica ....................................................... 133
ISIDORUS HISPALENSIS ................................................................ 135
PSEUDO-ISIDORUS ......................................................................... 175
ARCHAEOLOGY .............................................................................. 179
(A) General Studies ......................................................... 181
(B) Urban and Rural Space ............................................ 184
(C) Architecture ............................................................... 193
(D) Art ............................................................................... 198
(E) Epigraphy ................................................................... 213
(F) Minor Arts ................................................................. 224
(G) Numismatics .............................................................. 256
(H) Funeraria .................................................................... 262
SUEVES ....................................................................................... 277
(A) General Studies ......................................................... 279
(B) Archaeology ............................................................... 280
(C) Ecclesiastical .............................................................. 281
(D) Linguistics .................................................................. 282
(E) Liturgy ........................................................................ 283
(F) Hydatius (Idacius) Aquae Flaviae ep. .................... 284
(G) Martinus Bracarensis ................................................ 285
(H) Orosius Paulus ........................................................... 288
(I) Priscillianus Abulensis ............................................. 292
contents ix
This volume now makes up the second in the tri-annual series that I
began with Brill in 2005. Overall, the reception of these volumes has
been very positive and apparently continue to be useful to established
scholars and those who are up and coming. The challenges of doing a
bibliography while remaining the same in some ways has improved. It
is still, nevertheless, a daunting task to be up to date on all that is pub-
lished in this field in the absence of any one place, or even two, where
one could go and obtain the necessary material. It demands visiting
in-person as many academic libraries as is possible, which I acknowl-
edge below. In addition, one has to consult numerous bibliographi-
cal sources, in print and on-line, especially those that I acknowledge.
The websites Rebiun and Dialnet have proven to be exceedingly use-
ful. Rebiun is a free internet site that allows researchers to search for
books in all of the university libraries in Spain. Dialnet gives access to
over 1,000 academic journals in all disciplines which in the majority
of cases are up to date. It addition, it provides content information
on hundreds of specialized volumes of congresses. It will be become
evident right away that the bibliography contains works dating prior
to 2007. Again, as with any other bibliographies this is not unusual at
all, since the bibliographer is ever attempting to atone for ones ‘sins of
omission.’ Moreover, the bibliography consistent with all major bibli-
ographies is a couple of years in arrears in relation to the actual date
of publication. Scholars of Late Antique Iberia, nevertheless, can be
reasonably assured that these volumes will bring to their attention as
complete as is possible research that may be useful to their scholarly
interests. In keeping with the previous issues, this one remains not
annotated for several reasons. For one, the size of the volume would
reach proportions in size that would make it highly unlikely to find a
publisher. In view of this, it is significant that Brill is the only publisher
willing to support and publish this series and for that they are to be
commended. Secondly, I leave it up to the individual scholar to decide
what is relevant to their research agenda rather than I being the sole
judge on this matter, which would be quite presumptuous on my part
to assume such a role.
xii introduction
One thing that has proven quite useful is that most scholars now
have personal on-line websites where they list a full inventory of pub-
lished, in the press, and in progress publications. Still, many more do
not have such websites, but it seems to be increasingly less so in this
computer savvy culture that we live in today. At a more human per-
sonal level I am very fortunate to have received direct responses to my
request from many scholars who so generously shared with me their
relevant publications for inclusion. On the other hand, some scholars
even after repeated requests refused for reasons unknown to honor my
petitions.
The bibliography in terms of its format remains essentially the same.
One change with the previous bibliographies of this series is that I have
moved Priscillian to the section on the Sueves since he and his heresy
flourished mainly in Late Antique Gallaecia. Moreover, on account of
the rarity of studies on Iberian Arianism I have expunged the sub-
section for Arianism and simply have a general rubric for heresy.
The sections on Isidore of Seville and Archaeology continue to rep-
resent the most abundant entries. While some specialized books on
Isidore have appeared the majority of research is in the form of ref-
erences to his works, mainly the Etymologies, in specialized research.
The field is still wide open for researchers to explore Isidore and his
deep influence in the Middle Ages. We have yet to see studies that
explore to what extent he continued to be a source of authority in
the fifteenth century and beyond. In the field of archaeology, with few
exceptions, a new find of material culture from Germanic Iberia comes
to light almost annually. While we are increasingly in a better posi-
tion to assess the extent of Germanic settlement in Iberia, there is still
considerably more to be discovered and evaluated. There does exist,
however, a significant imbalance of the archaeological research. The
material discoveries for Germanic are still overwhelmingly from sites
situated within Spain, while unfortunately Portugal lags far behind.
There are a few productive scholars there who dedicate themselves to
this era; one can only hope that larger groups will form as in Spain,
Madrid and Barcelona for example. The overall picture is quite healthy
for Late Antique Visigothic studies and its corollary fields as this bib-
liography verifies. The next installment will cover 2010–2012, a work
that I have already started.
For the current volume I have consulted what are the most up
to date bibliographies in print or on-line that were available to me.
I should note that the bi-annual Luso-Hispano bibliographies of my
introduction xiii
acknowledgements
230 Alvarado Planas. “Las fuentes del derecho visigodo I y II.” Man-
ual de historia del derecho y de las instituciones, pp. 197–230.
[See no. 2521]
247 Koon, S, and J. Wood. “Unity from disunity: law, rhetoric and
power in the Visigothic kingdom.” ERH 16 (2009) 793–808.
248 Kroppenberg, I. “Der gescheiterte Codex: Überlegungen zur
Kodifikationsgeschichte des Codex Theodosianus.” Rechtsge-
schichte 10 (2007) 112–126.
[Lex romana visigothorum]
344 N. A. “Libro de las Leyes Fechas por los Reyes Godos, siglo
XIV—Fundación Lázaro Galdiano, Madrid.” Hispania Gotho-
rum, p. 532.
[See no. 2615]
463 Sanz Serrano, E. Ma. “La mujer a través de los concilios his-
panorromanos y visigodos.” Roles sexuales, pp. 85–110.
[See no. 2831]
474 Escribano Paño, Ma. V. “Las leyes contra los heréticos bajo la
dinastía Teodosiana (379–455) y su efectiva aplicación.” Mai-
nake 31 (2009) 95–113.
475 Gallego Franco, H. “Mujeres, paganismo y heterodoxia en la
historiografía hispana tardoantigua.” El mundo religioso his-
pano, pp. 343–351.
[See no. 2612]
514 Ferrer Grenesche, J.-M. Los santos del nuevo Misal hispano-
mozárabe. Toledo: Estudio Teológico de San Ildefonso, 1995.
194 p. ill.
515 Flores Arcas, J. J. “Ars celebrandi. Creatividad en la fidelidad.”
EcclO 23 (2006) 297–320.
516 Godoy Fernández, C. “L’Eucaristia en els dipòsits e relíquies
per a la consagració dels altars hispànics d’època visigótica.”
MLCat 15 (2007) 47–58.
517 González López-Corps, M. “Apuntes para la Historia de la
Iniciación Cristiana en los primeros siglos de Hispania.” Tole-
tana 16 (2007) 67–95.
84 liturgy
(No Publications)
APRINGIUS PACENSIS
768 Gnilka, Ch. “Julian bei Prudentius: (zu Prud. apoth. 449–54).”
Philologische Streifzüge, pp. 412–415.
[See no. 2599]
779 Gnilka, Ch. “Siede und Rosenöl: zu Prud. ham. 287f. und cath.
3, 21f.” Philologus 149 (2005) 174–179.
780 Gnilka, Ch. “Zu Prudentius Cath. 7.” Hermes 133 (2005) 124–
125.
781 Gnilka, Ch. “Falsae pietatis imago: Quellenstudien zu einer
Szenenfolge der Psychomachie des Prudentius.” Virtutis imago,
pp. 339–367.
[See no. 2636]
782 Gnilka, Ch. “Humor bei Prudentius.” Iubilet cum Bonna Rhe-
nus, pp. 127–146.
[See no. 2687, Peristephanon 10, 1136–1140]
prudentius 123
842 Smolak, K. “Epic poetry as exegesis: The Song of the Good War
(Eupolemius).” Poetry and Exegesis, pp. 231–244.
[See no. 2634, Psychomachia]
884 Álamo Martínez, C. del. and E. Valdez del Álamo. “Kunst und
Kult zu Ehren des Schutzheiligen Santo Domingo in Silos.”
Benediktinische Kunst, pp. 209–220, ill.
[See no. 2716, Etymologiae]
886 Allies, N. “The Sermo Plebeius and the spoken language in the
monastic Rule of Isidore of Seville.” In search of the medieval
voice, pp. 3–18.
[See no. 2538]
910 Bertini, F. “Le età del mondo romano: tra mitologia e storia,”
FuturAntico, 2: 15–20.
[See no. 2663, Etymologiae]
140 isidorus hispalensis
972 Dolbeau, F. “Prier avec les mots des saints dans l’Occident
médiévale.” La prière en latin, pp. 419–440.
[See no. 2785, Synonyma]
977 Drews, W. Juden und Judentum bei Isidor von Sevilla. Studien
zum Traktat ‘De fide catholica contra Iudaeos.’ Berliner his-
torische Studien, vol. 34. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, 2001.
621 p.
isidorus hispalensis 147
997 Evdokimova, L. “La place des arts de langage dans les ency-
clopédies médiévales et les goûts littéraires de leurs auteurs:
Isidore de Séville et Brunet Latin.” Aux sources du dialogue
des cultures, pp. 67–80.
[See no. 2672]
isidorus hispalensis 149
1017 Fried, J. “Konradiner und kein Ende oder Die Erfindung des
Adelsgeschlechtes aus dem Geist der Kanistik. Eine Auseinan-
dersetzung mit Eduard Hlawitschka.” ZSSRGAbt 123 (2006)
1–66.
[Etymologiae]
1079 Kenny, A. “Les catégories chez les Pères de l’Eglise latins.” Les
Catégories et leur histoire, pp. 121–133.
[See no. 2799, Etymologiae]
1168 Poirel, D. “Quis quid ubi quibus auxiliis cur quomodo quando.
Les recensions multiples des Allegoriae d’Isidore de Séville.”
L’édition critique des oeuvres d’Isidore de Séville, pp. 15–48.
[See no. 2793]
1226 Vecchio, S. “The seven deadly sins between pastoral care and
scholastic theology: The Summa de vitiis by John of Rupella.”
In the Garden of Evil, pp. 104–127.
[See no. 2629, Etymologiae]
1235 Wille, C. “Die Reiher, das Neunauge und der Igel. Tierna-
men im romanischen Mittelalter,” Tiere und Fabelwesen, pp.
79–101.
[See no. 2632, Etymologiae]
1296 Centeno Cea, I. “La ciudad entre los siglos IV y VII. El mundo
tardoantiguo.” Arqueología urbana en Ávila, pp. 115–138, ill.
[See no. 2584]
1318 Hurtado, T. (et al.). “Un nivel de destrucción del siglo V d.C
en el Portus Sucronem (Cullare, Valencia): contexto.” QPAC
26 (2008) 95–142, ill.
1319 Isla Fez, A. “El lugar de habitación de las aristocracias en época
visigoda, siglos VI–VIII.” AyTM 14 (2007) 9–20, ill.
1320 Izquierdo Benito, R. “La Urbs Regia.” Hispania Gothorum,
pp. 143–160.
[See no. 2615]
1400 Utrero Agudo, Ma. de los A. “Las iglesias cruciformes del siglo
VII en la Península Ibérica. Novedades y problemas cronológi-
cas y morfológias de un tipo arquitéctonico.” El Siglo VII Frente
al Siglo VII, pp. 133–154, ill.
[See no. 2745]
1547 Arce, J. “La inscripción del Puente de Mérida de época del rey
Eurico (483 d.C.).” Pyrenae 39 (2008) 121–129.
1548 Arce, J. “Aportaciones a la discussion sobre la traducción e
interpretación de la inscripción del Puente de Mérida de época
del rey Eurico (483 d.C.).” Pyrenae 39 (2008) 143–145.
1549 Ares Vázquez, N. “Una inscripción en Santa Eulalia de Bóveda
y su context arqueológico.” Lvcensia 19 (2009) 9–20, ill.
1550 Barroso Cabrera, R. – J. Morín de Pablos – I. Velázquez Sori-
ano. “La imagen de la realeza en el reino visigodo de Toledo
a través de la iconografía y la epigrafía.” ZArq 11 (2009) 488–
508, ill.
1551 Bepoix, J. E. “La ‘indictio’ de la inscripción de Alcalá de Gua-
daira: reinterpretación de la lectura de Jean Mallon.” Estudios
en memoria del Profesor Dr. Carlos Sáez, pp. 77–84.
[This inscription deals with the Visigoth Hermenegild, See no. 2700]
1552 Bescós Corral, A. “Pizarra No. 7, San Vicente del Río Almar,
Aleonada, Salamanca—Museo de Salamanca.” Hispania Gotho-
rum, p. 552.
[See no. 2615]
1558 Canto, A. Ma. “Los viajes del caballero inglés John Breval a
España y Portugal: novedades arqueológicas y epigráficas de
1726.” RPArq 7, 2 (2004) 265–364, ill.
[HEpig 14 (2008) 221]
1987 N. A. “Moneda II, Copia del siglo XIX de tremis del reinado
de Chindasvinto—Museo Cerralbo, Madrid.” Hispania Gotho-
rum, p. 500, ill.
[See no. 2615]
(No Publications)
(E) LITURGY
2169 Bianchi, B. “Il Lucidario del Codice Barbi (BNCF II VIII 49).”
SMV 53 (2007) 25–131.
[Formula honestae vitae]
2181 Hainthaler, Th. “Martin von Braga und seine Schrift De cor-
rectione rusticorum.” Volksglaube im antiken Christentum,
pp. 490–503.
[See no. 2604]
2302 Delaplace, Ch. “Les origines des églises rurales (Ve–VIe siè-
cles). A propos d’une formule de Grégoire de Tours.” HSRur
18 (2002) 11–40.
2303 Delaplace, Ch. “La mise en place de l’infrastructure ecclésias-
tique rurale en Gaule à la fin de l’Antiquité (IVe–VIe siècles ap.
J. C.).” CSMC 30 (1999) 153–170.
2304 Delaplace, Ch. “Saint Exupère et la tradition hagiographique
toulousaine.” MSAMF 58 (1998) 15–27.
2305 Delaplace, Ch. “Géographie et l’érémitisme en Gaule: marches
et marges de la christianisation (IVe–VIe siècle).” Frontières
terrestres, frontières célestes dans l’Antiquité, pp. 409–434.
[See no. 2699]
2347 Bailey, L. “These are not men: Sex and drink in the Sermons of
Caesarius of Arles.” JECS 15 (2007) 23–44.
2348 Bailey, M. D. “A late-medieval crisis of superstition?” Specu-
lum 84 (2009) 633–661.
[Sermones and includes Isidore of Seville’s Etymologiae]
2517 Tejral, J. “The Vandals from their origins to the year 406 AD.”
ZArq 11 (2009) 32–53.
2518 Villaverde Vega, N. “El reino Vándalo-africano y la persisten-
cia mercantile del estrecho septegaditano (mitad s. V—primer
tercio s. VI).” MM 49 (2008) 425–450.
COLLECTED ESSAYS AND STUDIA HONORARIA
(A) COLLECTED ESSAYS
2539 Bonifay, M. and J-C. Tréglia (ed.). LRCW 2 Late Roman Coarse
Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean.
Archaeology and archaeometry. Volume 1. BAR International
Series 1662 (I). Oxford, 2007. 481 p.
[See no. 1647, 1649–1650, 1675, 1685, 1707, 1709, 1722, 1925, 1931, 1939–
1941, 2273, 2289, 2291, 2294, 2296, 2298]
2608 Hamburger, J. F. and A.-M. Bouché. The Mind’s Eye. Art and
theological argument in the Middle Ages. Princeton, NJ: Princ-
eton University, Department of Art and Archaeology, 2006.
xv–447 p. ill.
[See no. 1081]
2653 Sezgin, F. (et al.). Coins and coinage of al-Andalus, VI. Frankfurt
am Main: Institute for the History of Arabic-Islamic Science at
the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, 2003. vii–373 p.
[See no. 89]
2654 Sezgin, F. (et al.). The Umayyad mosque in Córdoba: texts and
studies, vol. 1. Frankfurt am Main: Institute for the History of
Arabic-Islamic Science at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe Uni-
versity, 2008. 328 p. ill.
[See no. 121]
2681 Source of Wisdom. Old English and Early Medieval Latin Stud-
ies in Honor of Thomas D. HILL. Toronto Old English Series,
vol. 16. Toronto: University of Toronto, 2007. xxiii–420 p. ill.
[See no. 2228]
2687 Iubilet cum Bonna Rhenus: Festschrift zum 150 jährigen Bestehen
des Bonner KREISES. Berlin: Logos-Verlag, 2004. ix–227 p. ill.
[See no. 782]
352 collected essays and studia honoraria
2694 Von den leges barbarorum bis zum ius barbarum des National-
sozialismus. Festchrift für Hermann NEHLSEN zum 70 Geburt-
stag. Köln: Böhlau, 2008. xiii–780 p.
[See no. 1570]
2697 Medieval Church Law and the Origins of the Western Legal Tra-
dition. A tribute to Kenneth PENNINGTON. Washington, DC:
Catholic University of America, 2006. xviii–405 p.
[See no. 1078]
2722 Cantus planus. Papers read at the 12th meeting of the IMS study
group. Lillafüred, Hungary, 2004, Aug. 23–28. Budapest: Hungar-
ian Academy of Sciences, Institute for Musicology, 2006. 922 p.
[See no. 549]
2745 El Siglo VII Frente al Siglo VII, Arquitectura. AEArq, vol. 51.
Madrid: CSIC, 2009. 346 p. ill.
[See no. 1366, 1373–1374, 1376, 1381–1383, 1385, 1389, 1392, 1395–1396,
1400, 1402]
2756 Fauna and Flora in the Middle Ages. Studies of the Medieval
Environment and its impact on the human mind. Papers deliv-
ered at the International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 2000,
2001 and 2002. Beihefte zur Mediaevistik. Monographien,
Editionen, Sammelbände, vol. 8. Frankfurt a.M.: P. Lang, 2007.
323 p. ill.
[See no. 868]
2760 Giovanni Della Casa ecclesiatico e scrittore. Atti del III Con-
vegno (Firenze-Borgo San Lorenzo, 20–22 novembre 2003).
Studi e testi del Rinascimento europeo, vol. 34. Roma: Ediz-
ioni di Storia e Letteratura, 2007. xii–575 p.
[See no. 912]
364 congresses – symposia – colloquia
2770 Il Cantico dei Cantici nel Medioevo. Atti del Convegno Inter-
nazionale dell’Università degli Studi di Milano e della Soci-
età Internazionale per lo Studio del Medioevo Latino (S. I. S.
M E.L.). Gargnano sul Garda, 22–24 maggio 2006. Millennio
Medievale, vol. 76—Atti di convegni, vol. 23. Firenze: SISMEL,
2008. xii–600 p. ill.
[See no. 704, 2366]
2792 L’acqua nei secoli altomedievali. Spoleto, 12–17 aprile 2007. Setti-
mane di studio della Fondazione Centro Italiano di studi sull’Alto
Medioevo, vol. 55. 2 vols. Spoleto, 2008. xv–1382 p. ill.
[See no. 889, 959, 1045, 1129, 2190]
2830 Religions del Món Antic. Entre politeisme i monoteisme: III cicle
de conferències organizat per la Fundació Sa Nostra: Palma, 10
d’octubre–28 de novembre de 2002. Palma: Servei de publica-
cions i intercanvi científic, Universitat de les Illes Balears—
Fundació Sa Nostra, 2003. 244 p. ill.
[See no. 2255]
2843 The Ostrogoths from the Migration Period to the Sixth Century:
An Ethnographic Perspective. Seventh Conference on Studies
in Historical Archaeoethnology, San Marino, 8–12 September,
2000. San Marino: The Boydell Press, 2007. 320 p. ill.
[See no. 165]
Since the studies came to my attention after the main body was sub-
mitted to Brill some observations about their citation are in order.
Studies published in collected works, festschrifts or congresses, the
full bibliographical information of the volume in which they appear is
not included in any of the sections entitled COLLECTED WORKS or
CONGRESSES. For items published in academic journals, the complete
journal information is included in the main index of journal abbrevia-
tions. The authors and their subject have also been incorporated into
the two respective indexes.
015 María Nolla, J. “Las villas tardías del noreste peninsular,” Las
‘villae’ tardorromanas en el Occidente, pp. 369–390.
[See no. 2790]
A Cova dos Mouros’ (Oímbra, Ourense) Amphorae 1647, 1649, 1676, 1700,
1313 1707–1708, 1718, 1722, 1728,
A.H.P. de Zamora 380 1797–1798, 2539, 2565
Abad Line Fine Art 1522 Anaphoral Benedictus 2360
Adamnan of Iona 1047 Andalucía 63, 1952, 2015, 2732, 2743,
Adhemar of Chabannes 1211 2789
Aelfric, De temporibusanni 917 Andrea Biglia 2207–2208
Æthelwold 1069 Andrés de Guevara 371
Africa 187, 476, 632, 1651–1652, 1673, Anglo–Latin Riddles 915
1679, 1793, 1797, 1798, 1802, 1929, Anglo–Saxon Glossaries 1095
2509, 2512, 2518 Anglo–Saxon Library 1170, 2374
Agde 190, 2338 Anglo–Saxon Manuscripts 929
Aire–sur–l’Adour, Agde 2338 Annalen des Klosters Einsiedeln 1167
Al–Andalus 89–90, 92–93, 99–101, Annotationes Ad Quator Institutionum
104, 112, 114, 116–117, 124, 135, Imperatoris Iustinuani Libros:
1220, 1357–1358, 2653 Digestorum Seu Pandectarum
Alane, Badajoz 1789 Liber Primus (c. 1700)—Biblioteca
Alans 2450–2452 Histórica Marqués de Valdecilla
Álava 411, 1258, 1395, 1753–1754, de la Universidad Complutense,
1783–1785, 1787, 1792, 2042–2044, Madrid 346
2055 Anselm of Canterbury 1172, 1184
Alberico of Montecassino 920 Antifonario, Catedral de León 309
Albertus Magnus 1111 Antigua Comandancia de Marina,
Alcalá de Guadaíra, Sevilla 1551, 1597 Tarragona 1473
Alcalá de Henares 64, 437, 1267, Antonio de Nebrija 784, 787
1275–1276, 1621, 2000, 2562, 2601, Antonio de Pereda 650, 1523
2633, 2700 Antonio del Castillo Saavedra 1524
Alcaraz, Albacete 1452, 1668 Antonio Estela, c. 1560–1591 1444
Alcasser (Valencia) 1647 Antonio Sánchez 1620
Alcazaba de Badajoz 1464, 1482 Apian 2220
Alcazaba de Mérida 1471 Apocalypse of Thomas 2266
Alcázar, Córdoba 1337, 1672 Apringius Pacensis 550–552
Alcázar, Sevilla 1608 Aquitaine 2297, 2328, 2342, 2457
Alcuin of York 962 Aragón 426, 1948, 1982, 2225, 2551
Aldhelm Scholia 1184 Arator 2448
Aldhelm’s Enigma XXXVI 1014 Arcas, Cuenca 1827
Alesga, Asturias 1875 Archidiócese of Valladolid 621
Alfonso VI, King of Castilla–León 518, Architecture 1091, 1365–1402, 2288,
525 014
Algarve, Portugal 119, 1941 Archivio di Stato di Cremona 1033
Algeciras 132–133, 1251 Archivo de la Compañía de Jesús, Alcalá
Almería 111, 1263, 1681, 2706 de Henares 1275
Altercatio ecclesiae et sinagoga, Potamius Archivo del MAN 1249
of Lisboa 724 Archivo General de Simancas 1175
Alvar Gómez de Castro 1138 Armin U. Stylow 41, 46, 2702
Ambrogio Lorenzetti 2189 Arnobius of Sicca 968
Ambrose of Milan 723, 760, 789, 991 Arqueopaleontólogica 2011, 2823
382 subject index