Habsburg Studies
Austrian History Yearbook
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Founded in 1965 by R. John Rath, the Austrian History Yearbook remains the only English-language peer-reviewed journal devoted to the history of the territories in Central Europe that were formerly under Habsburg rule and now comprise the modern states of Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and parts of Italy, Poland, Ukraine, Romania and Serbia.
Publications du Centre Europeen d’Etudes Bourguignonnes
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For nearly fifty years, the Centre européen d’études bourguignonnnes (fourteenth and fifteenth centuries) – known until 1984 as the Centre européen d’études burgondo-médianes – has published annually the acts of the scholarly meetings it organizes in cities within the territory covered by its activities. Its objectives, as stated explicitly in its statutes, are the promotion, the encouragement, and the coordination of historical studies relating to the period of the Dukes of Burgundy of the house of Valois and of the first Hapsburgs, between the North Sea, the Rhine-Danube river system, and the Mediterranean. The themes of these meetings relate to different aspects of the past of these lands, with particular emphasis on the political, economic, cultural and spiritual links that existed between them. Because of their international and multilingual nature (French, German, English and Italian), the volumes of the collection hold a position of choice in the bibliography of studies devoted to this historical period which marks the transition between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance in the Western world.
More info: www.brepols.net
Millennium - Tijdschrift voor middeleeuwse studies
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The goal of the journal Millennium is to offer a platform for scholars in medieval studies from the Netherlands and Flanders. The primary focus of the journal lies in those issues that get most attention in medieval research at Flemish and Dutch universities. That is the reason why all articles are written in Dutch. Articles originally written in another language by authors whose work nonetheless has important repercussions for medieval studies in the Netherlands and Belgium will have been translated. Each article in Dutch is accompanied by a short summary in English, French or German. More info: www.brepols.net