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Chronicle of 754

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22: 313:
pointed out. Neither does Badajoz, because it did not exist at the time of the chronicle; Bishop Prudencio Sandoval of Pamplona, who first published the chronicle in its entirety in 1615, evidently thought Pax Julia was Badajoz, since he refers to "Isidore, bishop of Badajoz" in his title to the
173:, similarly covering the topics of rulers, rebellions, wars, the church and plagues (but in greater detail, with a more eccentric prose style that has made the work difficult for modern scholars to decipher). The work has three main focal points, the first two Byzantium and 99:
but this attribution is now widely accepted as being the result of compounded errors. Henry Wace explained the origin and the phantom history of "Isidorus Pacensis", an otherwise unattested bishop of
407:.1, (March 1999:13-29). Two of the manuscripts, though they bear no author's name, were asserted by seventeenth-century scholars to bear the name of "Isidorus Pacensis (Wace 1880). 134:
The Chronicle of 754 covers the years 610 to 754, during which it has few contemporary sources against which to check its veracity. It begins with the accession of
539: 215:, vol. 96, p. 1253 sqq. and given a modern critical edition and translated into Spanish by José Eduardo Lopez Pereira. An English translation by 391:(London: Allen & Unwin, 1971); Collins, conversely, eschewed the later, mythologised Arabic accounts, for which he has been criticised. 126:. A recent study by Lopez Pereira rejects both these in favour of an unidentified smaller city in present-day south-east Spain. 420:(Zaragoza, 1980); followed by a revised Latin edition and translation, with numerous essays, in 2009 (see References below) 534: 529: 238:
In some manuscripts the sections are apportioned into 13 chapters and an appendix. See the edition of Lopez Pereira 2009.
524: 509: 309:
Isidorus, p. 627. Beja plays no role in the Chronicle, as might be expected in a work issued from that city, as
460: 489: 193: 139: 519: 323:
Tailhan seems to have been the first to reject Isidorus Pacensis as author, but remarkably believed the
162:, the first modern historian to utilise it so thoroughly. It contains the most detailed account of the 353:
Hartmann, Carmen Cardelle de (2003). "The textual transmission of the Mozarabic Chronicle of 754".
188:
survives in three manuscripts, of which the earliest, of the ninth century, is divided between the
21: 115: 256: 8: 216: 463:
auctores antiquissimi XI, Chronica minora saec. IV, V, VI, VII, vol. 2,. Berlin, 1894.
370: 143: 514: 464: 374: 92: 30: 362: 178: 174: 247:
According to Christys p. 2 it was the last Latin chronicle written in al-Andalus.
189: 163: 119: 104: 95:. Since the 16th century, it has been attributed to an otherwise unknown bishop, 76: 400:
C.C. de Hartmann , "The textual transmission of the Mozarabic Chronicle of 754"
277:
Europe and the Gospel: Past Influences, Current Developments, Mission Challenges
196:, Madrid. The other manuscripts are of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. 328: 170: 498: 439: 310: 155: 123: 366: 504: 138:
to the Byzantine throne and is considered an eyewitness account for the
151: 64: 71:
contains the earliest known reference in a Latin text to "Europeans" (
135: 100: 472:
A Dictionary of Christian Biography, Literature, Sects and Doctrines
204: 147: 91:(Christian) chronicler, living under Arab rule in some part of the 298: 88: 60: 483:
Anonyme de Cordoue. Chronique rimée des derniers rois d'Espagne.
488:
English translation of the Chronicle by Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi
208: 56: 75:), whom it describes as having defeated the Saracens at the 169:
The style of the entries resembles the earlier chronicler
110:
There is also some disagreement about the place where the
59:-language history in 95 sections, written by an anonymous 453:. Fuentes y Estudios de Historia Leonesa 127. León, 2009. 259:(2012), "Misunderstanding cultures: Islam and the West", 387:
H.V. Livermore dismissed it as largely mythological, in
303:
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
451:
Continuatio Isidoriana Hispana Cronica Mozarabe de 754
444:
Recherches sur l'histoire et la littérature d'Espagne
146:
history and for the story of the Arabian conquest of
142:. Some consider it one of the best sources for post- 297:"Isidorus Pacensis" appears in error as bishop of 221:Conquerors and Chroniclers of Early Medieval Spain 496: 181:, adding a third which is the Umayyad conquest. 540:Christian texts of the medieval Islamic world 194:Biblioteca de la Real Academia de la Historia 29:of the Chronicle of 754. The text is in the 348: 346: 434:Christians in Al-Andalus, 711–1000 352: 20: 203:was first published in its entirety in 497: 343: 160:The Arab Conquest of Spain, 711-797 13: 14: 551: 389:The Origins of Spain and Portugal 458:Continuatio Hispana anno DCCLIV. 327:to be a rhymed epic such as the 410: 394: 381: 261:Philosophy and Social Criticism 470:William Smith and Henry Wace, 334: 317: 291: 282: 269: 250: 241: 232: 87:Its compiler was an anonymous 1: 478:"Isidorus Pacensis" pp 313f). 461:Monumenta Germaniae Historica 426: 177:it shares in common with the 154:; it provided the basis for 140:Umayyad conquest of Hispania 7: 219:can be found in his volume 129: 114:was written. Tailhan named 16:Latin-language written work 10: 556: 535:Christianity in al-Andalus 530:8th-century books in Latin 449:J. Eduardo Lopez Pereira, 275:Evert Van De Poll (2013), 207:, 1615; it was printed in 122:was the first to champion 63:(Christian) chronicler in 525:8th century in al-Andalus 510:8th-century history books 314:work, see Mommsen p. 333. 288:In Smith & Wace 1880. 82: 226: 164:Battle of Poitiers-Tours 418:Cronica mozarabe de 754 367:10.1111/1468-0254.00037 118:as the city of origin. 34: 402:Early Medieval Europe 355:Early Medieval Europe 24: 257:Kwame Anthony Appiah 223:(Liverpool, 1990). 217:Kenneth Baxter Wolf 52:Continuatio Hispana 46:Mozarabic Chronicle 520:Italian chronicles 436:(Routledge, 2002). 35: 474:(1880: vol. III, 279:(Versita), p. 55. 97:Isidorus Pacensis 93:Iberian Peninsula 43:(also called the 31:Visigothic script 547: 421: 414: 408: 398: 392: 385: 379: 378: 350: 341: 338: 332: 321: 315: 305:(1870) vol. II, 295: 289: 286: 280: 273: 267: 254: 248: 245: 239: 236: 179:Chronicle of 741 175:Visigothic Spain 40:Chronicle of 754 555: 554: 550: 549: 548: 546: 545: 544: 495: 494: 446:, 2nd ed. 1860. 429: 424: 415: 411: 399: 395: 386: 382: 351: 344: 339: 335: 322: 318: 296: 292: 287: 283: 274: 270: 255: 251: 246: 242: 237: 233: 229: 190:British Library 132: 85: 77:battle of Tours 17: 12: 11: 5: 553: 543: 542: 537: 532: 527: 522: 517: 512: 507: 493: 492: 486: 479: 468: 454: 447: 437: 432:Ann Christys, 428: 425: 423: 422: 409: 393: 380: 342: 333: 329:Song of Roland 316: 290: 281: 268: 249: 240: 230: 228: 225: 171:John of Biclar 131: 128: 84: 81: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 552: 541: 538: 536: 533: 531: 528: 526: 523: 521: 518: 516: 513: 511: 508: 506: 503: 502: 500: 491: 487: 484: 480: 477: 473: 469: 466: 462: 459: 455: 452: 448: 445: 441: 440:Reinhart Dozy 438: 435: 431: 430: 419: 413: 406: 403: 397: 390: 384: 376: 372: 368: 364: 360: 356: 349: 347: 337: 330: 326: 320: 312: 311:Reinhart Dozy 308: 304: 300: 294: 285: 278: 272: 266:(4–5) 425–33. 265: 262: 258: 253: 244: 235: 231: 224: 222: 218: 214: 210: 206: 202: 197: 195: 191: 187: 182: 180: 176: 172: 167: 165: 161: 157: 156:Roger Collins 153: 149: 145: 141: 137: 127: 125: 121: 117: 113: 108: 107:, Portugal). 106: 102: 98: 94: 90: 80: 78: 74: 70: 66: 62: 58: 54: 53: 48: 47: 42: 41: 32: 28: 23: 19: 485:Paris, 1885. 482: 481:J. Tailhan, 475: 471: 457: 456:T. Mommsen, 450: 443: 433: 417: 412: 404: 401: 396: 388: 383: 361:(1): 13–29. 358: 354: 336: 324: 319: 306: 302: 293: 284: 276: 271: 263: 260: 252: 243: 234: 220: 212: 200: 198: 185: 183: 168: 159: 133: 111: 109: 96: 86: 72: 68: 51: 50: 45: 44: 39: 38: 36: 26: 18: 416:Firstly as 499:Categories 427:References 301:in Smith, 213:Patr. Lat. 152:Septimania 144:Visigothic 73:europenses 65:Al-Andalus 375:247740699 340:p. 58-59. 325:Chronicle 201:Chronicle 186:Chronicle 136:Heraclius 112:Chronicle 101:Pax Julia 69:Chronicle 515:Mozarabs 205:Pamplona 192:and the 148:Hispania 130:The work 103:(modern 79:in 732. 299:Badajos 120:Mommsen 116:Córdoba 89:Mozarab 67:. The 61:Mozarab 55:) is a 25:Folio 2 490:Online 465:Online 373:  124:Toledo 83:Author 371:S2CID 227:Notes 209:Migne 57:Latin 476:s.v. 307:s.v. 199:The 184:The 150:and 105:Beja 37:The 505:754 363:doi 211:’s 49:or 501:: 442:, 369:. 357:. 345:^ 264:38 166:. 158:, 467:. 405:8 377:. 365:: 359:8 331:. 33:. 27:r

Index


Visigothic script
Latin
Mozarab
Al-Andalus
battle of Tours
Mozarab
Iberian Peninsula
Pax Julia
Beja
Córdoba
Mommsen
Toledo
Heraclius
Umayyad conquest of Hispania
Visigothic
Hispania
Septimania
Roger Collins
Battle of Poitiers-Tours
John of Biclar
Visigothic Spain
Chronicle of 741
British Library
Biblioteca de la Real Academia de la Historia
Pamplona
Migne
Kenneth Baxter Wolf
Kwame Anthony Appiah
Badajos

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