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staticRecentiores: Later Latin Texts and Contexts
Latin culture survived Rome's fall by more than a millennium. The study of the texts and the cultural history they embody offers a rich vein still far from exhaustively mined. This series embraces monographs, critical texts, and annotated translations from any period in the history of postclassical Latin writing. Literary history, manuscript studies, cultural history, the "liberal arts" and the technical literature they spawn, and what may still be called "intellectual history" of all periods—from late antiquity to the Renaissance and beyond—will be welcome.
Recentiores: Later Latin Texts and Contexts
Latin culture survived Rome's fall by more than a millennium. The study of the texts and the cultural history they embody offers a rich vein still far from exhaustively mined. This series embraces monographs, critical texts, and annotated translations from any period in the history of postclassical Latin writing. Literary history, manuscript studies, cultural history, the "liberal arts" and the technical literature they spawn, and what may still be called "intellectual history" of all periods—from late antiquity to the Renaissance and beyond—will be welcome.
staticSeries Editor
James J. O'Donnell
Editorial Board Paula Fredriksen, Boston University
James W. Halporn, Indiana University, emeritus
E. Ann Matter, University of Pennsylvania
Carol Neel, The Colorado College
Stephen G. Nichols, The Johns Hopkins University
Mary Wack, Washington State University
Series Editor
James J. O'Donnell
Editorial Board Paula Fredriksen, Boston University