DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Physiologus
Physiologus
The Protrepticus of Clement of Alexandria: a Commentary
The Mediaeval Bestiary and Its Textual Tradition
An Account of the Μυρµηκολέων Or Ant-Lion
Byzantium and France: the Twelfth Century Renaissance and the Birth of the Medieval Romance
Spreading Bulgarian Medieval Manuscripts with Natural Science Content in Wallachia and Moldavia
Crossing Paths in the Middle Ages: the Physiologus in Iceland
Jared Beverly -- the Zoological Imagination of Early Christians
The Unicorn Tapestries: Religion, Mythology, and Sexuality in Late Medieval Europe
The Physiologus and the Christian Fish Symbol. 407
CMH #27 Saved
The Education of a Byzantine Bestiarist
LION Subject Matter
Medical Lore in the Bestiaries*
Exploring Representations of Anti-Semitism in English and Northern French Medieval Bestiaries
CS Lewis and the Reshaping of Medieval Thought
The Hyena's Cave: 'Jeremiah'
The Nilotic Mosaic in Saint Stephen's Church of Gaza in Choricius
THE NEWSLETTER of the EARLY SLAVIC STUDIES ASSOCIATION Vol
Top View
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Previously Published Works
The Beast Between Us the Construction of Identity and Alterity Through Animal Symbolism in Late Antique Jewish and Christian Tradition
The Old English Elene, Phoenix, and Physiologus
The Desert Fathers' Beasts: Crocodiles in Medieval German
The Bestiary and Henryson's “Morall Fabillis”
The Siren and Onocentaur in the Physiologus Tradition
Visions of the Unicorn: the Case of Scève's Délie (1544)
The Baptism of Jesus, Irenaeus of Lyons, and His Interpreters
Beyond the Physiologus Animal Stories and Representations In
Patristica - Oecumenica Bd
Dorofeeva, Miscellanies, Christian Reform and Early Medieval
Cambridge Medieval History
Theobaldus Physiologus
University Micrcxilms International
Reassessing the Visual Networks of Barlaam and Ioasaph
The Bestiary in Canterbury Monastic Culture 1093-1360 Volume 1: Text
Animal Symbolism in Ecclesiastical Architecture
Grummett Religion Compass
Humans in the Bestiary
Iconographies of Bestiaries in C. S. Lewis' the Chronicles of Narnia
The Image of the Lion in Coptic Art
History of Medieval Arab Veterinary Medicine Byzantine Empire Justinian I
DRAFT October 2018 Mira Beth Waserman 1 Why Are There No