The International Prester John Project: How A Global Legend Was Created Across Six CenturiesMain MenuOrientation to ProjectPath One: 1122-1235Path Two: 1236-1310 ADPath Three : 1311-1460 ADPath Four : 1461-1520 ADPath Five: 1521-1699 ADPath Six: 1700-1800 ADChristopher Taylor // christopher.eric.taylor@gmail.com946e2cf6115688379f338b70e5b6f6c039f8ba6f Global Middle Ages
Historia de duabus civitatibus
12015-06-13T16:21:15-07:00Christopher Taylor // christopher.eric.taylor@gmail.com946e2cf6115688379f338b70e5b6f6c039f8ba6f52813plain2016-04-21T21:11:09-07:00Christopher Taylor // christopher.eric.taylor@gmail.com946e2cf6115688379f338b70e5b6f6c039f8ba6fOtto of Freising, The Two Cities: A Chronicle of Universal History to the Year 1146 A.D., trans. Charles C. Mierow. New York: Columbia UP, 2002.
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12023-12-27T21:31:45-08:00Chronica Richardi Pictauiensis4plain2024-01-19T14:16:08-08:00Chronica Richardi Pictauiensis, monachus cluniacensis de diuersis libris collecta
This universal chronicle by Cluny monk Richard of Poitiers (d. 1174) openly acklowledges its debt to earlier authors. Reporting on the existence of Christians in Asia, Richard claims the existence of Christian kings "beyond the Medes and Persians," a phrase that can be found in Otto of Freising's Historia de duabus civitatibus.