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2,406 results on '"early modern history"'

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1. From Mangons to Rewards : Butchery Animals as Revealing the Diversity of Trades in Belgian Cities in the Early Modern Period.

2. Faszination Rom. Maarten van Heemskerck zeichnet die Stadt.

3. Global Early Modern Art in Seven Objects.

4. Pre-r/l breaking in English and the diphthongal bias.

5. Automatic ceramic identification using machine learning. Lusitanian amphorae and Faience. Two Portuguese case studies.

6. Early Modern Deviant Burial in Prehistoric Monuments in Sweden.

7. Overcoming the crisis: Social and ecological impacts of the 17th and 18th century Northern Wars on Kazuń village (Poland) and its surrounding area.

8. An assemblage of urban water access: The geography of water marginalization in Amsterdam, 1690-1840.

9. A Reassessment of the Military Careers and Writings of Sir John Peyton (1579–1635) and Sir Henry Peyton (c.1580–1623).

10. State of the Field: The New Administrative History.

11. Crafting history in real time: The count-duke of Olivares, the Holy Roman Empire and generalissimo Wallenstein on the Spanish stage (1632–1634).

12. A Landscape of Toleration: Central Europe in the Early Modern Era.

13. The early modern knowledge precariat and the precariousness of ‘orthodoxy’ in Martin Mulsow’s <italic>knowledge lost</italic>.

14. Multiple forms of precarity in Martin Mulsow’s <italic>Knowledge Lost</italic>.

15. Artemisia Gentileschi and the ‘biographical sensationalism’ in the interpretation of her artistic work.

16. Plato, Locri and “the Flower of Italy”: Revaluating an “Ancient” Epithet.

17. Making a Case for Ebony.

18. The Not-So-Global Field of Global Art History.

19. Fauna and flora listed in John Hooker's manuscript 'Synopsis chorographical of Devonshire' (1599).

20. Back matter.

21. Russian Translations of Foreign Military Books in the 17th Century.

22. Safavid Twelver Lettrism Between Sunnism and Shiʿism, Mysticism and Science: Rajab al-Bursī vs. Maḥmūd Dihdār.

23. How to be not economic: abundance and the history of strolling.

24. Intercolonial Cinnamon: Fashioning Connections from the Eighteenth to Mid‐Nineteenth Centuries.

25. Unveiling the female experience through adult mortality and survivorship in Milan over the last 2000 years.

26. How Did Early Modern Scholars Study Early Maps?

27. Reconsidering William Hubbard's A General History of New England.

28. A Reformation in Progress: The Path toward the Reform of Johannes Oecolampadius.

29. Introduction: Emancipation from Metaphysics? Natural History, Natural Philosophy and the Study of Nature from the Late Renaissance to the Enlightenment.

30. Protestant Hermeneutics and the Persistence of Moral Meanings in Early Modern Natural Histories.

31. In search of Alice Molland: an English witchcraft will o' the wisp.

32. Fascination with the Persecutor: George L. Mosse and the Catastrophe of Modern Man.

33. Notes on Contributors.

35. Contributors' Notes.

36. The Small and Marvelous: Emotional Communities in Madeleine de Scudéry's "Story of Two Chameleons".

37. London, Newcastle’s Coal, and the Weaponisation of Energy in the British Civil Wars, 1642–1646.

38. Thomas Nashe: Balladeer.

39. A much richer idea of modernity.

40. Genome and life-history evolution link bird diversification to the end-Cretaceous mass extinction.

41. Early modern Europe's other real characters.

42. Thinking with the Spanish Empire: The Religious Orders and World Evangelization.

44. Pioneers of Capitalism: The Netherlands, 1000–1800.

45. Nature experiences affect the aesthetic reception of art: The case of paintings depicting aquatic animals.

46. Contentious Cantonese: Rock Fights and the Culture of Violence in the Early Modern Canton Delta.

47. Our ancestors: the Cimbri, Goths and Sarmatians. Three ethnogenetic legends in early modern Europe.

48. Mobility, Print and Trade in Europe: The Case of the Tesini Pedlars (17th–19th Centuries).

49. Evidence for Re-attributing to Pierre Gassendi the Authorship of Anatomia ridiculi muris (1651) and Favilla ridiculi muris (1653).

50. Curiosities in the Far North: Collecting networks in Norway, 1600–1730.

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