The Japanese and German Economies in the 20th and 21st Centuries

The Japanese and German Economies in the 20th and 21st Centuries

Business Relations in Historical Perspective

The Imperial City of Cologne: From Roman Colony to Medieval Metropolis (19 B.C.-1125 A.D.) is an urban history of Cologne from its imperial Roman origins as a northeastern frontier military outpost to a medieval metropolis on the German Empire’s northwestern border. This first history of Cologne, available in English, challenges received notions of late Roman ethnic identities, a Dark Age collapse of urban life, devastating Viking and Magyar incursions, and the origins of medieval urban government.
  • Cover
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Foreword
    • Historic Preservation and European Urban History
  • Prologue
    • Natural History and Prehistoric Human Habitation
  • 1. Romano-Germanic Cologne (58 B.C.-A.D. 456)
  • 2. Rupture or Continuity?
    • Merovingian Cologne (A.D. 456-686)
  • 3. The Imperial Project Redux
    • Carolingian Cologne (686-925)
  • 4. The Age of Imperial Bishops I
    • Ottonian Ducal Archbishops and Imperial Kin (925-1024)
  • 5. The Age of Imperial Bishops II
    • Early Salian Archchancellors and Urban Patrons (1024-1056)
  • 6. The Great Pivot
    • Herrschaft meets Gemeinde in the Pontificate of Anno II (1056-1075)
  • 7. The Rhineland Metropolis Emerges
    • Herrschaft and Gemeinde during the Investiture Controversy (1075-1125)
  • 8. From Roman Colony to Medieval Metropolis
    • The Urban History of Cologne in European Context
  • Select Bibliography
  • Index

Materias

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