References Middle Ages

Writings about the Middle Ages

Al Talbi (2009). Al Farabi’s doctrine of education: Between philosophy and sociological theory. 

Arikha, Noga (2007). Passions and tempers: A history of the humours. NY: Harper Collins.

Bede, V. (1995). Ecclesiastical history of the English people. London: Penguin Books. Retrieved from Google Books: http://books.google.com/books?id=-z486r0ZfbwC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Venerable+Bede&cd=2#v=onepage&q=&f=false. Retrieved March 5, 2010.

Boethius http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boethius. Retrieved on February 2, 2010.

Chaucer, Geoffrey (2010). Prologue to The Canterberry Tales http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/ct-prolog-para.html. Retrieved on January 31, 2010.

Dols, M. (1983). The leper in medieval Islamic society. Speculum, 58, 4, 891-916.

Dols, M. (1984) Insanity in Byzantium and Islamic Medicine, Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 38, 145-148. http://indianmedicine.eldoc.ub.rug.nl/root/D/16569/?pFullItemRecord=ON. Retrieved on April 2, 2010.

Dols, M. (1992) Majnun: the madman in medieval Islamic world. (Ed. D. E. Immisch). Oxford.

Education in Islamic Education – Pedagogy And Didactics. Retrieved from Education in Islamic Education – Pedagogy And Didactics http://science.jrank.org/pages/9096/Education-in-Islamic-Education-Pedagogy-Didactics.html#ixzz0iXX6jngq on March 18, 2010.

Gardner, Jane (1993). Being a Roman citizen. London: Routledge.

Giladi, Avner (1989). Concepts of childhood and attitudes towards children in Medieval Islam: A preliminary study with special reference to reaction to infant and child mortality. Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, 32, 2, 121-152.

Green, C.D. (2003). Where did the ventricular localization of mental faculties come from? Journal of History of the Behavioral Sciences 39, (2), 131-142.

Günther, Sebastian (2006) Be masters in that you teach and continue to learn: Medieval Muslim thinkers on educational theory. Comparative Education Review, 50, 3, 367-388

Hamarneh, S. (1962). Development of hospitals in Islam. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 17, 367.

Karenberg A, Hort I. (1998). Medieval descriptions and doctrines of stroke: Preliminary analysis of select sources. Part II: Between Galenism and Aristotelism – Islamic theories of apoplexy (800-1200).

Lee, R.W. 1956. The elements of Roman law. 4th ed. London: Sweet and Maxwell. Journal of the History of Neurosciences, 7, 3,174-85.

Metzler, Irina (2006) Disability in Medieval Europe: Thinking about physical impairment during the high Middle Ages, c. 1100-1400. London: Routledge. See especially her historiographical chapter, which takes past scholars to task for promoting the ‘disability as sin’ model.

Murphy, J. J. (1974). Rhetoric in the Middle Ages: A history of rhetorical theory from Saint Augustine to the renaissance. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Nemesius (1955). The nature of man. Translated by W. Telfer (Ed.), Cyril of Jerusalem and Nemesius of Emesa. Westminster Press, Philadelphia.

O’Neill, Y. V. (1993) Meningeal localization: A new key to some medical texts, diagrams and practices of the middle ages. Mediaevistik, 6, 211-238.

Rockey, D., & Johnstone, P. (1979). Medieval Arabic views on speech disorders: Al-Razi (c. 865-925). Journal of Communication Disorders, 12, 229-243.

Rubenstein, Richard (2003). Aristotle’s children: How Christians, Muslims, and Jews, rediscovered ancient wisdom and illuminated the middle ages. NY: Harcourt.

Saint Mark (2010). The gospel according to St. Mark. From http://www.drbo.org/chapter/48001.htm Retrieved on March 3, 2010.

Siraisi, N. (1985) Pietro d’Abano and Taddeo Alderotti: Two Models of Medical Culture, Medioevo, 11,139-162.

Siraisi, Nancy (1990) Medieval and early renaissance medicine. An introduction to knowledge and practice. Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press.

Stainton, T. (2008). Reason grace and charity: Augustine and the impact of church doctrine on the construction of intellectual disability. Disability and Society, 23, 4, 485-496.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved January 30, 2010 from

Stillman, N. (1975). Charity and social services in medieval Islam. Societas, 5/2, 105-115.

Stiker, Henri-Jacques (1997) A history of disability. Tr, William Sayers. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

Tritton, A. S. (1957) Material on Muslim education in the middle ages. London: Luzac.

Whitaker, H.A. (2007). Was medieval cell doctrine more modern than we thought? Chapter 4 in H. Cohen & B. Stemmer (Eds.) Consciousness and cognition: Fragments of mind and brain. (pp. 45-51). NY: Elsevier.

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