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1

Freller, Thomas. "IN SEARCH OF A MEDITERRANEAN BASE: THE ORDER OF ST. JOHN AND RUSSIA'S GREAT POWER PLANS DURING THE RULE OF TSAR PETER THE GREAT AND TSARINA CATHERINE II." Journal of Early Modern History 8, no. 1 (2004): 3–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570065041268933.

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AbstractRossiya yest' yevropeyskaya derzhava ("Russia is a European power") was Tsarina Catherine II's credo and program, a logical continuation of the policy of Tsar Peter the Great. Malta and the Order of St. John played an important role in Catherine's plan: the island of the knights was to serve as a bridgehead for a permanent Russian presence in the Mediterranean. Already in 1698 Tsar Peter had sent delegations and diplomats to Hospitaller Malta to negotiate a Russo-Maltese alliance against the Ottomans. In the 1760s a Russian chargé d'affaires was installed in Malta and the famous fleet
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2

Stănică, Loredana. "Rapports intertextuels et (re)constructions identitaires dans le roman Bois rouge de Jean-Marie Touratier." Revista Cercurilor studenţeşti ale Departamentului de Limba şi Literatura Franceză, no. 10 (November 15, 2021): 17–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.31178/rcsdllf.10.2.

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Published in 1993, the novel Bois rouge by Jean-Marie Touratier brings to life the history of the short-lived French colony of Brazil, the Antarctic France, whose existence, reduced to only five years (1555-1560), was described in the travelogues written in the 16th century by André Thevet (Les Singularitez de la France Antarctique - The New Found World, or Antarctike) and Jean de Léry (Histoire d’un voyage faict en la terre du Brésil – History of a Voyage to the Land of Brazil). Beneath the appearance of a simple story told by an ironic voice, sometimes even satirical towards the military lea
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3

Engelstein, Laura. "Bobkowski and the Banker." Polish Review 67, no. 3 (2022): 138–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/23300841.67.3.13.

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Abstract This essay begins with a discussion of the controversy among Polish émigré intellectuals, following Bobkowski's death, on the subject of his attitude toward the Jews during and after the war. In the course of this precursor to more recent debates, Czesław Miłosz (1911–2004), for one, characterized Bobkowski's posture as antisemitic, but others rose to the writer's defense. Among them was Szymon Konarski (1894–1981), wartime director of the Paris office of the Polish Savings Bank (PKO), who came to know Bobkowski through their involvement in the support network for Polish workers in oc
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4

Cazel, Fred A. "The Knights of Malta." History: Reviews of New Books 23, no. 2 (1995): 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03612759.1995.9951016.

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5

Cibelli, Deborah. "Battle Paintings after Lepanto by Giorgio Vasari and Matteo Pérez d’Aleccio." Paragone Past and Present 6, no. 1 (2025): 29–57. https://doi.org/10.1163/24761168-00601002.

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Abstract This study focuses on the genre of military painting by comparing Giorgio Vasari’s frescoes referring to the Battle of Lepanto of 1571 for the Sala Regia in the Vatican to the fresco cycle depicting the Siege of Malta of 1565 produced by Matteo Pérez d’Aleccio working for the Knights of the Sovereign Military Order of Saint John in Malta from 1577–1581. The visual analysis of the artists’ frescoes encompasses a discussion of the style and iconography of their work. Further assessment of the reception of the paintings considers ideologies relevant to the Christian Holy League and the k
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6

Robuschi, Luigi. "Le commende gerosolimitane nella Terraferma veneziana (secoli XVI–XVIII): identificazione e amministrazione." Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken 101, no. 1 (2021): 375–403. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/qufiab-2021-0014.

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Abstract The comparative analysis of the sources preserved at the Archivio del Gran Priorato di Lombardia e Venezia and the Archives of the Order of Malta in the National Library of Malta, have made it possible to quantify and identify the lands owned by the Order of Malta on the Venetian mainland – the Terraferma – between the 16th and the 18th centuries. The archival documentation, further corroborated by research in the Archives of Venice, Padua and Verona, uncovered a vast range of situations, yet to be studied and linked to the properties owned by the knights in Veneto. Furthermore, the d
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7

Watts, Karen. "Decorative Armour of the Knights of Malta." Royal Armouries Yearbook 4, no. 1 (1999): 26–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/30650682.1999.12426656.

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8

Macdonald, David. "An Unrecognized Countermark of the Knights of Malta." KOINON: The International Journal of Classical Numismatic Studies 5 (November 9, 2022): 140–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.32028/k.v5i.1661.

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In 1609, Alof de Wignacourt, Grand Master of the Supremus Militaris Ordo Hospitalarius Sancti Ioannis Hierosolymitani Rhodiensis et Melitensis (Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta), generally referred to as the Knights of Malta, reported to the Council of the Order that many counterfeit German and Hungarian thalers that been seized from Turkish ships were circulating in Malta. Moreover, some bore a false countermark of a fleur de lis, the personal emblem of the Grand Master. The Council ordered that the coins in question be assayed, counterfe
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9

BUTTIGIEG, EMANUEL. "KNIGHTS, JESUITS, CARNIVAL, AND THE INQUISITION IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY MALTA." Historical Journal 55, no. 3 (2012): 571–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x12000180.

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AbstractBetween 1530 and 1798, Malta, the southernmost tip of Catholic Europe, was home to the military-religious Order of St John (of Malta). This organization traced its origins to the years just before the beginning of the crusades in late eleventh-century Palestine. From Malta, the Order sought to keep up its dual mission of hospitality (hence the appellative of hospitallers) and fighting the infidel Muslim at sea. From 1592 to 1768 the Society of Jesus was present in this Catholic outpost from where it supported the mission of the Order and sought to remould hospitaller piety. The relatio
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10

Watts, Karen. "The Armour of the Knights of St John, Malta." Royal Armouries Yearbook 3, no. 1 (1998): 29–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/30650682.1998.12426624.

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11

Johnson, Anna. "Cantate Domino: Early Choir Books for the Knights in Malta." Journal of the Institute of Conservation 35, no. 2 (2012): 230–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19455224.2012.710871.

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12

D'AVENIA, FABRIZIO. "Making Bishops in the Malta of the Knights, 1530-1798." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 66, no. 2 (2015): 261–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046914002061.

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During the early modern age the appointment of Maltese bishops involved conflicts in the management of ecclesiastical patronage, jurisdictional issues and international diplomacy. The procedure for appointment, established by Charles v in 1530 when he granted Malta to the Order of St John, was the result of a compromise: safeguarding rights of royal patronage without undermining the independence of an international military order. It is important, however, to underline the reforming activity conducted by bishops appointed in such political ways, especially through the application of some insti
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13

Ivanov, Eduard. "The nature of the international legal personality of the Order of Malta." Pravovedenie 66, no. 4 (2022): 371–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu25.2022.402.

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The article provides a theoretical analysis of historical roots and the nature of international legal personality of the Order of Malta. The Order was established in 1048 to provide medical support to the wounded and sick pilgrim in the Holy Land. In the following years, the Order became military functions and participated in the Crusades. Power over territory and population was never the main mission of the Order. In the author’s opinion, the Order of Malta was rather a platform for cooperation of knights from different countries. However, in 16th–18th centuries, in the time of the developmen
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14

Floristán, José M. "Golpe de mano de los caballeros sanjuanistas contra los castillos de Patras y Lepanto (1603)." Fortunatae. Revista Canaria de Filología, Cultura y Humanidades Clásicas, no. 32 (2020): 157–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.25145/j.fortunat.2020.32.10.

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Edition, with a commentary, of the report of the raid that the knights of the Order of Saint John of Malta made on the castles of Patras and Lepanto (Rio, Antirrio) in April 20th, 1603. The report was sent by the grand master Alof de Wignacourt to Philipp III of Spain. Prosopographical news about one of the main heroes of the raid, the Greek knight Nicholas Marmaras(Νικόλαος Μαρμαρᾶς), is added
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15

Wita, Paweł. "Sermons preached by Fabian Birkowski at the Knights of Malta funerals." Meluzyna 6 (2017): 41–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.18276/me.2017.1-03.

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16

Joffé, E. G. H. "Relations between Libya, Tunisia and Malta up to the British Occupation of Malta." Libyan Studies 21 (1990): 65–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900001485.

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AbstractThe conventional view is that Malta has been on the ‘forgotten frontier’ of Christian maritime resistance to Islamic expansionism since the Islamic invasions of North Africa in the seventh century. The limited archival and archeological evidence suggests that, up to the arrival of the Order of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem in Malta in 1530, this picture is not accurate. The Islamic occupation of the Maltese archipelago in 870 created a cosmopolitan Muslim society which persisted until the mid-thirteenth century, despite the Norman conquest of the region in 1090. Indeed, the forma
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17

Cosma, Alessandro. "Paintings for the Knights of Malta. Mattia Preti and the Celebration of Martyrdom." Actual Problems of Theory and History of Art 6 (2016): 468–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.18688/aa166-6-49.

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18

Taitt, Glenroy. "Knights, Buccaneers and Sugar Cane: The Caribbean Colonies of the Order of Malta." Round Table 105, no. 4 (2016): 434–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00358533.2016.1204757.

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19

Parfitt, Steven. "Powderly Will Go to Paris: The Paris Exposition 1889 and the Knights of Labor." International Labor and Working-Class History 92 (2017): 183–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547917000138.

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AbstractThis article deals with one of the many neglected chapters of the global history of the Knights of Labor: the events that led the Knights to participate in one of the great international events of the age, the Paris Exposition of 1889, and their attempts to found their assemblies, as they called their branches, on French soil. Drawing on voluminous correspondence between the leaders of the Knights of Labor and their enthusiasts in France, and on the Order's own journal and the proceedings of its conventions, this article analyzes the reasons why the Knights failed to capitalize on thei
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20

Hrushka, Viktor V., Nataliya A. Horozhankina, Alla P. Girman, Serhii V. Shulyak, and G. V. Shcholokova. "Malta’s tourism potential." Journal of Geology, Geography and Geoecology 30, no. 4 (2021): 642–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.15421/112159.

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 Methods of estimation of tourist and recreational resources are traced; the analysis of natural tourist and recreational resources of the Republic of Malta is carried out; the analysis of historical and cultural tourist and recreational resources of the country is carried out; a point assessment of the country’s provision of tourist and recreational resources; the place of the Republic of Malta on the tourist market of Ukraine is revealed. The Republic of Malta is one of the few countries in the world with such a large and diverse historical and cultural site. The l
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21

Du, Juan. "Characteristics of Medieval Western European Knightly Tournaments." Journal of Management and Social Development 1, no. 1 (2024): 89–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.62517/jmsd.202412112.

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Knightly tournaments emerged in the mid-11th to mid-12th centuries in France. Their origin is closely tied to combat exercises and military training, but with the increasing participation of knights and nobles, tournaments evolved beyond mere military practice. A sophisticated system of competition gradually took shape, giving rise to distinct characteristics of tournaments. During this process, the involvement of the church in knighthood ceremonies lent authority to knights through their prowess. Tournaments provided feudal lords with opportunities to display wealth and strength. For knights,
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22

Grech, Ivan. "Getting to Know the Enemy: Hospitaller Malta’s Intelligence Network in the Early Seventeenth Century." Turkish Historical Review 9, no. 2 (2018): 105–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18775462-00902001.

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In 1530 the Knights Hospitallers were granted the Maltese islands by Charles V. The administration of an archipelago on the Mediterranean war frontier required constant knowledge on the enemy. This article reconstructs Hospitaller Malta’s principal intelligence collection and transmission channels during the seventeenth century, particularly during the magistracy of Alof de Wignacourt from 1601 to 1622, two important decades of infrastructural changes for the archipelago. These specialised communication channels allowed Malta to carve out a special place for itself within the Habsburg-Ottoman
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23

Hodges, Kenneth. "Why Malory's Launcelot Is Not French: Region, Nation, and Political Identity." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 125, no. 3 (2010): 556–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2010.125.3.556.

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Discussions of early nationalism need to focus not just on how incipient nations differentiated themselves from international communities, such as the Roman church, but also on how smaller territories fitted into more expansive composite monarchies, in which one king ruled several lands that had separate traditions and laws. Thomas Malory dramatizes the latter situation by having King Arthur's major knights come from lands subject to the English crown but located outside England: Wales, Ireland, Orkney. In their tense efforts to build a fellowship, the knights personify the troubles of buildin
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24

Knobler, Adam. "Holy Wars, Empires, and the Portability of the Past: The Modern Uses of Medieval Crusades." Comparative Studies in Society and History 48, no. 2 (2006): 293–325. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417506000120.

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On 12 June 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte took control of the islands of Malta. The Knights Hospitaller surrendered with little fight, and the independently recognized polity of the Knights of St. John, the last bastion of the medieval chivalric orders, fell. Founded in the Middle Ages as a military order created both to carry the sword against Islam and provide shelter and medical care for pilgrims to the Holy Land, the Knights had by the end of the eighteenth century become an anachronism. The Ottoman Empire, the last of the great Muslim powers of the Mediterranean, had long been considered little
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25

Ditchfield, S. "Nobility, Faith and Masculinity: The Hospitaller Knights of Malta c.1580-c.1700, by Emanuel Buttigieg." English Historical Review 129, no. 538 (2014): 716–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceu092.

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26

Paci, Deborah. "The Renaissance of Imperial Geopolitics." Cadernos do Tempo Presente 12, no. 01 (2021): 03–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.33662/ctp.v12i01.15713.

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Recebido: 12/02/2021 
 Aprovado: 29/04/2021
 My article aims at focusing on the fascist rhetoric over two territories, Malta and Corsica, the object of the irredentist goals of the fascist government during the twenties. Firstly, I will trace a general outline of the fascist geopolitical vision for the Mediterranean with reference to the Mussolinian policies towards France and Great Britain. Following this, I will examine the imperialist rhetoric promulgated through the magazine “Geopolitica” and the touring guides of Touring Club Italiano. 
 Keywords: Fascism, Italy, Malta, Cor
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27

Brincat, Joseph M. "Maltese: blending Semitic, Romance and Germanic lexemes." Lexicographica 33, no. 2017 (2018): 207–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lex-2017-0011.

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AbstractMalta’s position at the centre of the Mediterranean attracted various conquerors and settlers, but in its present form Maltese has its origins in the Arabic dialect introduced by the Muslim conquest around the year 1000. Lexical Latinisation started early under Norman rule and kept increasing steadily up to the twentieth century thanks to contact with Chancery and spoken Sicilian up to the sixteenth century, and then with Italian which was introduced by the Knights of Malta. This article traces the historical developments and their influence on the Maltese language, providing statistic
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Brincat, Joseph M. "Maltese: blending Semitic, Romance and Germanic lexemes." Lexicographica 33, no. 1 (2018): 207–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lexi-2017-0011.

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AbstractMalta’s position at the centre of the Mediterranean attracted various conquerors and settlers, but in its present form Maltese has its origins in the Arabic dialect introduced by the Muslim conquest around the year 1000. Lexical Latinisation started early under Norman rule and kept increasing steadily up to the twentieth century thanks to contact with Chancery and spoken Sicilian up to the sixteenth century, and then with Italian which was introduced by the Knights of Malta. This article traces the historical developments and their influence on the Maltese language, providing statistic
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29

Freller, Thomas. ""Adversus Infideles": Some Notes On the Cavalier's Tour, the Fleet of the Order of St. John, and the Maltese Corsairs." Journal of Early Modern History 4, no. 3-4 (2000): 405–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157006500x00060.

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AbstractOriginally a charitable monastic institution devoted to the care of Christian pilgrims in the Holy Land, the Hospitallers of St. John became a military order during the twelfth century. The arrival of the Order of St. John in Malta in 1530 brought this island to the attention of European leaders and their subjects; indeed, the number of visitors who wrote about their sojourns on the island in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is remarkable. At this time private military tours to Malta came to be integrated into what was called the Cavalier's Tour. The famous caravans of the fleet
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30

Robinson, Eric. "Decorative stone techniques of Italian masters." Geology Today 40, no. 3 (2024): 112–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gto.12474.

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Italian mastery of decorative stones can be traced through a variety of techniques, from the period of the Roman Empire through to the nineteenth century at least. Roman mosaic work was found across the Roman Empire, and the remains of mosaics are widely admired. In Roman Britain, artisans adapted their classic stone palette through the use of local stones, delivering greys, green and browns. Post‐Roman artistry is seen through the reuse of broken stones known by Cosmati mosaicists; the Cosmati pavement in Westminster Abbey, London is one of the best known of its type. Hardstone work—Pietre Du
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31

Dziuba, Andrzej F. "H. J. A. SIRE, The Knights of Malta. A Modern Resurrection. Third Millennium, Publishing, London 2016, ss. X + 340." Collectanea Theologica 87, no. 4 (2018): 265–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/ct.2017.87.4.16.

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32

Ciappara, Frans. "Strategies for the Afterlife in Eighteenth-Century Malta." Studies in Church History 45 (2009): 301–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400002588.

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According to Protestant eschatology, the dead are no longer with us. In the forceful words of Eamon Duffy they are ‘gone beyond the reach of human contact, even of human prayer’. But if this was the most devastating change in the mind of Protestants, Catholics affirmed Tridentine teaching on the cult of the dead by an ‘obsessional multiplication’ of suffrages or intercessory prayers, especiallypost mortemmasses. This belief was still strong in eighteenth-century Catholic Europe. Italy, Spain and south-west Germany all exhibited such religious ‘frenzy’. Only France may be cited as an example to
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33

Brown, Elizabeth A. R. "Philip the Fair of France and His Family’s Disgrace: The Adultery Scandal of 1314 Revealed, Recounted, Reimagined, and Redated." Mediaevistik 32, no. 1 (2020): 71–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/med.2019.01.03.

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In the spring of 1314, the three daughters-in-law of King Philip the Fair of France were seized as adulteresses, and two young knights, their alleged lovers, were brutally put to death at Pontoise, their property confiscated.1 The knights in question were brothers, Philippe and Gautier d’Aulnay, whose actions brought singular dishonor to their line and to their father Gautier, a faithful vassal and supporter of Count Charles of Valois, Philip the Fair’s brother and close confidant.2 Two of the king’s disgraced daughters-in-law were sent to the Norman fortress of Château-Gaillard. The oldest, M
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34

Fritze, Ronald H. ":The Great Siege of Malta: The Epic Battle Between the Ottoman Empire and the Knights of St. John." Sixteenth Century Journal 47, no. 4 (2016): 1116–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/scj4704169.

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Braasch, Ronald W. "Vadia Guerre." Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques 51, no. 2 (2025): 56–76. https://doi.org/10.3167/hrrh.2025.510204.

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Abstract English campaigns in France during the Hundred Years War were military operations and significant governmental undertakings. The monarchy needed to mobilize and deploy men, animals, and equipment across the Channel to wage war in France. Once assembled, the English army employed a complex administrative system to ensure its soldiers were funded and resourced, leaving records of financial expenditures. The often-cited Vadia Guerre (War Wages) represented one section of the military finances for such English campaigns. This article presents a snapshot of English efforts to wage war duri
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WITKOWSKI, RADOSŁAW, and ANDRZEJ MAZUR. "First record of fig bark beetle Hypoborus ficus Erichson (Curculionidae: Scolytinae) from Poland." Zootaxa 4571, no. 1 (2019): 143. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4571.1.11.

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Hypoborus ficus Erichson, 1836, is a widespread bark beetle in the Mediterranean region (Talhouk 1969). The species was recorded in Europe: Austria, Azerbaijan, Azores, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, France (including Corsica), Greece, Hungary, Italy (including Sardinia and Sicily), Macedonia, Malta, Portugal, Southern Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine (Crimea); Africa: Algeria, Canary Islands, Egypt, Madeira Islands, Morocco, Tunisia; and Asia: Cyprus, Georgia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Syria, Tajikistan, and Turkey (Fontana 1925; Knížek 2011).
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McIntire, C. Thomas. "Comptes rendus / Reviews of books: The Knights-Monks of Vichy France: Uriage, 1940-1945." Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 24, no. 3 (1995): 358–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000842989502400314.

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38

Fleet, Kate. "Bruce Ware Allen, The Great Siege of Malta: The Epic Battle between the Ottoman Empire and the Knights of St. John." European History Quarterly 47, no. 2 (2017): 324–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265691417695979a.

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39

ROSE, EDWARD P. F. "BRITISH MILITARY CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GEOLOGY OF MALTA, PART 1: NINETEENTH CENTURY FOUNDATIONS." Earth Sciences History 40, no. 2 (2021): 503–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6187-40.2.503.

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Malta, an island in the central Mediterranean Sea, was fortified as a base for the Knights Hospitaller 1530–1798 and to provide major harbours for the British Royal Navy after 1813. Men with British military associations (all subsequently to attain some distinction in public and/or academic life) were amongst the many pioneers of Maltese geology who established the essence of its outcrop stratigraphy and structure: a circa 300-metre-thick sequence of near-horizontal mid-Cenozoic fossiliferous limestones punctuated by a ‘blue clay/marl’, cut by a series of major faults and penetrated by several
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40

Graham, Ian, Dan Atar, Knut Borch-Johnsen, et al. "Fourth Joint Task Force of the European Society of Cardiology and Other Societies on Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Clinical Practice (Constituted by representatives of nine societies and by invited experts)." European Journal of Cardiovascular Prevention & Rehabilitation 14, no. 2_suppl (2007): E1—E40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.hjr.0000277984.31558.c4.

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Other experts who contributed to parts of the guidelines: Edmond Walma, Schoonhoven (The Netherlands), Tony Fitzgerald, Dublin (Ireland), Marie Therese Cooney, Dublin (Ireland), Alexandra Dudina, Dublin (Ireland) European Society of Cardiology (ESC) Committee for Practice Guidelines (CPG):, Alec Vahanian (Chairperson) (France), John Camm (UK), Raffaele De Caterina (Italy), Veronica Dean (France), Kenneth Dickstein (Norway), Christian Funck-Brentano (France), Gerasimos Filippatos (Greece), Irene Hellemans (The Netherlands), Steen Dalby Kristensen (Denmark), Keith McGregor (France), Udo Sechtem
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Jäger, Thomas. "The Art of Orthogonal Planning: Laparelli's Trigonometric Design of Valletta." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 63, no. 1 (2004): 4–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4127990.

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The fortified city of Valletta, founded in 1566 by the Knights of Malta, is one of the few Renaissance ideal cities to be built. Planned from the beginning and constructed on virgin ground, it follows a rigid gridiron scheme designed by the Italian architect Francesco Laparelli da Cortona (1521-1570) that is an exemplar of Neoplatonic planning principles of the age of humanism and constitutes a model of modern urban design. Although the founding and development of the city has been well investigated historically, the formal essence of its urban design has not yet been examined satisfactorily f
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beauchemin, raymond. "You Crack Me Up!" Gastronomica 6, no. 2 (2006): 65–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2006.6.2.65.

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The Confréérie mondiale de les chevaliers de l'omelette gééante (World Fraternity of Knights of the Giant Omelet) spreads good cheer in several countries of the French-speaking world through the making and sharing of giant omelets. The tradition began in 1973 in Bessièères, France, where the townspeople fed indigent families in town. The practice of making a giant omelet soon spread to Frééjus, France; Malmedy, Belgium, and other cities with francophone histories: Dumbééa, New Caledonia; Granby, Quebec, and Abbeville, Louisiana. Each omelet has a regional flavor. The Louisiana omelet is influe
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TREMATERRA, PASQUALE. "THE INVASIVE PLATYNOTA STULTANA WALSINGHAM INCREASES ITS SPREAD IN EUROPE (LEPIDOPTERA TORTRICIDAE)." Redia 108 (July 22, 2025): 211–12. https://doi.org/10.19263/redia-108.25.25.

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After Platynota stultana Walsingham was reported in Apulia in 2022, its adults were observed in other areas of Italy from north to south (Liguria, Tuscany, Lazio, Campania, and Sicily). At the same time, the species has spread not only in Spain, but also in other European countries (Portugal, France, Malta, Switzerland, Germany, and Greece). P. stultana has polyphagous behaviour, damaging many cultivated, ornamental and wild plants. Recent interceptions show that this species has the potential to establish itself permanently in southern Mediterranean areas. Key Words: Platynota stultana, Lepid
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Miranda, José Carlos Ribeiro. "O Livro de Galaaz e a ideologia da linhagem." Guarecer. Revista Eletrónica de Estudos Medievais, no. 5 (2020): 171–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.21747/21839301/gua5a6.

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The Arthurian prose cycle of romances, written in France in the early 13thcentury, was soon to be known throughout Europe, namely in Portugal. On the one hand, this cycle is the acme of Romanesque writing featuring King Arthur and his knights; yet, on the other hand, these texts also expose the outpacing of the chivalric model as they formalize and describe a specific mind frame of coeval aristocracy, built around the concept of lineage. Memory of the ancestors and blood kinship are the basis of a particular bondage between individuals that confers legitimacy to the dispute for social supremac
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COSIMO, MAGAZZINO. "The nexus between public expenditure and inflation in the Mediterranean countries." Theoretical and Practical Research in Economic Fields 2, no. 1 (2021): 94–107. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4694448.

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<em>The aim of this article is to assess the empirical evidence of the nexus between public expenditure and inflation for the Mediterranean countries during the period 1970-2009, using a time-series approach. After a brief introduction, a concise survey of the economic literature on this issue is shown, before discussing the data and introducing some econometric techniques. Stationarity tests reveal, generally, that public expenditure/GDP ratio is a I(1) process, while prices index is a I(2) process. Moreover, a long-run relationship between the share of public expenditure and inflation is fou
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Vladimir, Zemlyanitsin. "Louis X of France and the change of the vector of Flemish policy of France." Metamorphoses of history, no. 29 (2023): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.37490/s241436770027686-4.

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This paper examines factors that led to changes in Flemish policy of France after the death of Philip the Fair. During the last two months of the reign of Philip the Fair, leagues that united disaffected people began to appear throughout France. Their resentment was the result of king’s fiscal policy. Although the peace treaty with Flanders was signed in September 1314, the military subsidy was not cancelled. Representatives of leagues demanded that the king cancels the subsidy, returns money to payers (as it was in 1313) and recommended that the king does not use advices of low-born people (a
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"The Knights of Malta." Choice Reviews Online 32, no. 01 (1994): 32–0451. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/choice.32-0451.

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Mollier, Pierre. "Malta, the Knights, and Freemasonry." Ritual, Secrecy, and Civil Society, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.18278/rscs.2.1.3.

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"Malta." IMF Staff Country Reports 19, no. 347 (2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.5089/9781513520841.002.

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The mission focused on selected topics in relation to the supervision of less significant institutions (LSIs), which are not directly supervised by the European Central Bank (ECB), and on non-European Union (EU) branches. The supervision of all banks’ anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) policies and procedures was also included, as no tasks related to AML/CFT have been conferred upon the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) of the eurozone. The mission took into account the findings and recommendations formulated by the 2018 euro area (EA) FSAP and coordinate
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Buttigieg, Emanuel, and Franco Davies. "Santiago de Compostela: Aspects of a cult in Malta of the Knights of St John." Memoria y Civilización, June 16, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15581/001.24.017.

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The cult of St James within the Order of St John was evident throughout its stay in Malta in the architectural fabric it left behind, particularly the fortified land-front of the city of Valletta, as well as in other notable buildings, namely the Auberge of Castile, León and Portugal, and its church of St James. While its architectural aspects have withstood the test of time, other social aspects of the cult of Santiago in Malta are evident through the religious art in the Conventual Church of the Order in Valletta, today St John’s co-cathedral, but also through religious rituals held on the i
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