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The object of this paper is a quantitative study of sequential structures in the medieval Czech chronicle Dalimilova Kronika. The authors analyses style changes in the chronicle and tries to answer some questions concerning its authorship. Another topic discussed in this paper concerns the relationship between orality and literacy at the threshold of the Middle Ages in Europe. A philological approach, combined with quantitative tools including trend analysis and time series modeling, is applied in this paper.
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EN
The chronicler in his work. Issues of the author and narrator: The paper is focused on relationship between author and narrator in the historiography of the 14th and 15th centuries from the perspective of narratology. Firstly, in the texts of the chronicles of so-called Dalimil, Johannes de Marignola and Laurentius of Březová, the role of the narrator and the self-stylization of the author are examined. Secondly, the paper deals with the secondary reading and updating of the texts, mainly with the perception of the personality of the author.
EN
The study focuses on the Chronicle of the So-Called Dalimil. In contrast with the traditional perception of this source dominated by ethnic and nationalistic accents, the author here tries to reveal the ideological layers and devotes special attention to the questions of the legitimacy of the power of the king and the contracts that connected the sovereign with the „community“, i.e. with the nobility. The first part of the paper treats Dalimil’s conception of the right to resist (ius resistendi) and his justification of the uprising of the nobility against the sovereign who violates his mission and the interest of the „community“. The second part addresses the issues of tyranny and tyrannicide in the Middle Ages and treatment of this topic by the So-Called Dalimil.
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