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Colloquia Litteraria
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2009
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vol. 8
|
issue 1/2
139-147
PL
Pages of the history of classical philology in Warsaw. The correspondence of Gustaw Przychodzki and Albert C. Clark, 1920-1925   This is the first in a series of articles presenting a selection of correspondence of professor Gustaw Przychodzki, who founded the Institute of Classical Studies in the newly revived University of Warsaw in 1919. Professor Albert C. Clark’s letter from Oxford dated 1920 is the first to be published. It was written when Poland was experiencing the dramatic moment of powerful Bolshevik armed forces approach to Warsaw. Gustaw Przychodzki was then fighting on the front. Professor Clark expressed his joy at the revival of classical studies in Warsaw and wished all Poles success in defending the city against the Bolsheviks.
Colloquia Litteraria
|
2009
|
vol. 8
|
issue 1/2
123-129
PL
Artykuł podejmuje problematykę późnoantycznej "Echtheitskritik" w ujęciu Sympliciusza Commentaria In Galeni "De Secits" (Pocz. VI W.)
EN
The most significant relic of medieval literary Polish language is the Sankt Florian Psalter, a work which, despite appearances, is still little known. During the last public presentation of the manuscript in the National Library in Warsaw in 2006, the exhibition organizers emphasized that we are still doomed to hypotheses and conjectures on the issues that are most important: the place of origin of the Psalter, its functions and sources, and where the Polish translation was taken from. Also the national conference '70 years of research on the Sankt Florian Psalter', which took place in autumn 2009 at the Institute of Literary Studies of the Polish Academy of Science, confirmed only that - despite noticeable progress in recent decades in research on the trilingual Psalter - it still remains undiscovered.
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RU
Brygida Kürbis, a medievalist from Poznań, who died in 2001, thanks to her publications, contributed a lot to increasing the importance of both editing medieval chronicles and source studies, which are auxiliary sciences of history. The author deliberately modified the postulated rules and principles of publishing written sources in editorial practice, depending on the type of released texts and publishing capabilities, changing over time.
DE
Brygida Kürbis, a medievalist from Poznań, who died in 2001, thanks to her publications, contributed a lot to increasing the importance of both editing medieval chronicles and source studies, which are auxiliary sciences of history. The author deliberately modified the postulated rules and principles of publishing written sources in editorial practice, depending on the type of released texts and publishing capabilities, changing over time.  
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