Citation: B. Schneider, CHURCH POLICY AND POPULAR PIETY - THE FLU CTUATING DEVELOPMENT OF BROTHERHOODS IN GERMANY FROM THE LATE-MIDDLE-AGES TO THE MID-19TH-CENTURY, Saeculum, 47(1), 1996, pp. 89-119
Citation: C. Wieland, THE UNIVERSITY AS SODALITY -MODERN ERA UNIVERSITY( THE HISTORY OF RELIGION IN THE MEDIEVAL AND EARLY), Saeculum, 47(1), 1996, pp. 120-135
Citation: G. Korff, THE DYNAMICS OR DIFFERENTIATION OF A CULT - THE VENERATION OF ROCK AND SEBASTIAN DURING THE 19TH AND 20TH-CENTURIES, Saeculum, 47(1), 1996, pp. 158-175
Citation: D. Lange, THE PRE-ISLAMIC DIMENSION OF HAUSA HISTORY + RECENT QUESTIONS OF ARABIC ORIGINS THROUGH LEGEND, MYTH, RITUAL AND LINGUISTIC ELEMENTS, Saeculum, 46(2), 1995, pp. 161-203
Citation: W. Gauer, EUROPE AND ASIA - THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPM ENT OF THE CONTINENT AND THE UNITY OF THE ANCIENT-WORLD, Saeculum, 46(2), 1995, pp. 204-215
Citation: H. Lutterbach, SEXUAL TABOOS IN PENITENTIALS - A THEOLOG ICAL, RELIGIOUS, AND SOCIALLY HISTORICAL CONTRIBUTION TOWARDS A NEW ASSESSMENT OF SEXUALITY AND SEXUAL CONDUCT IN THE MIDDLE-AGES, Saeculum, 46(2), 1995, pp. 216-248
Citation: E. Meyerzwiffelhoffer, ANCIENT-HISTORY AS RECORDED IN THE UNIVER SAL HISTORIOGRAPHIES OF THEEARLY-MODERN ERA - A COMMENTARY AND DISCUSSION ON WRITING THE HISTORYOF EARLY CIVILIZATION, Saeculum, 46(2), 1995, pp. 249-273
Citation: W. Gabbert, CULTURAL DETERMINISM AND THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO - TOWARDS A CRITICISMOF A DICHOTOMIC PERCEPTION OF HISTORY, Saeculum, 46(2), 1995, pp. 274-292
Citation: A. Nitschke, THE CONTRIBUTION OF A SOLITARY PERSON - T OWARDS A NATURAL-SCIENTIFICEXPLANATION FOR SOCIAL-CHANGE, Saeculum, 46(2), 1995, pp. 293-316
Citation: I. Bejczy, MORE,THOMAS 'UTOPIA' - THE CITY-OF-GOD ON EARTH( A SYSTEMATIC INVESTIGATION INTO THE INFLUENCE OF AUGUSTINE 'CITY OF GOD' AND OTHER PATRISTIC WRITINGS ON HIS PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL THEODICY ), Saeculum, 46(1), 1995, pp. 17-30
Citation: C. Steenstrup, PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE IN JAPAN - JAPANE SE ROOTS IN HISTORY AND THEINFLUENCE ON THE NIPPONESE COMMUNITY OF TODAY, Saeculum, 46(1), 1995, pp. 31-59
Citation: J. Osterhammel, CULTURAL-BOUNDARIES IN A SO-CALLED EUROPE ANIZATION OF THE NEW-WORLDSOF THE EAST AND OF THE AMERICA, Saeculum, 46(1), 1995, pp. 101-138
Citation: G. Wieland, SCIENCE AND ITS GENERAL ADVANTAGES - TOWA RDS AND UNDERSTANDING OF THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE MEDIEVAL AND MODERN UNIVERSITY, Saeculum, 45(2), 1994, pp. 308-315
Citation: D. Langewiesche, THE UNIVERSITY AS PRECURSOR - THE UNIVERS ITY AND SOCIETY IN THE 19TH-CENTURY AND EARLY-20TH-CENTURY, Saeculum, 45(2), 1994, pp. 316-331