Dana Carleton Munro
Dana Carleton Munro (June 8, 1866 – January 13, 1933) was an American historian, brother of Wilfred Harold Munro, born at Bristol, R.I. He was educated at Brown (A.M., 1890) and in Europe at Strassburg and Freiburg. He taught at Penn (1893–1902), at Wisconsin until 1915, then at Princeton.[1] Brown gave him the degree of Doctor of humane letters (L.H.D.) in 1912. He edited Translations and Reprints from the Original Sources of History (1894–1902). He was co-author of Mediœval Civilization (1904, 1906) and Essays on the Crusades (1902).
Books
- A Syllabus of Mediœval History (seventh edition, 1913)
- A History of the Middle Ages (1902)
- A Source Book of Roman History (1904)
- The Kingdom of The Crusaders (1935)
gollark: Spoken languages would just be represented as Haskell ASTs, obviously.
gollark: Does the JVM have tagged unions? No, I do not think so.
gollark: This would have many benefits.
gollark: As a certified idea haver, I have a better idea. We force all languages ever to compile to a common IL which does have all the features people want. There may be resistance to this, which is why it would be deployed via a "trusting trust" attack on all popular compilers simultaneously.
gollark: Although I guess you'd then lose out on the nice language features on each end.
References
- "Dana Carleton Munro papers, 1889–1949". dla.library.upenn.edu.
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Dana Carleton Munro |
- Dana Carleton Munro at Find a Grave
- Works by Dana Carleton Munro at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
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