Florilegium (journal)

Florilegium, the journal of the Canadian Society of Medievalists / Société canadienne des médiévistes, is a quarterly "international, peer-reviewed academic journal concerned with the study of late Antiquity and the Middle Ages".[1]

Florilegium
DisciplineHistory, Late Antiquity, Medieval studies
LanguageEnglish
Edited byA. E. Christa Canitz
Publication details
History1979-present
Publisher
FrequencyAnnual
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Florilegium
Indexing
ISSN0709-5201 (print)
2369-7180 (web)
Links

Originally titled Florilegium: Carleton University Annual Papers on Classical Antiquity and the Middle Ages, the journal was first published in 1979 under the co-editorship of Roger Blockley and Douglas Wurtele, and adopted as the Canadian Society of Medievalists’s official journal in 1997.[2]

Currently published by the University of Toronto Press on behalf of the Canadian Society,[3] the journal accepts previously unpublished,[4] "original scholarly research in all areas of late antique and medieval studies and especially welcomes papers […] which take a cross-cultural or interdisciplinary approach to history, literature, or any other relevant area of study".[1] Submissions, which may be in English or French, are subjected to double-blind peer-review.[4]

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed in:

[5]

gollark: Look up "Aaronson oracles" also.
gollark: Just train yourself to be a good unbiased RNG.
gollark: Use your free will.
gollark: PotatOS++.
gollark: Implode enes.

References

  1. "Florilegium". Canadian Society of Medievalists. Retrieved 23 Jun 2018.
  2. "Florilegium". The Centre for Digial Scholarship Journals. Retrieved 23 Jun 2018.
  3. "Florilegium". University of Toronto Press. Retrieved 5 Jul 2017.
  4. "Florilegium". Canadian Association of Learned Journals / Association canadienne des revues savantes. Retrieved 23 Jun 2018.
  5. "Florilegium Indexing". University of Toronto Press. Retrieved 2017-07-05.

Official website


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.