Florilegium (journal)
Academic journal / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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]
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (July 2017) |
Discipline | History, Late Antiquity, Medieval studies |
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Language | English |
Edited by | A. E. Christa Canitz |
Publication details | |
History | 1979-present |
Publisher | |
Frequency | Annual |
Standard abbreviations ISO 4 (alt) · Bluebook (alt1 · alt2) NLM (alt) · MathSciNet (alt ) | |
ISO 4 | Florilegium |
Indexing CODEN (alt · alt2) · JSTOR (alt) · LCCN (alt) MIAR · NLM (alt) · Scopus | |
ISSN | 0709-5201 (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published by the University of Toronto Press on behalf of the Canadian Society,[3] the journal accepts previously unpublished,[4] "original scholarly research in all areas of late antique and medieval studies and especially welcomes papers [...]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]