Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Chronicle
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{short description|Historical account of facts and events}} {{hatgrp| {{other uses}} {{redirect-distinguish|Chronicler|the Chronicler}} {{redirect|Chronica|the album|Chronica (album)}} }} {{more citations needed|date=April 2019}} [[File:Képes_krónika_első_lapja.jpg|thumb|''[[Chronicon Pictum]]'', the "Illuminated Chronicle" from the royal Hungarian court from 1358]] A '''chronicle''' ({{langx|la|chronica}}, from [[Greek language|Greek]] {{lang|grc|χρονικά}} ''chroniká'', from {{lang|grc|χρόνος}}, ''chrónos'' – "time") is a historical account of events arranged in [[chronology|chronological]] order, as in a [[timeline]]. Typically, equal weight is given for historically important events and local events, the purpose being the recording of events that occurred, seen from the perspective of the '''chronicler'''. A chronicle which traces world history is a [[Universal history (genre)|universal chronicle]]. This is in contrast to a [[narrative]] or [[history]], in which an author chooses events to interpret and analyze and excludes those the author does not consider important or relevant. The information sources for chronicles vary. Some are written from the chronicler's direct knowledge, others from witnesses or participants in events, still others are accounts passed down from [[generation]] to generation by [[oral tradition]].<ref name="MGME19-20">Elisabeth M. C. Van Houts, ''Memory and Gender in Medieval Europe: 900–1200'' (Toronto; Buffalo: University of Toronto Press, 1999), pp. 19–20.</ref> Some used written material, such as [[charter]]s, [[letter (message)|letter]]s, and earlier chronicles.<ref name="MGME19-20"/> Still others are tales of unknown origin that have [[myth]]ical status.<ref name="MGME19-20"/> Copyists also changed chronicles in creative copying, making corrections or in updating or continuing a chronicle with information not available to the original chronicler.<ref name="MGME19-20"/> Determining the reliability of particular chronicles is important to [[historian]]s.<ref name="MGME19-20"/> Many [[newspaper]]s and other [[periodical literature]] have adopted "chronicle" as part of their name. ==Subgroups== {{Quote box | class = letterhead | title = | quote = "It is well known that history, in the form of Chronicles, was a favourite portion of the literature of the middle ages. The annals of a country were usually kept according to the years of the sovereign's power, and not those of the Christian æra. The Chronicles compiled in large cities were arranged in like manner, with the years reckoned according to the annual succession of chief magistrates." | source = – [[John Gough Nichols]], [[critical edition]] foreword to ''[[Chronicle of the Grey Friars of London]]'' (1852)<ref>{{Cite web |title=Chronicle of the Grey Friars of London : Camden Society (Great Britain) : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive |author= |work=Internet Archive |date= |access-date=18 June 2023 |url= https://archive.org/details/greyfriarsof00camduoft/page/n9/mode/2up}}</ref> | width = 20% | title_bg = none | tstyle = text-align: left; | qalign = left }} Scholars categorize the genre of chronicle into two subgroups: live chronicles, and dead chronicles. A ''dead'' chronicle is one where the author assembles a list of events up to the time of their writing, but does not record further events as they occur. A ''live'' chronicle is where one or more authors add to a chronicle in a regular fashion, recording contemporary events shortly after they occur. Because of the immediacy of the information, historians tend to value live chronicles, such as [[annals]], over dead ones.{{cn|date=October 2024}} The term often refers to a book written by a chronicler in the Middle Ages describing historical events in a country, or the lives of a nobleman or a clergyman, although it is also applied to a record of public events. The earliest medieval chronicle to combine both retrospective (''dead'') and contemporary (''live'') entries, is the [[Chronicle of Ireland]], which spans the years 431 to 911.<ref>Roy Flechner, '"The Chronicle of Ireland: Then and Now" ''Early Medieval Europe'' v.21:4(2013) 422-54 [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/emed.12025/abstract Article] [[doi:10.1111/emed.12025]]</ref> Chronicles are the predecessors of modern "[[time line]]s" rather than analytical histories. They represent accounts, in prose or verse, of local or distant events over a considerable period of time, both the lifetime of the individual chronicler and often those of several subsequent [[continuator]]s. If the chronicles deal with events year by year, they are often called [[annal]]s. Unlike the modern historian, most chroniclers tended to take their information as they found it, and made little attempt to separate fact from legend. The point of view of most chroniclers is highly localised, to the extent that many anonymous chroniclers can be sited in individual [[abbey]]s.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal |last=Kuijpers |first=Erika |last2=Lenarduzzi |first2=Carolina |last3=Pollmann |first3=Judith |last4=Dekker |first4=Theo |last5=Lassche |first5=Alie |date=2024-12-27 |title=Profiling local chroniclers in the early modern Low Countries |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/urban-history/article/profiling-local-chroniclers-in-the-early-modern-low-countries/F9A0CE687017280D09433D596190A7AE |journal=Urban History |language=en |pages=1–26 |doi=10.1017/S0963926824000531 |issn=0963-9268}}</ref> It is impossible to say how many chronicles exist, as the many ambiguities in the definition of the genre make it impossible to draw clear distinctions of what should or should not be included. However, the ''[[Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle]]'' lists some 2,500 items written between 300 and 1500 AD.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Pollmann |first=Judith |date=2016-11-01 |title=Archiving the Present and Chronicling for the Future in Early Modern Europe |url=https://academic.oup.com/past/article/230/suppl_11/231/2884264?login=false |journal=Past & Present |volume=230 |issue=suppl_11 |pages=231–252 |doi=10.1093/pastj/gtw029 |issn=0031-2746}}</ref> ==Citation of entries== Entries in chronicles are often cited using the abbreviation ''s.a.'', meaning ''sub anno'' (under the year), according to the year under which they are listed. For example, "''ASC'' MS A, s.a. 855" means the entry for the year 855 in manuscript A of the ''Anglo-Saxon Chronicle''. The same event may be recorded under a different year in another manuscript of the chronicle, and may be cited for example as "''ASC'' MS D, s.a. 857". ==English chronicles== The most important [[List of English chronicles|English chronicles]] are the ''[[Anglo-Saxon Chronicle]]'', started under the patronage of King Alfred in the 9th century and continued until the 12th century, and the ''Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland'' (1577–87) by [[Raphael Holinshed]] and other writers; the latter documents were important sources of materials for Elizabethan drama.<ref>'A Glossary of Literary Terms' – M.H. Abrams</ref> Later 16th-century Scottish chronicles, written after the [[Scottish Reformation|Reformation]], shape history according to Catholic or Protestant viewpoints. ==Cronista== A '''cronista''' is a term for a historical chronicler, a role that held historical significance in the [[Middle Ages|European Middle Ages]]. Until the European [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]], the occupation was largely equivalent to that of a historian, describing events chronologically that were of note in a given country or region. As such, it was often an official governmental position rather than an independent practice. The appointment of the official chronicler often favored individuals who had distinguished themselves by their efforts to study, investigate and disseminate [[population]]-related issues. The position was granted on a local level based on the mutual agreements of a city council in plenary meetings. Often, the occupation was honorary, unpaid, and stationed for life. In modern usage, the term usually refers to a type of [[journalist]] who writes chronicles as a form of [[journalism]] or non-professional historical documentation.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Dadson|first=Trevor J.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8UW-D822uBMC&q=Cronista+spain&pg=PA51|title=The Genoese in Spain: Gabriel Bocángel Y Unzueta, 1603-1658 : a Biography|date=1983|publisher=Tamesis|isbn=978-0-7293-0161-9|language=es}}</ref> ===Cronista in the Middle Ages=== Before the development of modern journalism and the systematization of chronicles as a journalistic genre, cronista were tasked with narrating chronological events considered worthy of remembrance that were recorded year by year. Unlike writers who created [[Epic Poetry|epic poems]] regarding living figures, cronista recorded historical events in the lives of individuals in an ostensibly truthful and reality-oriented way.<ref name=":0" /> Even from the time of early Christian historiography, cronistas were clearly expected to place human history in the context of a linear progression, starting with the creation of man until the [[Second Coming|second coming of Christ]], as prophesied in [[The Bible|biblical texts]].<ref>Richard W. Burgess, Studies in Eusebian and post-Eusebian Chronography, Stuttgart (1999).</ref> {{anchor|List}}<!--linked--> == Lists of chronicles == * [[Babylonian Chronicles]] (loosely-defined set of 25 clay tablets) * [[Burmese chronicles]] * [[Cambodian Royal Chronicles]] (loosely-defined collection) * [[List of collections of Crusader sources]] (most of them chronicles) * [[List of Danish chronicles]] * [[List of English chronicles]] * [[List of Hungarian chronicles]] * [[Rus' chronicle#List of Rus' chronicles|List of Rus' chronicles]] * [[Muslim chronicles for Indian history]] * [[Chronicles of Nepal]] * [[Serbian chronicles]] === Alphabetical list of notable chronicles === {{more citations needed|section|date=June 2023}} {{original research|section|date=June 2023}} {{dynamic list}} [[File:Archive-ugent-be-2A0E426C-68E4-11E8-87FC-F6DB0AD9BE4D DS-21 (cropped).jpg|thumb|Chronicles of Flanders. Manuscript manufactured in Flanders, 2nd half of the 15th century. Manuscript preserved in the University Library of Ghent.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Kroniek van Vlaanderen, van de aanvang tot 1467|url=https://lib.ugent.be/viewer/archive.ugent.be:2A0E426C-68E4-11E8-87FC-F6DB0AD9BE4D#?c=&m=&s=&cv=9&xywh=-798,-1,7695,4297|access-date=2020-08-24|website=lib.ugent.be}}</ref>]] *''[[History of Alam Aray Abbasi]]'' – [[Safavid dynasty]] *''[[Alamgirnama]]'' – [[Mughal Empire]] *''[[Alexandrian World Chronicle]] - Greek history of the world until 392 AD *''[[Altan Tobchi]]'' - [[Mongol Empire]] *''[[Anglo-Saxon Chronicle]]'' – [[History of the British Isles|England]] * ''[[Annales Bertiniani]]'' – [[West Francia]] *''[[Annales Cambriae]]'' – [[History of Wales|Wales]] *''[[Annales Posonienses]]'' – [[Kingdom of Hungary]] *''[[Annales seu cronicae incliti Regni Poloniae]]'' – [[History of Poland|Poland]] *''[[Annals of Inisfallen]]'' – [[History of Ireland|Ireland]] *''[[Annals of Lough Cé]]'' – [[History of Ireland|Ireland]] *''[[Annals of the Four Masters]]'' – [[History of Ireland|Ireland]] *''[[Annals of Spring and Autumn]]'' – [[History of China|China]] *''[[Annals of Thutmose III]]'' – [[Ancient Egypt]] *''[[The Annals of the Choson Dynasty]]'' – [[History of Korea|Korea]] *''[[Babylonian Chronicles]]'' – [[History of Mesopotamia|Mesopotamia]] *''[[Anonymous Bulgarian Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]] *''[[Barnwell Chronicle]]'' - [[History of England|England]] *''[[Bodhi Vamsa]]'' – [[History of Sri Lanka|Sri Lanka]] *''[[Books of Chronicles]]'' attributed to [[Ezra]] – [[Israel]] *''[[Buranji]]'' – [[Ahoms]], [[History of Assam|Assam]], India *''[[Bychowiec Chronicle]]'' [[History of Lithuania|Lithuania]] *''[[Cāmadevivaṃsa]]'' – [[Lan Na|Northern Thailand]] *''[[Culavamsa]]'' – [[History of Sri Lanka|Sri Lanka]] *(''[[Chronica Polonorum]]''): see {{Lang|la|[[Gesta principum Polonorum]]}} *''[[Cheitharol Kumbaba]]'' – [[Cheitharol Kumbaba|Manipur]], India *''[[Chronica Gentis Scotorum]]'' *''[[Chronica Hungarorum]]'' – [[History of Hungary]] *''[[Chronica seu originale regum et principum Poloniae]]'' – [[History of Poland|Poland]] *''[[Chronicle of 754]]'' - [[History of Spain|Spain]] *''[[Chronicle of Muntaner|Chronicle (Crònica)]] by [[Ramon Muntaner]]'' – 13th/14th-century [[Crown of Aragon]]. Third and longest of the Grand Catalan Chronicles. *''[[Chronicle of Finland]]'' (''Chronicon Finlandiae'') by [[Johannes Messenius]] – [[History of Finland|Finland]] *''[[Chronicle of Fredegar]]'' - [[History of France|France]] *''[[Chronicon Slavorum|Chronicle of the Slavs]]'' – [[History of Europe|Europe]] *''[[Chronicle of Greater Poland]]'' – [[History of Poland during the Piast dynasty|Poland]] *''[[Chronicle (Jean de Venette)|Chronicle of Jean de Venette]]'' – [[History of France|France]] *''[[Chronicle of the Bishops of England]]'' (''De Gestis Pontificum Anglorum'') by [[William of Malmesbury]] *[[Chronicles of Jerahmeel]] *''[[Chronicle of the Kings of Alba]]'' - [[History of Scotland|Scotland]] *''[[Chronicle of the Kings of England]]'' (''De Gestis Regum Anglorum'') by [[William of Malmesbury]] *''[[Chronicles of Mann]]'' - [[Isle of Man]] *[[Chronicon (Eusebius)|''Chronicon'' of Eusebius]] *''[[Chronicon Scotorum]]'' – [[History of Ireland|Ireland]] *[[Thietmar of Merseburg|''Chronicon'' of Thietmar of Merseburg]] *''[[Chronicon Paschale]]'' - 7th century Greek chronicle of the world *''[[Chronicon Pictum]]'' – [[History of Hungary]] *''[[Chronographia (Psellos)|Chronographia]]'' – 11th century [[History of the Eastern Roman Empire]] (Byzantium) by [[Michael Psellos]] *''[[Comentarios Reales de los Incas]]'' *''[[Conversion of Kartli (chronicle)|Conversion of Kartli]]'' – [[History of Georgia (country)|Georgia]] *[[Chronicle Machairas|Cronaca]]<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Machairas, Leontios|doi=10.1163/9789004184640_emc_sim_01737}}</ref>- Chronicle of Cyprus from the 4th up to the 15th century by [[Greek Cypriots|Cypriot]] chronicler [[Leontios Machairas]] *''[[Cronaca fiorentina]]'' – Chronicle of Florence up to the end of the 14th Century by [[Baldassarre Bonaiuti]] *''[[Cronicae et gesta ducum sive principum Polonorum]]'' – [[History of Poland|Poland]] *''[[Crónica Mexicayotl]]'' — [[History of the Incas]] *''[[Croyland Chronicle]]'' – [[History of England|England]] *''[[The Dawn-Breakers|Dawn-Breakers (Nabil's Narrative)]]'' – [[Baháʼí Faith]] and [[Middle East]] *''[[Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja|Dioclean Priest's Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Europe|Europe]] *''[[Dipavamsa]]'' – [[History of Sri Lanka|Sri Lanka]] *''[[Divan of the Abkhazian Kings]]'' – [[History of Georgia (country)|Georgia]] *''[[Epic of Sundiata]]'' - [[History of West Africa|West Africa]] *''[[Epitome rerum Hungarorum]]'' – [[History of Hungary]] *''[[Eric's Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Sweden|Sweden]] *''[[Chronicon (Eusebius)|Eusebius Chronicle]]'' – [[History of the Mediterranean region|Mediterranean]] and [[Ancient Near East|Middle East]] *''[[Fragmentary Annals of Ireland]]'' – [[History of Ireland|Ireland]] *''[[Froissart's Chronicles]]'' – [[History of France|France]] and [[History of Europe|Western Europe]] *''[[Galician-Volhynian Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Ukraine|Ukraine]] *''[[Georgian Chronicles]]'' – [[History of Georgia (country)|Georgia]] *''[[Gesta Hungarorum]]'' – [[History of Hungary]] *''[[Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum]]'' – [[History of Hungary]] *''[[Gesta Normannorum Ducum]]'' – [[History of Normandy|Normandy]] *{{Lang|la|[[Gesta principum Polonorum]]}} *''[[Grandes Chroniques de France]]'' – [[History of France|France]] *''[[General Estoria]] by [[Alfonso X]]'' – c. 1275-1284 [[Castile (historical region)|Castile]], [[Spain]]. *''[[Chronicle of Henry of Livonia|Henry of Livona Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Europe|Eastern Europe]] *''[[Orderic Vitalis#The Historia Ecclesiastica|Historia Ecclesiastica]]'' – [[History of England|Norman England]] * ''[[Historia Scholastica]]'' by [[Petrus Comestor]] - 12th century [[France]] * ''The Historie and Chronicles of Scotland'', [[Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie]] *''[[História da Província Santa Cruz a que vulgarmente chamamos Brasil]]'' – [[History of Brazil|Brazil]] *''[[History of the Prophets and Kings]]'' – [[History of the Middle East|Middle East]] and [[History of the Mediterranean region|Mediterranean]] *''[[Hustyn Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Europe|Eastern Europe]] *''[[Jami' al-tawarikh]]'' by [[Rashid-al-Din Hamadani]] - [[Universal history (genre)|Universal history]] *''[[Jans der Enikel]]'' – [[History of Europe|Europe]] and [[History of the Mediterranean region|Mediterranean]] *''[[Chronicon (Jerome)|Jerome's Chronicle]]'' – [[History of the Mediterranean region|Mediterranean]] and [[Ancient Near East|Middle East]] *''[[Jinakalamali]]'' – [[Lan Na|Northern Thailand]] *''[[Joannis de Czarnkow chronicon Polonorum]]'' – [[History of Poland|Poland]] *''[[Kaiserchronik]]'' – [[Holy Roman Empire|Central and southern Europe, Germany]] *''[[Kano Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Nigeria|Nigeria]] *''[[Khulasat-ut-Tawarikh]]'' by Sujan Rai - [[History of India]] *''[[Khwaday-Namag]]'' - [[History of Persia]] *''[[Kilwa Chronicle]]'' - [[History of East Africa|East Africa]] *''[[Kojiki]]'' - [[History of Japan|Japan]] *''[[Chronicon Lethrense|Lethrense Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Denmark|Denmark]] *''[[Livonian Chronicle of Henry]]'' – [[Livonia]] *''[[Livonian Rhymed Chronicle]]'' – [[Livonia]] *''[[Llibre dels fets|Libre dels Feyts]]'' – Book of the Deeds by [[James I of Aragon]], first of the Grand Catalan Chronicles *''[[Madala Panji]]'' – Chronicle of the [[Jagannath Temple, Puri|Jagannath Temple]] in [[Puri, India]], related to the [[History of Odisha]] *[[Mainz Anonymous]] *''[[Mahavamsa]]'' – [[History of Sri Lanka|Sri Lanka]] *''[[Maronite Chronicle]]'' – [[Levant|The Levant]], anonymous [[Annals|annalistic]] chronicle in the [[Syriac language]] completed shortly after 664. *''[[Manx Chronicle]]'' – [[History of the Isle of Man|Isle of Man]] *''[[Nabonidus Chronicle]]'' – [[Mesopotamia]] *''[[Nihon Shoki]]'' - [[History of Japan|Japan]] *''[[Novgorod First Chronicle]]'' – [[Novgorod Republic]] *''[[Nuova Cronica]]'' – [[Florence]] *''[[Nuremberg Chronicle]]'' *''[[Old Tibetan Chronicle]]'' - [[History of Tibet]] *''[[Parian Chronicle]]'' - [[Ancient Greece]] *''[[Chronicon Paschale|Paschale Chronicle]]'' – [[History of the Mediterranean region|Mediterranean]] *''[[Pictish Chronicle]]'' - [[History of Scotland|Scotland]] *''[[Primary Chronicle]]'' – [[Kievan Rus']] *''[[Puranas]]'' – [[History of India|India]] *''[[Rajatarangini]]'' – [[History of Jammu and Kashmir|Kashmir]] *''Roit and Quheil of Tyme'' – [[History of Scotland|Scotland]], [[Adam Abell]] *''[[Chronicon Roskildense|Roskildense Chronicle]]'' – [[History of Denmark|Denmark]] *''[[Royal Frankish Annals]]'' – [[Frankish Empire]] *''[[Scotichronicon]]'' – by the [[Scotland|Scottish]] historian [[Walter Bower]] *''[[Shahnama-yi-Al-i Osman]]'' by [[Fethullah Arifi Çelebi]] – [[Ottoman empire]] (1300 ac – the end of Sultan [[Suleyman I]]'s reign) which is the fifth volume of it [[Süleymanname]] *''[[Skibby Chronicle]]'' – Danish Latin chronicle from the 1530s * [[Solomon bar Simson Chronicle]] *''[[Swiss illustrated chronicles]]'' – [[History of Switzerland|Switzerland]] *''[[Timbuktu Chronicles]]'' – [[History of Mali|Mali]] *''[[Zizhi Tongjian]]'' – [[History of China|China]] === Rhymed chronicles === Rhymed or poetic chronicles, as opposed to prosaic chronicles, include: * ''{{ill|Rhymed Chronicle of 1682|uk|Римована хроніка (1682)}}'' * ''Rhymed Chronicle of Armenia Minor'' * ''{{ill|Cronache aquilane|it|Cronache aquilane}}'' ("Chronicle of [[L'Aquila]]"), both in prose and verse form * ''[[Brabantsche Yeesten]]'' ({{circa}} 1315–1351) by [[Jan van Boendale]] (continued by an anonymous author){{sfn|Stein|2021|pp=300–301}} * ''Cornicke van Brabant'' (1415) by Hennen van Merchtenen{{sfn|Stein|2021|p=301}} * ''Cronijck van Brabant'' ({{circa}} 1435–1460), anonymous, until 1430{{sfn|Stein|2021|p=309}} * ''{{ill|Rhymed Chronicle of Brunswick|de|Braunschweigische Reimchronik}}'' * ''{{ill|Rhymed Chronicle of Cologne|de|Reimchronik der Stadt Köln}}'' by [[Gottfried Hagen]] * ''[[Chronicle of Dalimil]]'' * ''{{ill|Danish Rhymed Chronicle|da|Den danske Rimkrønike}}'' * ''{{ill|Chronicon Egmundanum|nl|Chronicon Egmundanum}}'' * ''{{ill|Engelbrekt's Chronicle|sv|Engelbrektskrönikan}}'' * ''[[Erik's Chronicle]]'' * ''Rhymed Chronicle of Flanders'', part of the {{ill|Comburg Manuscript|nl|Comburgse handschrift}}. It is unique as all other surviving Dutch-language chronicles of Flanders were written in prose. * ''Die olde Freesche cronike'' (1474), anonymous history of [[Friesland]] until 1248<ref name="f856">{{cite book |last=Carasso-Kok |first=M. |title=Repertorium van verhalende historische bronnen uit de middeleeuwen: heiligenlevens, annalen, kronieken en andere in Nederland geschreven verhalende bronnen |publisher=Nijhoff |series=Bibliografische Reeks van het Nederlands Historisch Genootschap |year=1981 |isbn=978-90-247-9132-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ALjPDDIIJY0C&pg=PA170 |language=nl |access-date=8 October 2024 |page=170}}</ref> * ''{{ill|Rhymed Chronicle of Gandersheim|de|Gandersheimer Reimchronik}}'' * ''Rhymed Chronicle of Holland'' by [[Melis Stoke]] * ''{{ill|Karl's Chronicle|sv|Karlskrönikan}}'' * ''Rhymed Chronicle of Kastl'' (''Kastler Reimchronik'') * {{ill|Rhymed Chronicle of Klaas Kolijn|nl|Rijmkroniek van Klaas Kolijn}}, notorious 17th-century forgery pretending to be written in the 12th century * ''[[Livonian Rhymed Chronicle]]'' * ''Rhymed Chronicle of Mecklenburg'' by Ernest of Kirchberg * ''Chronique métrique de Philippe le Bel'' or ''Chronique rimée'' (1316) by [[Geoffrey of Paris]] * ''Chronique rimée'' ({{circa}} 1250) by [[Philippe Mouskes]] * ''New Prussian Chronicle'' by [[Wigand of Marburg]] * ''[[Roman de Brut]]'' by [[Wace]] * ''Spieghel Historiael'' by [[Jacob van Maerlant]] * ''{{ill|Sture's Chronicle|sv|Sturekrönikan}}'' * ''{{ill|Styrian Rhymed Chronicle|de|Steirische Reimchronik}}'' * ''Rhymed Chronicle of Utrecht'' ({{Circa}} 1378) * ''[[Rhyming Chronicle of Worringen]]''{{sfn|Avonds|1988|p=199}} == See also == * [[Books of Chronicles]] * [[Medieval Chronicle Society]] == References == {{reflist}} == External links == * {{Cite EB1911|wstitle= Chronicle |volume=6 |last1= Bémont |first1= Charles |author1-link= Charles Bémont | pages = 298–299 |short=1}} * {{Cite journal |last1=Avonds |first1=Piet |date=1988 |url=https://www.dbnl.org/tekst/_lit003198801_01/_lit003198801_01_0031.php |title=Van Keulen naar Straatsburg. Jan van Heelu's rijmkroniek over de slag bij Woeringen (1288) |journal=Literatuur: tijdschrift over Nederlandse letterkunde |volume=5 |issue=1 |pp=196–204 |lang=nl}} * {{Cite book |last1=Stein |first1=Robert |editor-last1=van Anrooij |editor-first1=W. |editor-last2=Verbij-Schillings |editor-first2=J. |date=2021 |chapter=Levend verleden: de Cronijck van Brabant |chapter-url=https://hdl.handle.net/1887/3247548 |title=Werken van Gelre |location=Hilversum |publisher=Verloren |pages=299–315 |isbn= |accessdate=27 June 2024 |lang=nl}} {{Historiography}}{{Time Topics}} {{Chronology}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Chronicles| ]] [[Category:Medieval literature]] [[Category:Works about history]]
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Pages transcluded onto the current version of this page
(
help
)
:
Template:Ambox
(
edit
)
Template:Anchor
(
edit
)
Template:Authority control
(
edit
)
Template:Chronology
(
edit
)
Template:Circa
(
edit
)
Template:Cite EB1911
(
edit
)
Template:Cite book
(
edit
)
Template:Cite journal
(
edit
)
Template:Cite web
(
edit
)
Template:Cn
(
edit
)
Template:Dynamic list
(
edit
)
Template:Hatgrp
(
edit
)
Template:Hatnote
(
edit
)
Template:Historiography
(
edit
)
Template:Ill
(
edit
)
Template:Lang
(
edit
)
Template:Langx
(
edit
)
Template:More citations needed
(
edit
)
Template:Original research
(
edit
)
Template:Quote box
(
edit
)
Template:Reflist
(
edit
)
Template:Sfn
(
edit
)
Template:Short description
(
edit
)
Template:Time Topics
(
edit
)