- A
condaghe (Sardinian pronunciation: [kɔɳˈɖaɣɛ]; also
spelled as
condache or condake,
pronounced [kɔɳˈɖakɛ]), also
known as a fundaghe, was a kind of administrative...
-
until at
least the 12th
century in Sardinia. It
appears as
tremisse in the
condaghe.
Philip Grierson, "Tremissis", in
Alexander Kazhdan, ed., The
Oxford Dictionary...
- s'istoria de su mundu;
Condaghe de
Biddafraigada ("The
language is the world's history; Biddafraigada's
Condaghe"),
Condaghes, p. 4: "A sos
tempos de...
- convent, of
which only
ruins remain,where the
homonymous condaghe was compiled. That
condaghe is a
valuable source for
medieval Sardinian history. R. Delogu...
- the
Middle Ages as a
result of
being registered in do****ents like the
condaghes for
administrative purposes; most of them
derive either from Sardinian...
-
Raimondo Pinna, 2010,
Santa Igia. La Città del
Giudice Guglielmo,
edizioni Condaghes Casula 1994, p. 209-210.
Casula 1994, p. 210-212.
Casula 1994, p. 304...
- in the
Condaghe of Bonarcado, 12th-13th
century Among the most
valuable sources for the
study of
ancient Sardinian onomastics are the
condaghes, administrative...
- of the
enemies in the
struggle for the
independence of Sardinia. The
Condaghes are also of
great importance for the
study of the
judicial period between...
-
quadri Archived 2018-06-25 at the
Wayback Machine,
Piero Marcialis, 1996,
Condaghes "Mentre a
Parigi si
ghigliottinava Robespierre e il
governo repubblicano...
- The
condaghe of
Saint Peter of
Silki (1065-1180), one of the
first do****ents
written in Sardinian....