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About the project

The Connecting Medieval Music project provides a platform for the study of contrafacta in medieval Romance lyric. It is a digital repertory of Occitan and French models and contrafacta, which also includes all Latin, German, Italian, and Galician-Portuguese contrafacta connected to the Gallo-Romance tradition.

Thanks to its interactive interface, Connecting Medieval Music invites users to explore the connections between lyrics across Europe in their geographical and chronological dimensions.

Accessibility

How can you use this website?

This website is run by the University of Warwick. We want as many people as possible to be able to use this website.

On this website, you should be able to:

Privacy Policy

Parts of this Privacy Policy are specific to oiko.world members.

1. Information about oiko.world, the University of Warwick and the Privacy policy

1.1 The University of Warwick (‘we’, ‘us’) welcomes you to oiko.world (our “Website”), on which we facilitate the study of ancient civilisations and their connections where users can set up a oiko.world account, (the “oiko.world Service”). Anyone who is granted an oiko.world account is a user of the oiko.world Service (“oiko.world Member”).

Service Terms of Use

This part of the Terms of Use is specific to oiko.world members.

1. Information about oiko.world, the University of Warwick and using this website

1.1 The University of Warwick (‘we’, ‘us’) welcomes you to oiko.world (our “Website”), on which we facilitate the study of ancient civilisations and their connections where users can set up a oiko.world account, (the “oiko.world Service”).

About Oiko.world

Welcome to Oiko.world!

The idea for Oiko.world came to me when beginning research for my recent book Ancient Worlds. In trying to research and understand the links between communities stretched across the ancient globe, I was constantly confronted with the traditional bounded way in which we study history, almost as isolated silos of activity. While we study the past in this way for good reasons, what we loose from such a perspective is a sense of how communities connected together, and a wider comparative sense of how civilisations evolved.

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