Salzburg annals

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The Salzburg Annals are historiographical records of the Bavarian-Austrian region from the 8th to 10th centuries.

The oldest records are the Annales Iuvavenses antiqui , which began around 830 and continued until 842 and 976, respectively. Together with the annals from around 1150 that are preserved in the Admonter Codex , they form the Annales Iuvavenses maximi , which are central sources for the early Bavarian-Austrian history.

The Annales Sancti Ruperti were finally in the late 12th century in Salzburg St. Peter's created. They contain the previous records, start independently in 1180, end in 1286 and were later written on until 1327.

Editions

  • Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores 9 and 30/2

literature

  • Harry Bresslau : The older Salzburger Annalistik (= treatises of the Prussian Academy of Sciences, Philosophical-Historical Class. 1923,2). Publishing house of the Academy of Sciences, Berlin 1923.
  • Roman Deutinger : The election of the king and the raising of the duke of Arnulf of Bavaria. The testimony of the older Salzburg annals for the year 920. In: German Archive for Research of the Middle Ages 58, 2002, pp. 17–68 ( digitized version ).
  • Alphons Lhotsky : Source studies on the medieval history of Austria (= communications from the Institute for Austrian Historical Research. Supplementary volume. Vol. 19). Böhlau, Vienna 1963.