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- Condaghe abstract "A condaghe (also condache, condake, condaxi or fundaghe), from the medieval Sardinian term kondake (from Byzantine Greek κοντάκιον, kontákion, "the pole around which a scroll is wound"), was an administrative document in use in Sardinia between the 11th and 13th centuries. They are one of the earliest witnesses for the development of the Sardinian language and are an important source for historians of medieval Sardinia.The original condaghes (Italian: condaghi) were collections of acts of donations to churches or monasteries. Later condaghes were kept by noble families for recording inheritances, purchases, donations (datura), transactions (tramutu) and litigation (kertu), principally when relating to the church. The chief object of such records was to provide precise dates in case of legal dispute.Physically, the first condaghes were scrolls: overlapping parchment manuscripts wound tightly around a kontákion. Over time they took on the familiar form of a codex (like modern books). They were produced in the scriptoria of monasteries and cathedrals, but the great majority have been lost. Only the condaghes of the monasteries of Santa Maria di Bonarcado, San Michele di Salvennor, San Nicola di Trullas and San Pietro in Silki and of the Basilica of San Gavino are preserved from among the ecclesiastical kind. There is only one surviving lay condaghe, that of Judge Barisone II of Logudoro.".
- Condaghe wikiPageExternalLink 7_26_20060401174222.pdf.
- Condaghe wikiPageExternalLink 7_87_20060731160137.pdf.
- Condaghe wikiPageExternalLink 2010072213042800040.pdf.
- Condaghe wikiPageID "33642883".
- Condaghe wikiPageLength "2561".
- Condaghe wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Condaghe wikiPageRevisionID "635646890".
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Barisone_II_of_Logudoro.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Barisone_II_of_Torres.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Basilica_of_San_Gavino.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_Greek.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Category:Legal_history.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_documents.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Codex.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Italian_language.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Kontakion.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Kontákion.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Medieval_Greek.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink San_Michele_di_Salvennor.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink San_Nicola_di_Trullas.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink San_Pietro_in_Silki.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Santa_Maria_di_Bonarcado.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Sardinia.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Sardinian_language.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Scriptoria.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLink Scriptorium.
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLinkText "Condaghe".
- Condaghe wikiPageWikiLinkText "condaghe".
- Condaghe hasPhotoCollection Condaghe.
- Condaghe subject Category:Legal_history.
- Condaghe subject Category:Medieval_documents.
- Condaghe hypernym Document.
- Condaghe type Book.
- Condaghe type Document.
- Condaghe type Document.
- Condaghe type Field.
- Condaghe comment "A condaghe (also condache, condake, condaxi or fundaghe), from the medieval Sardinian term kondake (from Byzantine Greek κοντάκιον, kontákion, "the pole around which a scroll is wound"), was an administrative document in use in Sardinia between the 11th and 13th centuries.".
- Condaghe label "Condaghe".
- Condaghe sameAs Condaghe.
- Condaghe sameAs m.0hgr84r.
- Condaghe sameAs Q3686378.
- Condaghe sameAs Q3686378.
- Condaghe wasDerivedFrom Condaghe?oldid=635646890.
- Condaghe isPrimaryTopicOf Condaghe.