xBookUtils.terms['fn_huntconcise5e_ch11-p014'] = '*Abelard’s students did not yet have the sophisticated rules of logic that had been worked out by the ancient philosopher Aristotle (See “Aristotle, Scientist and Philosopher” in Chapter 4) Until the middle of the twelfth century, very little of Aristotle’s work was available in Europe because it had not been translated from Greek into Latin. By the end of the century, however, that situation had been rectified by translators who traveled to cities such as Córdoba in Spain and Syracuse in Sicily, where they found Islamic scholars who had already translated Aristotle’s Greek into Arabic and could help them translate from Arabic to Latin.';
xBookUtils.terms['fn_huntconcise5e_ch11-p031'] = '*Gothic is a modern term, originally meant to denigrate the style’s “barbarity” but now used admiringly.';
xBookUtils.terms['fn_huntconcise5e_ch11-p039'] = '*Henry’s father, Geoffrey of Anjou, was nicknamed “Plantagenet,” from the genet, a shrub he liked. Historians sometimes use the name to refer to the entire dynasty, so Henry II was the first Plantagenet as well as the first Angevin king of England.';
xBookUtils.terms['fn_huntconcise5e_ch11-p051'] = '*Philip was particularly successful in imposing royal control in Normandy; later French kings gave most of the other territories conquered by Philip to various members of the royal family.';
xBookUtils.terms['fn_huntconcise5e_ch11-p0155'] = '*Primary source.';