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Authorities in the Middle Ages

Author : Sini Kangas
Publisher : Walter de Gruyter
Page : 340 pages
File Size : 28,89 MB
Release : 2013-04-30
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 3110294567

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Medievalists reading and writing about and around authority-related themes lack clear definitions of its actual meanings in the medieval context. Authorities in the Middle Ages offers answers to this thorny issue through specialized investigations. This book considers the concept of authority and explores the various practices of creating authority in medieval society. In their studies sixteen scholars investigate the definition, formation, establishment, maintenance, and collapse of what we understand in terms of medieval struggles for authority, influence and power. The interdisciplinary nature of this volume resonates with the multi-faceted field of medieval culture, its social structures, and forms of communication. The fields of expertise include history, legal studies, theology, philosophy, politics, literature and art history. The scope of inquiry extends from late antiquity to the mid-fifteenth century, from the Church Fathers debating with pagans to the rapacious ghosts ruining the life of the living in the Sagas. There is a special emphasis on such exciting but understudied areas as the Balkans, Iceland and the eastern fringes of Scandinavia.

Women and Power in the Middle Ages

Author : Mary Erler
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 293 pages
File Size : 42,5 MB
Release : 1988
Category : History
ISBN : 0820323810

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Power in medieval society has traditionally been ascribed to figures of public authority--violent knights and conflicting sovereigns who altered the surface of civic life through the exercise of law and force. The wives and consorts of these powerful men have generally been viewed as decorative attendants, while common women were presumed to have had no power or consequence. Reassessing the conventional definition of power that has shaped such portrayals, Women and Power in the Middle Ages reveals the varied manifestations of female power in the medieval household and community--from the cultural power wielded by the wives of Venetian patriarchs to the economic power of English peasant women and the religious power of female saints. Among the specific topics addresses are Griselda's manipulation of silence as power in Chaucer's "The Clerk's Tale"; the extensive networks of influence devised by Lady Honor Lisle; and the role of medieval women book owners as arbiters of lay piety and ambassadors of culture. In every case, the essays seek to transcend simple polarities of public and private, male and female, in order to provide a more realistic analysis of the workings of power in feudal society.

Making Archives in Early Modern Europe

Author : Randolph C. Head
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 367 pages
File Size : 31,73 MB
Release : 2019-06-27
Category : History
ISBN : 1108473784

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Compares the archives of European states after 1500 to reveal changes in how records supported memory, authority and power.

The Cathars

Author : Malcolm Barber
Publisher : Addison-Wesley Longman
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 30,57 MB
Release : 2000
Category : History
ISBN :

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The Cathars infiltrated the highest ranks of society and posed a threat not only to the Catholic Church in France but also to the secular authorities. This study examines their heretical beliefs and their violent suppression under the Crusades & Inquisition.

Pluralism in the Middle Ages

Author : Ragnhild Johnsrud Zorgati
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 252 pages
File Size : 31,88 MB
Release : 2012-03-12
Category : History
ISBN : 1136622101

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The challenges of cultural and religious diversity that face European and American societies today are not a new phenomenon. People in the Middle Ages lived in pluralistic societies, and they found highly interesting ways of dealing with religious and cultural diversity. While religious and political authorities commanded people to stick to their kind, some people explored the borderland between religious identities. In medieval Iberia, Christians and Muslims challenged the legal authorities’ prohibitions against crossing religious and cultural boundaries when they engaged in mixed marriages between Muslims and Christians or converted from one religion to the other. By examining the topics of conversion and mixed marriages in legal texts of Muslim and Christian origin, Pluralism in the Middle Ages explores the construction of boundaries as well as the reasons explaining such constructions. It demonstrates that the religious and social boundaries were not static, nor were they similarly defined by Islamic and Christian medieval cultures. Moreover, the book argues that Muslims and Christians in medieval Iberia did not constitute clearly separated groups, since various categories of people haunted the boundaries between them: false converts employing taqiya strategy (taking on an outward Christian identity while practicing Islam in secret), those engaged in mixed marriages or interreligious sexual relations (and their children), and converts, whose conversion may be perceived as sincere or insincere, total or partial.

Sex, Dissidence and Damnation

Author : Jeffrey Richards
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 15,40 MB
Release : 2013-09-13
Category : History
ISBN : 1136127003

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For the authorities in medieval Europe, dissent struck at the roots of an ordered, settled world. It was to be crushed - initially by reason and argument, eventually by torture. Jeffrey Richards examines the wretched lives of heretics, witches, Jews, lepers and homosexuals and uncovers a common motive for their persecution: sexual aberrance.

Aspects of Power and Authority in the Middle Ages

Author : Brenda Bolton
Publisher : Brepols Publishers
Page : 376 pages
File Size : 34,51 MB
Release : 2007
Category : History
ISBN :

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Concepts of power and authority and the relationship between them were fundamental to many aspects of medieval society. The essays in this collection present a series of case studies that range widely, both chronologically and geographically, from Lombard Italy to early-modern Iberia and from Anglo-Saxon, Norman, and later-medieval England to twelfth-century France and the lands beyond the Elbe in the conversion period. While some papers deal with traditional royal, princely and ecclesiastical authority, they do so in new ways. Others examine groups and aspects less obviously connected to power and authority, such as the networks of influence centring on royal women or powerful ecclesiastics, the power relationships revealed in Anglo-Saxon and Old-Norse literature or the influence that might be exercised by needy crusaders, by Jews with the ability to advance loans or by parish priests on the basis of their local connections. An important section discusses the power of the written word, whether papal bulls, collections of miracle stories, or the documents produced in lawsuits. The papers in this volume demonstrate the variety and multiplicity of both power and authority and the many ways by which individuals exercised influence and exerted a claim to be heard and respected.

Exile in the Middle Ages

Author : Laura Napran
Publisher : Brepols Publishers
Page : 274 pages
File Size : 42,7 MB
Release : 2004
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :

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Exile in the Middle Ages took many different forms. As a literary theme it has received much scholarly attention in the Latin, Greek and vernacular traditions. The historical and legal phenomenon of exile is relatively unexplored territory. In the secular world, it usually meant banishment of a person by a higher authority for political reasons, resulting in the exile leaving home for a shorter or longer period. Sometimes an exile did not wait to be expelled but left of his or her own accord. Leaving home to go on pilgrimage, or, in the case of women to marry could be experienced as a form of exile. In the ecclesiastical sphere, two forms of exile stand out. Monasticism was often seen as a form of spiritual (permanent) exile from the secular world. Excommunication was a punishment exercised by the Church authorities in order to eject persons (often only temporarily) from the community of Christians. Banishment as a form of social punishment is therefore the central theme of this volume on Exile in the Middle Ages. The book covers the period of the central Middle Ages from ca. 900 to ca. 1300 in Western Europe, though some chapters have a wider remit. The genesis of the volume was a series of presentations delivered at the Leeds International Medieval Congress in 2002, which was devoted to the theme of Exile.

Medieval Europe 1000-1250

Author : Randall Rogers
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 14,75 MB
Release : 1995
Category :
ISBN : 9780333473665

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This study examines various aspects of the history of the early-middle ages in Europe, and their inter-relationships. Governments, clerical and lay, became more comprehensive in their scope and effective authority, while strong forces of religious dissent challenged these very authorities.

Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe

Author : Edward Peters
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 321 pages
File Size : 46,3 MB
Release : 2011-09-22
Category : History
ISBN : 0812206800

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Throughout the Middle Ages and early modern Europe theological uniformity was synonymous with social cohesion in societies that regarded themselves as bound together at their most fundamental levels by a religion. To maintain a belief in opposition to the orthodoxy was to set oneself in opposition not merely to church and state but to a whole culture in all of its manifestations. From the eleventh century to the fifteenth, however, dissenting movements appeared with greater frequency, attracted more followers, acquired philosophical as well as theological dimensions, and occupied more and more the time and the minds of religious and civil authorities. In the perception of dissent and in the steps taken to deal with it lies the history of medieval heresy and the force it exerted on religious, social, and political communities long after the Middle Ages. In this volume, Edward Peters makes available the most compact and wide-ranging collection of source materials in translation on medieval orthodoxy and heterodoxy in social context.