Buch, Englisch, 253 Seiten, Festeinband, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 232 mm, Gewicht: 564 g
Reihe: Bedrohte Ordnungen
Power, Local Societies, and Change from the Tenth to Twelfth Centuries
Buch, Englisch, 253 Seiten, Festeinband, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 232 mm, Gewicht: 564 g
Reihe: Bedrohte Ordnungen
ISBN: 978-3-16-163671-4
Verlag: Mohr Siebeck
Das Mittelalter gilt als Zeit der Ritter und Burgen, als Zeit "feudaler" Gewalt und "feudaler" Herrschaft. Als Ursprungsort einer solchen "Feudalgesellschaft" gilt eine "feudale Revolution" im 11. Jahrhundert. Der vorliegende Band eröffnet eine neue Perspektive auf die Transformationen des 10.-12. Jahrhundert.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
IntroductionChristoph Haack: After the "Feudal Revolution": A Look Back on the Debate and a Multiperspective Update
Part I: Historizing and Revising the "Feudal Revolution"- Model
Luise Nöllemeyer: Challenging the Feudal Revolution in the 1990s. The Post-Mortem of a Debate - Christoph Haack: The Terrors of the Year 1000. Structural Change and Narrations of Conflict - Isaac Smith: Words of Power, Power of Words. Lexical and Social Change in Mâcon and Freising in the Tenth to Eleventh Centuries
Part II: New Views on Classic Transformations
Lukas Werther Local Perspectives on the Measurability and Patterns of Change in Southern Germany from an Archaeological Point of View (c. 500-1300) - Cornel-Peter Rodenbusch Abandoning Trial in Eleventh Century Catalonia
Part III: "La mutation de l'an 1100". Feudal Revolution and Gregorian Reform
Charles West: "This toll must be paid at Koblenz". Merchants and the "Feudal Revolution" in the Eleventh-Century Rhineland - Thomas Kohl: A Feudal Transformation in the Empire? Historiography, Tradition and Sources - Alessio Fiore: Building the "Feudal Revolution". Power, Buildings, Economic Resources, and Aristocratic Identities in Central and Northern Italy (c. 950-c. 1150) - Florian Mazel: Rethinking Lordship in the Tenth to Eleventh Centuries. "Shared Lordship" between Laymen and Clerics and its Contestation
Response
Chris Wickham: After the "Feudal Revolution"? A Response