Introduction: making early medieval societies Conrad Leyser; 1. Property, power, and conflict: rethinking the Constantinian revolution Kate Cooper; 2. Playing with fire: conflicting bishops in late Roman Spain and Gaul David Natal and Jamie Wood; 3. After Rome, before Francia: religion, ethnicity, and identity politics in Gregory of Tours' Ten Books of Histories Helmut Reimitz; 4. 'To mistake gold for wealth': the Venerable Bede and the fate of Northumbria Martin J. Ryan; 5. The incidence of rebellion in the early medieval West Paul Fouracre; 6. Disputes and documents in early medieval Italy Marios Costambeys; 7. Divorce and remarriage between late antiquity and the early Middle Ages: canon law and conflict resolution Riccardo Bof and Conrad Leyser; 8. The memory of Gregory the Great and the making of Latin Europe, 600–1000 Conrad Leyser; 9. The weight of opinion: religion and the people of Europe from the tenth to the twelfth century R. I. Moore; 10. 'The peace in the feud' revisited: feuds in the peace in medieval European feuds Stephen D. White; Bibliography; Index.
Examines the fundamental question of what held the societies of the post-Roman world together.
Kate Cooper is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Manchester. She writes and teaches about the world of the Mediterranean in the late Roman period, working to understand the 'identity politics' of the Roman provinces with a special interest in daily life and the family, religion, and gender. Her most recent book is Band of Angels: The Forgotten World of Early Christian Women (2013); other publications include The Fall of the Roman Household (Cambridge, 2007), and a collection of essays, edited with Julia Hillner, Religion, Dynasty and Patronage in Early Christian Rome (Cambridge, 2007). In recent years, Kate has renewed a long-standing interest in the problem of religion and violence, holding a RCUK Global Uncertainties: Ideas and Beliefs Fellowship (2009–12) and a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship (2012–15) for a project on 'The Early Christian Martyr Acts: A New Approach to Ancient Heroes of Resistance'. Kate regularly contributes to broadcast media on the history of gender, sexuality, and religious identity, as well as writing for print and online publications such as The Times, The Guardian, and The Huffington Post. Her personal website has readers in 124 countries and can be found at www.kateantiquity.com. Conrad Leyser is Fellow and Tutor in History at Worcester College, Oxford. Previously, he was Senior Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Manchester. His work centres on late Roman and early medieval traditions of moral authority, with a particular interest in questions of rhetoric, gender and law. He is the author of Authority and Asceticism from Augustine to Gregory the Great (2000). Other publications include Motherhood, Religion, and Society in Medieval Europe, 400–1400 (co-edited with Lesley Smith, 2011). His current project is The Age of Faith: The Story of the Medieval Church, 200–1200, a study of the clerical caste from the third to the eleventh centuries in the Latin West. He organised the international colloquium 'Peace in the Feud: History and Anthropology, 1955–2005', held at Manchester in 2005, out of which this book has developed. Conrad reviews for the Times Literary Supplement, and he has appeared twice as lead contributor to Radio 4's 'Long View'.
'In this groundbreaking collection, the social impact of
'constructive feuding' is analysed in terms of how its potential
destructive impact in practice was limited by customary rules.
Cooper, Leyser and their colleagues have form in challenging
accepted understandings of the past through the redrawing of
disciplinary boundaries and this exciting volume poses fresh
questions with some unexpected answers.' Jill Harries, University
of St Andrews
'This valuable collection brings together essays of established and
rising scholars who reflect on cohesion and power from late
antiquity to the twelfth century. As a whole, these essays
accomplish the twin objectives of engaging with recent approaches
to the history of power and its representation in the early Middle
Ages and at the same time suggesting new ways of understanding
power as forms of social and cultural practices rather than in the
terms of the long and largely fruitless debate about state vs
non-state political orders.' Patrick Geary, Institute for Advanced
Study, Princeton
'This is a very valuable book, making a significant contribution to
the rich literature on social cohesion and conflict in early
medieval Europe. Leading historians take a pleasing variety of
approaches both to specific texts and to general questions. The
essays will be stimulating reading for all interested in the period
and in the engagement of history with anthropology.' John Hudson,
University of St Andrews
'Innovative and thought-provoking. … Deftly interweaving disparate
methods, time-periods, and regions, the monograph produces a fresh
vision of a millennium of Western European history.' Michael E.
Stewart, Journal of Social History
'Much important food for thought in this book, which will repay
careful reading (and re-reading).' Levi Roach, The English
Historical Review
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