1: Hostages in the Middle Ages: Problems and Perspectives
2: Varieties and Logics of Medieval Hostageship
3: Hostages in the Early Middle Ages: Communication, Conversion,
and Structures of Alliance
4: Hostages in the Later Middle Ages: Representation, Finance, and
the Laws of War
5: Conditional Hostages
6: The King's Ransom
7: Hostageship Interpreted, from the Middle Ages to the Age of
Terrorism
Adam Kosto is an historian of medieval European institutions. He studied at Yale (BA 1989), Cambridge (MPhil 1990), and Harvard (AM 1991, PhD 1996) before joining the faculty of Columbia University in 1997, where he now serves as Professor of History.
Kosto's clear and systematic work is testament to his brilliance,
not only as a historian, but also as a storyteller. The book itself
is packed with wonderfully illuminating material on the medieval
hostage, but also the analogous development of medieval power
structures and society. The versatility of this book means that it
would not only be of interest to a well-established historian
(legal or otherwise), but also to a non-historian, or someone
starting out in the field.
*Shavana Musa, Reviews in History*
This new history of, and framework for understanding, hostageship
is a major contribution that will make the hostages of the past
difficult to ignore. Military, legal, political, diplomatic, social
and economic historians of numerous periods and regions will read
this book with great reward.
*Guy Geltner, English Historical Review*
Kosto has shed a great deal of light on a hitherto infrequently
studied aspect of medieval history ... This is an important
book.
*American Historical Review*
this is an excellent and closely reasoned book which casts light on
a neglected and very important area of medieval life.
*John France, War in History*
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