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Authorship, Worldview, and Identity in Medieval Europe
Details
This collection of essays brings the focus back to medieval authors to see how they described their world. While we see that each author certainly had their own biases, the vast majority of them did not view the world as constrained to their small piece of it.
What did medieval authors know about their world? Were they parochial and focused on just their monastery, town, or kingdom? Or were they aware of the broader medieval Europe that modern historians write about? This collection brings the focus back to medieval authors to see how they described their world. While we see that each author certainly had their own biases, the vast majority of them did not view the world as constrained to their small piece of it. Instead, they talked about the wider world, and often they had informants or textual sources that informed them about the world, even if they did not visit it themselves. This volume shows that they also used similar ideas to create space and identity - whether talking about the desert, the holy land, or food practices in their texts. By examining medieval authors and their own perceptions of their world, this collection offers a framework for discussions of medieval Europe in the twenty-first century.
Autorentext
Christian Raffensperger is the Kenneth E. Wray Chair in the Humanities at Wittenberg University, as well as a Professor and Chair of History. His work focuses on connecting eastern Europe into the larger medieval European world, as seen in Reimagining Europe: Kievan Rus' and the Medieval World (2012) and Conflict, Bargaining, and Kinship Networks in Medieval Eastern Europe (2018).
Inhalt
- **Introduction the medieval world then and now
Part 1: A Wider World
The Horizons of Gregory of Tours
When World Views Collide? The Travel Narratives of Haraldr Sigurðarson of Norway
Concubinage in New Contexts: Interfaith Borrowings and the Rulers of Castile-León in the High Middle Ages
Finding Byzantine-Norman Common Ground:Classics and Christianity in Tzetzes' Encomium to Loukia
Imagined Geographies in Early Rus'
The Globe in Thirteenth-Century Hispania: Archbishop Rodrigo Jiménez de Rada and his World
The World View of Marco Polo's Devisament dou monde: Commercial Marvels, Silk Route Nostalgia and Global Empire in the Late Middle Ages
Treasuries as Windows to the Medieval World: San Isidoro de León and Saint Blaise at Braunschweig
Part 2: Neighbors and Neighborhoods
Adam's of Bremen view of the Polabian Slavs
Into the Wild West: Two Twelfth-Century Clerics' View of Medieval Brittany
An Irish Sea King?: Ethnicity and Legitimacy in the Vita Griffini filii Conani and Historia Gruffud vab Kenan
Saxo and the Slavs
Is there any other world? Imagination of the outside world in the medieval historiography of the Czech lands based on the chronicles Cosmas of Prague, so called Dalimil and Pibík Pulkava of Radenín
15.'Und gras vor spise zeren': Migration, Fermentation, and the Map of Civilization in the Baltic Crusades
Bulgaria - the new Byzantium: Political ideology and self-perception in a medieval Balkan State
Medieval Welsh Ethnic Nicknames and Implications for the Welsh View of their Geopolitical Context, 1050 1400
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781032217772
- Editor Raffensperger Christian
- Sprache Englisch
- Genre History
- Anzahl Seiten 348
- Größe H234mm x B156mm
- Jahr 2023
- EAN 9781032217772
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 978-1-03-221777-2
- Veröffentlichung 25.09.2023
- Titel Authorship, Worldview, and Identity in Medieval Europe
- Autor Christian (Wittenberg University, U Raffensperger
- Gewicht 453g
- Herausgeber Routledge