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E-raamat: Crisis of the Twelfth Century: Power, Lordship, and the Origins of European Government

  • Formaat: 720 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Sep-2015
  • Kirjastus: Princeton University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781400874316
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  • Formaat: 720 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Sep-2015
  • Kirjastus: Princeton University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781400874316

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A cultural history of power in medieval Europe examines the shift from a dominating nobility who tortured and exploited peasants and encroached on clerical domains to the creation of rulers with a social purpose and the establishment of governments in kingdoms, principalities, and towns.

Medieval civilization came of age in thunderous events like the Norman Conquest and the First Crusade. Power fell into the hands of men who imposed coercive new lordships in quest of nobility. Rethinking a familiar history, Thomas Bisson explores the circumstances that impelled knights, emperors, nobles, and churchmen to infuse lordship with social purpose.

Bisson traces the origins of European government to a crisis of lordship and its resolution. King John of England was only the latest and most conspicuous in a gallery of bad lords who dominated the populace instead of ruling it. Yet, it was not so much the oppressed people as their tormentors who were in crisis. The Crisis of the Twelfth Century suggests what these violent people--and the outcries they provoked--contributed to the making of governments in kingdoms, principalities, and towns.

Arvustused

"Was the 'old public order' of Charlemagne and his successors so public and so ordered? Was the subsequent regime so close to anarchy? Bisson adds to this traditional account by thinking deeply about the benefits and disadvantages of government. He is very aware of the inhumanity of the past he studies... Confronting this world of hunter and hunted, Bisson is inspired by attractively humane impulses. And he looks for public, accountable, official remedies for suffering and oppression."--Robert Barlett, New York Review of Books "For some time, medievalists have associated the 12th century with 'renaissance.' ...Thomas Bisson offers a radically different view, ... [ and] makes the case with considerable brio and insight...A tremendously powerful vision of the period. Bisson's vision of a dark 12th century can be questioned [ but] that does not mean it should be dismissed. The Crisis of the Twelfth Century will be essential reading for all medievalists."--John H. Arnold, Times Higher Education "The story is an old one, but so many-sided as to invite constant retelling from new angles. Bisson has found a new angle, and writes with prodigious sweep and learning."--Alexander Murray, London Review of Books "The sustained argument is a fascinating one, the attractions of the book increased by sections devoted to rather different geographical areas from those that dominate most surveys of medieval Europe. [ Bisson's] effort to combine the traditionally separate fields of political and cultural history in explaining the 'origins of government' is admirable."--John Hudson, BBC History Magazine "In an era when bold syntheses are still too rare, Bisson has taken on 12th-century government in the whole of western Europe, from Poland to Spain, to show with unusual clarity how the period was one of violence and exploitation and how 'government' was inseparable from the exercise of personal power. Bisson's take is controversial and will stir up opposition (it's part of the attraction of the book), but his vision, and his delight in showing patterns of real structural change, make his work refreshing; and I found his nearly 600 pages hard to put down."--Chris Wickham, History Today "This is a book which scholars of central medieval power and society will have to ponder for a long time to come. Its sheer breadth, its ambition and the lightness with which it wears its scholarship all demand attention... Few other books manage to use Europe's regional variation so elegantly to elaborate on coherent pan-European themes whilst avoiding any impression that developments were inevitable. Its contribution to the debate over changes in lordship and government will be massive. It will undoubtedly serve to pull historical interest back to the centre of medieval experience."--Theo Riches, Reviews in History "The Crisis of the Twelfth Century is an unparalleled cultural history of power in medieval Europe, and a monumental achievement by one of today's foremost medievalists."--Spartacus Educational "[ T]he overall arc of the work's argument is impressive... Bisson has provided historians with an impressive work that will hopefully spark new discussions of medieval lordship, politics, and government."--Jonathan R. Lyon, H-Net Reviews "This is a deeply learned book, not for the faint of heart or the unsophisticated reader. Bisson presumes a thorough and comprehensive knowledge of the events and close readings of a wide range of texts. However, the astute reader will be rewarded with an illuminating comparative study of a pivotal point in the history of the European Middle Ages."--Theresa Earenfight, Journal of the Review of Politics "Bisson's book ... sweeps aside still-prevailing assumptions of teleology in political and constitutional history and forces historians of different areas of Europe to battle against any parochial instinct. That it raises so many questions is an indication of its considerable contribution to and departure from existing histories of governments and states of the central Middle Ages."--Alice Taylor, Speculum "Bisson ... is to be commended ... for so effectively setting the agenda for future historians."--William Chester Jordan, Journal of Law and History Review "This book reinforces Thomas Bisson's position as one of the most important contemporary historians of the Middle Ages... Few have the knowledge of the period enjoyed by Bisson... [ T]his sophisticated, nuanced and subtle book will amply reward the reader's effort."--Peter Fleming, Labour

Preface vii
List of Illustrations
xvii
Usage and Conventions xix
Abbreviations xxi
I Introduction
1(21)
II The Age of Lordship (875--1150)
22(62)
Old Order
25(6)
The Quest for Lordship and Nobility
31(37)
Constraint, Violence, and Disruption
41(27)
Cultures of Lordship
68(16)
III Lord-Rulership (1050--1150): The Experience of Power
84(98)
The Papacy
87(8)
West Mediterranean Realms
95(16)
Leon and Castile
95(9)
In Sight of the Pyrenees
104(7)
Imperial Lands
111(17)
Bavaria
116(4)
Lombardy
120(8)
France
128(27)
Anjou
129(13)
Flanders
142(13)
Northern Kingdoms
155(27)
Capetian France
158(10)
Norman England
168(14)
IV Crises of Power (1060--1150)
182(107)
Uneasy Maturity
183(1)
Dynastic Anxiety
183(14)
Anxious Fulfillments
191(6)
The Church
197(15)
Troubled Societies
212(66)
The Saxon Revolt and Its Consequences (1073--1125)
213(16)
Castled France (ca. 1100--1137)
229(14)
Troubles on the Pilgrims' Road (1109--36)
243(16)
Flanders: The Murder of Charles the Good (1127--28)
259(10)
England: `When Christ and His Saints Slept' (1137--54)
269(9)
An Age of Tyranny?
278(11)
V Resolution: Intrusions of Government (1150--1215)
289(136)
Great Lordship in Prosperity and Crisis
293(23)
`Shadows of Peace'
306(2)
Aquitaine: Princes of Ill Repute
308(2)
Anjou: The Tyranny of Giraud Berlai
310(2)
A Tyrannical Bishop(?): Aldebert of Mende (1151--87)
312(4)
The Justice of Accountability
316(33)
The Accountability of Fidelity (1075--1150)
322(3)
Prescriptive Accountancy
325(3)
Towards an Accountability of Office (1085--1200)
328(1)
A Dynamic of Fiscal Growth (ca. 1090--1160)
329(7)
Towards a New Technique (ca. 1110--75)
336(1)
England: Pipe rolls and Exchequer
336(3)
Flanders: The Grote Brief and Its Origins
339(4)
Sicily: Pluri-Cultural Conservancy?
343(2)
Catalonia: From Exploitation to Agency
345(4)
Constraint, Compromise, and Office
349(20)
Charters of Franchise: Some Lessons
350(8)
Thresholds of Office
358(4)
In Sight of Our Lady's Towers
362(7)
Working with Power
369(56)
Catalonia
371(7)
England
378(20)
France
398(17)
The Roman Church
415(10)
VI Celebration and Persuasion (1160--1225)
425(149)
Cultures of Power
430(41)
Sung Fidelity
431(7)
Courtly Talk
438(7)
Learned Moralising
445(11)
Expertise: Two Facets
456(1)
Knowing
457(5)
Knowing How
462(9)
Pacification
471(13)
The Capuchins of Velay
475(9)
Politicised Power
484(45)
The Crisis of Catalonia (1173--1205)
499(16)
The Crisis of Magna Carta (1212--15)
515(14)
States and Estates of Power
529(45)
The States of Troubled Realms
530(11)
The Great Lordship of Consensus
541(7)
Towards Estates of Associative Power
548(8)
Towards a Parliamentary Custom of Consent
556(18)
VII Epilogue
574(9)
Glossary 583(4)
Bibliography 587(54)
Index 641
Thomas N. Bisson is the Henry Charles Lea Professor of Medieval History Emeritus at Harvard University.