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Wickham - Medieval Europe

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Wickham Medieval Europe
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A new look at the middle ages -- Rome and its western successors, 500-750 -- Crisis and transformation in the east, 500-850/1000 -- The Carolingian experiment, 750-1000 -- The expansion of Christian Europe, 500-1100 -- Reshaping western Europe, 1000-1150 -- The long economic boom, 950-1300 -- The ambiguities of political reconstruction, 1150-1300 -- 1204 : the failure of alternatives -- Defining society : gender and community in late medieval Europe -- Money, war and death, 1350-1500 -- Rethinking politics, 1350-1500 -- Conclusion.;The millennium between the breakup of the western Roman Empire and the Reformation was a long and hugely transformative period--one not easily chronicled within the scope of a few hundred pages. Yet distinguished historian Chris Wickham has taken up the challenge in this landmark book, and he succeeds in producing the most riveting account of medieval Europe in a generation. Tracking the entire sweep of the Middle Ages across Europe, Wickham focuses on important changes century by century, including such pivotal crises and moments as the fall of the western Roman Empire, Charlemagnes reforms, the feudal revolution, the challenge of heresy, the destruction of the Byzantine Empire, the rebuilding of late medieval states, and the appalling devastation of the Black Death. He provides illuminating vignettes that underscore how shifting social, economic, and political circumstances affected individual lives and international events. Wickham offers both a new conception of Europes medieval period and a provocative revision of exactly how and why the Middle Ages matter--

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MEDIEVAL EUROPE

Copyright 2016 Chris Wickham All rights reserved This book may not be - photo 1

Copyright 2016 Chris Wickham

All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press) without written permission from the publishers.

For information about this and other Yale University Press publications, please contact:

U.S. Office:

Europe Office:

Typeset in Minion Pro by IDSUK (DataConnection) Ltd

Printed in Great Britain by Gomer Press Ltd, Llandysul, Ceredigion, Wales

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Wickham, Chris, 1950 author.

Title: Medieval Europe / Chris Wickham.

Description: New Haven : Yale University Press, 2016. | Includes bibliographical references.

LCCN 2016018675 | ISBN 9780300208344 (cloth : alkaline paper)

LCSH: EuropeHistory4761492. | Middle Ages. | Social changeEuropeHistoryTo 1500. | EuropeSocial conditionsTo 1492. | BISAC: HISTORY / Medieval. | HISTORY / Europe / General. | HISTORY / Social History.

Classification: LCC D117 .W53 2016 | DDC 940.1dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016018675

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Contents

Illustrations and maps

Illustrations

Ivory diptych for Manlius Boethius, 487. Museo Civico Cristiano, Brescia, Italy/Bridgeman Images.

Saint Jean baptistery, Poitiers, sixth century. Nick Hanna/Alamy Stock Photo.

Votive crown of Recceswinth, 660s. Prisma Archivo/Alamy Stock Photo.

Hagia Sophia, Constantinople (Istanbul), 530s. Photo by Leslie Brubaker.

Birmingham Quran, c. 640s650s, fols 2r and 1v. University of Birmingham.

Reception hall, Madinat al-Zahra, Crdoba, 950s.

Palace chapel, Aachen cathedral, c. 800.

).

Lindisfarne Gospels, Gospel of Luke, early eighth century. The British Library (Cotton MS Nero D.IV, f.139).

Stave church, Heddal, Norway, thirteenth century.

Bronze doors, Gniezno cathedral, late twelfth century, depicting the death scene of the life of Adalbert of Prague. Jan Wlodarczyk/Alamy Stock Photo.

Rocca San Silvestro, Tuscany, thirteenth century. Ventodiluna.

Apse mosaic of San Clemente, Rome, c. 1118. imageBROKER/Alamy Stock Photo.

Pisa cathedral, late eleventh and early twelfth century. M&M Photo.

Gravensteen castle, Ghent, late twelfth century. Alpineguide/Alamy Stock Photo.

The Mercure Shakespeare Hotel, Stratford, thirteenthsixteenth centuries. Mark Beton/England/Alamy Stock Photo.

Notre Dame cathedral, le de la Cit, Paris. Peter Bull.

Pipe roll, late twelfth century, 10 Hen II, 116364. The National Archives, London.

Statues of Ekkehard of Meissen and Uta of Ballenstadt, Naumburg cathedral, mid-thirteenth century. VPC Travel Photo/Alamy Stock Photo.

The Dream of Innocent III, fresco by Giotto di Bondone, church of San Francesco, Assisi, 1290s. Bridgeman Images.

Northern (Istanbul) gate, city walls of Nicaea (znik, Turkey), Roman to early thirteenth century. EBA.

The Anastasis, Kariye Camii (Chora monastery), Constantinople (Istanbul), c. 1320. QC.

.

.

St Anne teaching the Virgin to read, French manuscript illumination, 1430s. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, Ms. 5, fol. 45v. Digital image courtesy of the Gettys Open Content Program.

Effects of good government in the city, by Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Palazzo Pubblico, Siena, 133839. Fonazione Musei Senesi.

Egil Skallagrimsson, illustration probably by Hjalti orsteinsson from an Icelandic manuscript, seventeenth century, AM 426, f. 2v. Photo by Jhanna lafsdttir, image courtesy of the rni Magnsson Institute for Icelandic Studies.

.

Charles bridge, Prague, late fourteenth century. Book Travel Prague.

Patio de las Doncellas, Alcazar, Seville, 1360s. funkyfood London Paul Williams/Alamy Stock Photo.

Enea Silvio Piccolomini sets out for the Council of Basel, by Pinturicchio, Siena cathedral, 1500s. Piccolomini Library, Siena Cathedral, Italy/F. Lensini, Siena/Bridgeman Images.

Piazza Pio II, Pienza, Tuscany, 145962. Siephoto/Masterfile.

Maps

Europe in 550.

Western Europe in 850.

Eastern Europe in 850.

Western Europe in 1150.

Eastern Europe in 1150.

Western Europe in 1500.

Eastern Europe in 1500.

Acknowledgements

My first thanks go to Heather McCallum, who suggested that I write this book and finally persuaded me; she also critiqued its drafts and was a reality check throughout. Leslie Brubaker read the whole book and made it clear what changes I could not avoid making; so did two very supportive Yale readers. Many other friends read parts of the book: Pat Geary and Mayke de Jong read . I could not have done this without their (often highly critical) support, especially when I moved into parts of the middle ages I knew relatively little about. Several other people helped me with advice and references and to find books: Peter Coss, Lorena Fierro Daz, Marek Jankowiak, Tom Lambert, Isabella Lazzarini, Conrad Leyser, Sophie Marnette, Giedre Mickunaite, Maureen Miller, Natalia Nowakowska, Helmut Reimitz, John Sabapathy, Mark Whittow, Emily Winkler, are only some of them. I cannot even list the many people who saved me from errors in casual conversation, not knowing that I was taking mental notes; but all the speakers at the Monday-at-5 medieval seminar which I have run for eleven years at Oxford with Mark Whittow have contributed, in one way or another, to my ideas in this book. I have also to thank RAE2008 and REF2014 for their intellectual stimulus: they forced me to read significant books and articles on a wide variety of topics which I would not always have come across otherwise, and many of these are in the bibliography.

C.W.
January 2016

Map 1 Europe in 550 Map 2 Western Europe in 850 Map 3 Eastern Europe in - photo 2

Map 1 Europe in 550.

Map 2 Western Europe in 850 Map 3 Eastern Europe in 850 Map 4 Western - photo 3

Map 2 Western Europe in 850.

Map 3 Eastern Europe in 850 Map 4 Western Europe in 1150 Map 5 Eastern - photo 4

Map 3 Eastern Europe in 850.

Map 4 Western Europe in 1150 Map 5 Eastern Europe in 1150 Map 6 Western - photo 5

Map 4 Western Europe in 1150.

Map 5 Eastern Europe in 1150 Map 6 Western Europe in 1500 Map 7 Eastern - photo 6

Map 5 Eastern Europe in 1150.

Map 6 Western Europe in 1500 Map 7 Eastern Europe in 1500 1 Consular - photo 7

Map 6 Western Europe in 1500.

Map 7 Eastern Europe in 1500 1 Consular diptych for Manlius Boethius 487 - photo 8

Map 7 Eastern Europe in 1500.

1 Consular diptych for Manlius Boethius 487 It was very common for late - photo 9

1. Consular diptych for Manlius Boethius, 487. It was very common for late Roman aristocrats to commission commemorative ivory diptychs (pictures in two halves) such as this one, for special occasions in this case Boethius appointment as consul and prefect of Rome. On the right he holds the signal for the start of chariot racing, for these offices involved the patronage of expensive games. The consul was probably the father of the major philosopher, also called Boethius, executed for treason by Theoderic, king of Italy, in 524.

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