This volume brings together articles (including two hitherto unpublished pieces) that Susan Reynolds has written since the publication of her Fiefs and Vassals (1994). There she argued that the concepts of the fief and of vassalage, as generally understood by historians of medieval Europe, were constructed by post-medieval historians from the works of medieval academic lawyers and the writers of medieval epics and romances. Six of the essays reprinted here continue her argument that feudalism is unhelpful to understanding medieval society, while eight more discuss other aspects of medieval society, law, and politics which she argues provide a better insight into the history of western Europe in the Middle Ages. Three range outside the Middle Ages and western Europe in considering the idea of the nation, the idea of empire, and the problem of finding a consistent and comprehensible vocabulary for comparative and interdisciplinary history.
Lordship and Feudalism in the Middle Ages
This is a radical new examination of relations between rulers, nobles, and freemen, the distillation of wide-ranging research by a leading medieval historian. It has revolutionized the way we think of the Middle Ages.
Nottingham's brewers included a corviser, a cook, a cooper, a tailor, a smith and a clerk. In the small borough of Thornbury, a chaplain, a baker, a butcher a chaloner, a dyer, a smith, a cobbler, a tanner and a weaver were all brewing ...
Describes how medieval society was organized and the ways a lord's lifestyle differed from a peasant's.
While these challenges have presented a new picture of Western Europe in the so-called feudal age, one more focused than the traditional model of feudalism was, no new scholarly consensus has yet emerged. The volume has two objectives.
Legends have been written about it, films have been made, but what really happened during the Middle Ages? Learn about feudalism, popes, leaders, and wars in this informative book.
This is a comparative study of the role of English and French towns in feudal society in the middle ages.
Feudalism was a set of legal and military customs in mediaeval Europe that structured society in a way that the poorest worked the land and had to pay the rich for the right to do so.
The State in the Middle Ages: A Comparative Constitutional History of Feudal Europe
Eight historical essays on social, political and institutional aspects of European life from the fourth to the eleventh centuries A. D.