The Frankish kings and culture in the early Middle Ages
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Frankish kings and culture in the early Middle Ages
(Collected studies series, CS477)
Variorum, 1995
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
These 14 studies explore the implications of manuscript studies, examining the relationship between the church and the secular world; cover the phenomena of royal patronage and its manifestations; discuss aspects of literacy and orality of the period; and cover 10th-century culture.
Table of Contents
- Anglo-Saxon missionaries in Germany - personal connections and local influences
- town and monastery in the Carolinginan period
- a Frankish aristocratic family of the 10th century - the descent of the Tracys from Charlemagne
- the Carolingian kings and the see of Rheims, 882-987
- Charles the Bald (823-877) and his library - the patronage of learning
- the palace school of Charles the Bald
- royal patronage of culture in the Frankish kingdoms under the Carolingians - motives and consequences
- text and image in the Carolingian world
- Latin and Romance - an historian's perspective
- the written word and oral communication - Rome's legacy to the Franks
- women in the Ottonian church - an iconographic perspective
- continuity and innovation in 10th-century Ottonian culture
- Ottonian intellectual culture in the 10th century and the role of Theophanu
- the study of Frankish history in France and Germany in the 16th and 17th centuries.
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