The development of southern French and Catalan society, 718-1050
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Bibliographic Information
The development of southern French and Catalan society, 718-1050
University of Texas Press, c1965
Available at 9 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. [405]-431
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Early in the eighth century, the current of the Muslim movement that inundated northern Spain crept over the Pyrenees to spread across a portion of the French Midi. From the north the tide of Carolingian conquest forced the Muslims back and took in these same southern French and northern Spanish provinces. During the same era the Vikings raided intermittently and with varying degrees of intensity along the seacoasts and up the inland waterways, sometimes controlling considerable areas for extended periods.
These raids and conquests inevitably affected the way of life of the people of southern France and Catalonia. Contemporary travelers and later scholars have noted that the feudal traditions and obligations that were so strong in the north seemed very weak or nonexistent in the south. They found that the land seemed to be held largely as allods, not as feudal fiefs; they saw that women held positions of surprising power, that throughout the area there was great emphasis on money, and that the traditions of Roman and Visigothic law still survived.
Although scholars have noted these differences, no one has made a comprehensive study of southern French and Catalan society as a whole. It is to fill this void that Archibald Lewis provides this volume. In a detailed and scholarly study, based largely upon original records and chronicles, he examines the familial, social, economic, governmental, military, and religious life of the area from 718 to 1050 A.D.
Lewis gives as comprehensive a picture as the records will permit of the society that existed in the early eighth century, describes and discusses the major changes which took place during the next three centuries, and analyzes their causes and effects. This study, which includes careful and detailed notes and an extensive bibliography, provides a reliable and long-needed reference tool.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Abbreviations Used in Notes
Part I. Southern France and Carolingian Conquest, 718-778
I. Southern France in the Early Eighth Century
II. The Carolingian Conquest, 718-778
Part II. Southern France, Catalonia, and the Carolingian Empire, 778-828
III. The Expansion into Gascony and Catalonia
IV. The Carolingian System
V. Southern French and Catalan Society (778-828)
Part III. The Decline of Royal Power, 828-900
VI. Civil War, Invasion, and the Breakdown of Royal Authority
II. The Governmental System of the Midi and Catalonia
VIII. The Church (828-900)
IX. Southern French and Catalan Society (828-900)
Part IV. The Failure of the Territorial State, 900-975
X. The End of Royal Influence
XI. The Breakup of Principalities and the Court System
II. The Military System of the Midi and Catalonia
XIII. The Church (900-975)
XIV. The Society of the Midi and Catalonia
Part V. The Age of the Principes, 975-1050
XV. The New Militarism
VI. The Church (975-1050)
XVII. The Continued Failure of Principalities
XVIII. The Principes and Public Order
XIX. Southern French and Catalan Society (975-1050)
Conclusion
Bibliography
I. Primary Materials
II. Secondary Materials
Index
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