Frankland : the Franks and the world of the early middle ages : essays in honour of Dame Jinty Nelson

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Frankland : the Franks and the world of the early middle ages : essays in honour of Dame Jinty Nelson

edited by Paul Fouracre and David Ganz

Manchester University Press, 2012

  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This collection of highly original essays by leading early medieval historians honours the work and career of Dame Janet (Jinty) Nelson, one of the most respected and influential scholars of her generation. The essays build on the spirit of Janet Nelson's work by linking the study of Francia with at least one other area or general theme of early medieval history. The papers range across all of the regions of Europe affected by Frankish culture and explore themes which reflect the cutting edge of the work she inspired: memory, queenship, the treatment of prisoners of war, penance, the use of property, historiography, palaeography, prosopography, religious organization. The volume includes an appreciation of her career, and is rounded off by a topical index to highlight its thematic aspects. -- .

Table of Contents

Dame Jinty Nelson: an appreciation, Paul Fouracre and David Ganz Charters, law codes and formulae: the Franks between theory and practice, Alice Rio Compulsory purchase in the earlier Middle Ages, Susan Reynolds Gallic or Greek? Archbishops in England from Theodore to Ecgbehrt, Alan Thacker Forgetting and remembering Dagobert II. The English connection, Paul Fouracre Some Carolingian questions from Charlemagne's days, David Ganz 'Immune from heresy'. Defining the boundaries of Carolingian Christianity, Matthew Innes English history and Irish readers in the Frankish World, Paul Kershaw In search of the Carolingian 'dear lord', Rachel Stone Making a difference in tenth-century politics: King Athelstan's sisters and Frankish queenship, Simon MacLean, The Carolingian capture of Aachen in 978 and its historiographical footprint, Theo Riches ''Absoluimus uos uice beati petri apostolorum principis''. Episcopal authority and the reconciliation of excommunicants in England and Francia c. 900-c.1150, Sarah Hamilton Fontenoy and after: pursuing enemies to death in France between the ninth and the eleventh centuries, John Gillingham The death of Burgheard son of Aelfgar and its context, Stephen Baxter. The representation of queenship in Anglo-Norman charters, David Bates Bretons and Franks: the impact of the modern political climate on writing the history of the early middle ages, Wendy Davies Appendix: Domesday entries for persons named Burgheard Publications of Professor Janet L. Nelson Tabula Gratulatoria Index of topics, compiled by C. P. Lewis -- .

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