Reading the Middle Ages : sources from Europe, Byzantium, and the Islamic world

Bibliographic Information

Reading the Middle Ages : sources from Europe, Byzantium, and the Islamic world

edited by Barbara H. Rosenwein

University of Toronto Press, c2014

2nd ed

  • : pbk
  • : bound

Available at  / 8 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: pbk ISBN 9781442606029

Description

Covering over one thousand years of history and containing primary source material from the European, Byzantine, and Islamic worlds, Barbara H. Rosenwein's Reading the Middle Ages, Second Edition once again brings the Middle Ages to life. Building on the strengths of the first edition, the second edition contains 40 new readings, including 13 translations commissioned especially for this book, and a stunning new 10-plate color insert entitled "Containing the Holy" that brings together materials from the Western, Byzantine, and Islamic religious traditions. Ancillary materials, including study questions, can be found on the History Matters website (www.utphistorymatters.com).

Table of Contents

Preface Abbreviations and Symbols Abbreviations for the Authorized Version of the Bible Chapter 1: Prelude: The Roman World Transformed (c.300-c.600) A Christianized Empire 1.1 Toleration or favoritism? Edict of Milan (313) 1.2 Law: The Theodosian Code (438) 4 1.3 Plague: Gregory the Great, Letter to Bishop Dominic of Carthage (600) Heresy and Orthodoxy 1.4 Heretics: A Donatist Sermon (c.318) 1.5 Orthodoxy's declaration: The Nicene Creed (325) Patristic Thought 1.6 Relating this world to the next: Augustine, The City of God (413-426) 1.7 Monasticism: The Benedictine Rule (c.530-c.560) Saintly Models 1.8 The virginal life: Jerome, Letter 24 (To Marcella) (384) 1.9 The eremetical life: Athanasius, Life of St. Antony of Egypt (357) 1.10 The active life: Sulpicius Severus, The Life of St. Martin of Tours (397) 1.11 St. Radegund as ascetic: Venantius Fortunatus, The Life of St. Radegund (before c.600) 1.12 St. Radegund as relic collector: Baudonivia, The Life of St. Radegund (c.600) Barbarian Kingdoms 1.13 Gothic Italy as Rome's heir: Cassiodorus, Variae (State Papers) (c.507-536) 1.14 Gothic Spain converts: The Third Council of Toledo (589) 1.15 Merovingian Gaul's bishop-historian: Gregory of Tours, History (576-594) Timeline for Chapter One Chapter 2: The Emergence of Sibling Cultures (c.600-c.750) The Resilience of Byzantium 2.1 Byzantine village life and the education of a saint: The Life of St. Theodore of Sykeon (7th c.) 2.2 The argument for icons: John of Damascus, On Holy Images (730s or early 750s) 2.3 The iconoclastic argument: The Synod of 754 2.4 Vilifying the iconoclasts: The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor (before 818) The Formation of the Islamic World 2.5 Pre-Islamic Arabic poetry: Al-A'sha, Bid Hurayra Farewell (before 625) 2.6 The sacred text: Qur'an Suras 1, 53:1-18, 81, 87, 96, 98 (c.610-622) 2.7 Umayyad diplomacy: The Treaty of Tudmir (713) 2.8 Taxation: A Tax Demand in Egypt (710) 2.9 Praising the caliph: Al-Akhtal, The Tribe Has Departed (c.692) The Impoverished but Inventive West 2.10 A world explained by words: Isidore of Seville, Etymologies (c.615-c.630) 2.11 A modern martyr in Francia: The Passion of Leudegar (680s) 2.12 The settlement of disputes: Judgment of Childebert III (709 or 710) 2.13 Reforming the Continental church: Letters to Boniface (723-726) 2.14 Creating a Roman Christian identity for England: Bede, The Ecclesiastical History of the English People (731) Timeline for Chapter Two Chapter 3: Creating New Identities (c.750-c.900) The Material Basis of Society 3.1 Manors in the West: Polyptyque of the Church of Saint Mary of Marseille (814-815) 3.2 Byzantine guilds: The Book of the Prefect (886-912) Map 3.1 Major European Slave Exports (700-900) 112 3.3 The sale of a slave in Italy: A Contract of Sale (725) The Abbasid Reconfiguration 3.4 An early view of the Prophet: Muhammad ibn Ishaq, Life of Muhammad (754-767) 3.5 Hadith: Al-Bukhari, On Fasting (9th c.) 3.6 The "New Poetry": Abu Nuwas, Turning the Tables (c.800) Al-Andalus 3.7 The minority-that is, Christian-view: Chronicle of Albelda (c.883) 3.8 An Islamic Andalusian voice: Ibn 'Abd Rabbihi, I Have Never Seen (before 940) 3.9 A Jewish poet in al-Andalus: Dunash ben Labrat, There Came a Voice (mid-10th c.) The Western Church and Empire 3.10 The pope and the Carolingians: Pope Stephen II, Letters to King Pippin III (755-756) 3.11 Charlemagne as Roman emperor: Einhard, Life of Charlemagne (825-826?) 3.12 Modeling the state on Old Testament Israel: The Admonitio Generalis (789) 3.13 Ideals of family and fidelity: Dhuoda, Handbook for Her Son (841-843) Expanding Christianity 3.14 The Slavic conversion: Constantine/Cyril, Prologue to the Gospel (863-867) 3.15 The Bulgarian Khan in Byzantine guise: Seal of Boris-Michael (864-889) 3.16 The Bulgarians adopt Christianity: Pope Nicholas I, Letter to Answer the Bulgarians' Questions (866) Timeline for Chapter Three Chapter 4: Political Communities Reordered (c.900-c.1050) Regionalism: Its Advantages and Its Discontents 4.1 Fragmentation in the Islamic world: Al-Tabari, The Defeat of the Zanj Revolt (c.915) 4.2 The powerful in the Byzantine countryside: Romanus I Lecapenus, Novel (934) 4.3 Donating to Cluny: Cluny's Foundation Charter (910) and various charters of donation (10th-11th c.) 4.4 Love and complaints in Angouleme: Agreement between Count William of the Aquitanians and Hugh IV of Lusignan (1028) 4.5 The Peace of God at Bourges: Andrew of Fleury, The Miracles of St. Benedict (1040-1043) 4.6 A castellan's revenues and properties in Catalonia: Charter of Guillem Guifred (1041-1075) Byzantine Expansion 4.7 Military life: Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, Military Advice to His Son (950-958) 4.8 Imperial rule: Michael Psellus, Portrait of Basil II (c.1063) Scholarship across the Islamic World 4.9 Education: Al-Qabisi, A Treatise Detailing the Circumstances of Students and the Rules Governing Teachers and Students (before 1012) 4.10 Political theory: Al-Farabi, The Perfect State (c.940-942) 4.11 Logic: Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Treatise on Logic (1020s or 1030s) Kingdoms in East Central Europe 4.12 Hungary as heir of Rome: King Stephen, Laws (1000-1038) 4.13 Coming to terms with Catholic Poland: Thietmar of Merseburg, Chronicle (1013-1018) 4.14 Poland's self-image: Boleslaw's Coin (992-1000) 4.15 Kievan Rus': The Russian Primary Chronicle (c.1113, incorporating earlier materials) Northern Europe 4.16 An Ottonian courtier/bishop: Ruotger, Life of Bruno, Archbishop of Cologne (late 960s) 4.17 Literacy: King Alfred, Prefaces to Gregory the Great's Pastoral Care (c.890) 4.18 Law: King Athelred, Law Code (1008) 4.19 Christianity comes to Denmark: The Jelling Monument (960s) Timeline for Chapter Four Containing the Holy Plate 1 Dome of the Rock (692) Plate 2 Icon with Saint Demetrios (2nd half 10th c.) Plate 3 Reliquary Locket (10th-11th c.) Plate 4 Page from a Qur'an (993) Plate 5 A Holy Vestment (late 10th-early 11th c.) Plate 6 Tlemcen, Great Mosque (1236) Plate 7 The Church as Reliquary: Sainte-Chapelle (1248) Plate 8 Monstrance (c.1430) Plate 9 Synagogue and Ark (1435) Plate 10 The Wienhausen Sepulcher (15th c.) Reading Through Looking Plate 11 Seal of Boris-Michael (864-889) Plate 12 Boleslaw's Coin (992-1000) Plate 13 The Jelling Monument (960s) Plate 14 The Bayeux Tapestry (end of the 11th c.) Plate 15 Gabriel de Valseca, Portolan Map (1447) Chapter 5: The expansion of western Europe (c.1050-c.1150) Commercial Take Off 5.1 Cultivating new lands: Frederick of Hamburg's Agreement with Colonists from Holland (1106) 5.2 Ibn 'Abdun, Regulations for the Market at Seville (early 12th c.) 5.3 The role of royal patronage: Henry I, Privileges for the Citizens of London (1130-1133) Church Reform 5.4 The royal view: Henry IV, Letter to Gregory VII (1075) 5.5 The papal view: Gregory VII, Letter to Hermann of Metz (1076) The Clergy in Action 5.6 Vesting Prayers (c.1000?) 5.7 The Star of Clerics (c.1200?) 5.8 A Visitation Record (1268) The Crusades and Reconquista 5.9 Martyrs in the Rhineland: Rabbi Eliezer b. Nathan ("Raban"), O God, Insolent Men (early to mid-12th c.) 5.10 A Westerner in the Holy Land: Stephen of Blois, Letter to His Wife (March 1098) 5.11 The Muslim reaction: Ibn al-Athir, The First Crusade (13th c.) 5.12 The crusade in Spain and Portugal: The Conquest of Lisbon (1147-1148) The Norman Conquest of England 5.13 The pro-Norman position: William of Jumieges, The Deeds of the Dukes of the Normans (c.1070) 5.14 The native position: "Florence of Worcester," Chronicle of Chronicles (early 12th c.) 5.15 The Conquest depicted: The Bayeux Tapestry (end of the 11th c.) 5.16 Exploiting the Conquest: Domesday Book (1087) The Twelfth-Century Renaissance 5.17 Logic: Abelard, Glosses on Porphyry (c.1100) 5.18 Medical science: Constantine the African's translation of Johannitius's Isagoge (before 1098) 5.19 The healing power of stones: Marbode of Rennes, The Book of Stones (? late 11th c.) Cluniacs and Cistercians 5.20 The Cistercian view: St. Bernard, Apologia (1125) 5.21 The Cluniac view: Peter the Venerable, Miracles (mid-1130s-mid-1150s) Timeline for Chapter Five Chapter 6: Institutionalizing Aspirations (c.1150-c.1250) The Crusades Continue 6.1 The Northern Crusades: Helmold, The Chronicle of the Slavs (1167-1168) 6.2 The Fourth Crusade: Nicetas Choniates, O City of Byzantium (c.1215) Grounding Justice in Royal Law 6.3 English common law: The Assize of Clarendon (1166) 6.4 English litigation on the ground: The Costs of Richard of Anstey's Lawsuit (1158-1163) 6.5 The legislation of a Spanish king: The Laws of Cuenca (1189-1193) Local Laws and Arrangements 6.6 A manorial court: Proceedings for the Abbey of Bec (1246) 6.7 Doing business: A Genoese societas (1253) 6.8 Women's work: Guild Regulations of the Parisian Silk Fabric Makers (13th c.) 6.9 Men's work: Guild Regulations of the Shearers of Arras (1236) Bureaucracy at the Papal Curia 6.10 The growth of papal business: Innocent III, Letters (1200-1202) 6.11 Petitioning the papacy: Register of Thomas of Hereford (1281) 6.12 Mocking the papal bureaucracy: The Gospel According to the Marks of Silver (c.1200) Confrontations 6.13 Henry II and Becket: Constitutions of Clarendon (1164) 6.14 Emperor and pope: Diet of Besan on (1157) 6.15 King and nobles: Magna Carta (1215) Caring for the Body 6.16 The abbot of Cluny seeks medical help: Letters between Peter the Venerable and Doctor Bartholomew (c.1151) 6.17 A doctor's bedside manner: Advice from "Archimatthaeus"(2nd half of 12th c.) Vernacular Literature 6.18 A troubadour love song: Bernart de Ventadorn, When I see the lark (c.1147-c.1170) 6.19 A trobairitz love song: La Comtessa de Dia, I have been in heavy grief (late 12th-early 13th c.) 6.20 A political song from the south of France: Bertran de Born, Half a sirvent s I'll sing (1190) 6.21 Fabliaux: Browny, The Priest's Cow and The Priest Who Peeked (13th c.) 6.22 Romance: Chretien de Troyes, Lancelot (c.1177-1181) New Developments in Religious Sensibilities 6.23 Disciplining and purifying Christendom: Decrees of Lateran IV
Volume

: bound ISBN 9781442608214

Description

Covering over one thousand years of history and containing primary source material from the European, Byzantine, and Islamic worlds, Barbara H. Rosenwein's Reading the Middle Ages, Second Edition once again brings the Middle Ages to life. Building on the strengths of the first edition, the second edition contains 40 new readings, including 13 translations commissioned especially for this book, and a stunning new 10-plate color insert entitled "Containing the Holy" that brings together materials from the Western, Byzantine, and Islamic religious traditions. Ancillary materials, including study questions, can be found on the History Matters website (www.utphistorymatters.com).

Table of Contents

Preface xix Abbreviations and Symbols xxi Abbreviations for the Authorized Version of the Bible xxiii Chapter 1: Prelude: The Roman World Transformed (c.300-c.600) A Christianized Empire Heresy and Orthodoxy Patristic Thought Saintly Models Barbarian Kingdoms Timeline for Chapter One 58 Chapter 2: The Emergence of Sibling Cultures (c.600-c.750) The Resilience of Byzantium The Formation of the Islamic World The Impoverished but Inventive West Timeline for Chapter Two 106 Chapter 3: Creating New Identities (c.750-c.900) The Material Basis of Society The Abbasid Reconfiguration Al-Andalus The Western Church and Empire Expanding Christianity Timeline for Chapter Three 166 Chapter 4: Political Communities Reordered (c.900-c.1050) Regionalism: Its Advantages and Its Discontents Byzantine Expansion Scholarship across the Islamic World Kingdoms in East Central Europe Northern Europe Timeline for Chapter Four 227 Containing the Holy 229 Reading Through Looking 246 Chapter 5: The Expansion of Western Europe (c.1050-c.1150) Commercial Take Off Church Reform The Clergy in Action The Crusades and Reconquista The Norman Conquest of England The Twelfth-Century Renaissance Cluniacs and Cistercians Timeline for Chapter Five 302 Chapter 6: Institutionalizing Aspirations (c.1150-c.1250) The Crusades Continue Grounding Justice in Royal Law Local Laws and Arrangements Bureaucracy at the Papal Curia Confrontations Caring for the Body Vernacular Literature New Developments in Religious Sensibilities Timeline for Chapter Six 376 Chapter 7: Discordant Harmonies (c.1250-c.1350) East Central Europe in Flux Transformations in the Cities Heresies and Persecutions Rulers and Ruled Modes of Thought, Feeling, and Devotion Timeline for Chapter Seven 442 Chapter 8: Catastrophe and Creativity (c.1350-c.1500) The Plague The Ottomans Byzantium: Decline and Fall War and Social Unrest Crises and Changes in the Church and Religion The Renaissance Finding a New World Timeline for Chapter Eight 503 Sources 505 Index of Names, Places, and Readings 515

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

  • NCID
    BB15493922
  • ISBN
    • 9781442606029
    • 9781442608214
  • Country Code
    cn
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    North York, Ont.
  • Pages/Volumes
    xxvii, 524 p.
  • Size
    26 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
Page Top