The village world of early medieval Northern Spain : local community and the land market
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The village world of early medieval Northern Spain : local community and the land market
(Royal Historical Society studies in history new series)
The Royal Historical Society , The Boydell Press, 2017
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 200-218) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The pattern of rural life in early medieval Spain is here vividly brought to life through careful examination of contemporary documents.
In the early eighth century, the Muslim general Tariq ibn Ziyad led his forces across the Straits of Gibraltar and conquered most of the Iberian Peninsula. However, alongside the flourishing kingdom of al-Andalus, the small Christian realm of Asturias-Leon endured in the northern mountains. This book charts the social, economic and political development of Asturias-Leon from the Islamic conquest to 1031. Using a forensic comparative method, which examinesthe abundant charter material from two regions of northern Spain - the Liebana valley in Cantabria, and the Celanova region of southern Galicia - it sheds new light on village society, the workings of government, and the constantswirl of buying, selling and donating that marked the rhythms of daily life. It also maps the contact points between rulers and ruled, offering new insights on the motivations and actions of both peasant proprietors and aristocrats.
Robert Portass is Senior Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Lincoln.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The making of medieval Iberia, 711-1031
Cantabria after Rome
Local society in the ninth century
The emergence of a village elite
Kings, counts and courts
Galicia after Rome
Before Celanova
Rosendo, Celanova and the village world, 936-1031
Magnates, monasteries and the public framework
Conclusion
Bibliography
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