Slavs in the Middle Ages between idea and reality

Bibliographic Information

Slavs in the Middle Ages between idea and reality

by Eduard Mühle

(East Central and Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 450-1450, v. 89)

Brill, c2023

  • : hardback

Other Title

Die Slawen zwischen Idee und Wirklichkeit

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Note

"Originally published as "Die Slawen zwischen Idee und Wirklichkeit" by Böhlau in 2020."--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [403]-579) and indexes

Summary:"The book presents a new history of the Slavs during the Middle Ages. Based on in-depth source analysis, it describes on the one hand the 'factual' historical structures that can be discerned behind the phenomenon of 'the Slavs'--from the 'early Slavic' population groups and their first formations of power in the 7th to 9th centuries, through the Slavic-speaking realms and nationes of the 10th to 12th centuries, to the late medieval societies of the 13th to 15th centuries. On the other hand, it analyzes external Byzantine, Latin and Arabic perceptions, as well as 'Slavic' self-imagery, with which the Slavs have been conceptualized or imagined as a cultural construct since the 6th century. Mühle further demonstrates that these images were already being instrumentalized for historical-political purposes in various contexts and for different purposes in the Middle Ages"-- Provided by publisher

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The book presents a new history of the Slavs during the Middle Ages. Based on in-depth source analysis, it describes on the one hand the ‘factual’ historical structures that can be discerned behind the phenomenon of ‘the Slavs’ – from the ‘early Slavic’ population groups and their first formations of power in the 7th to 9th centuries, through the Slavic-speaking realms and nationes of the 10th to 12th centuries, to the late medieval societies of the 13th to 15th centuries. On the other hand, it analyzes external Byzantine, Latin and Arabic perceptions, as well as ‘Slavic’ self-imagery, with which the Slavs have been conceptualized or imagined as a cultural construct since the 6th century. Mühle further demonstrates that these images were already being instrumentalized for historical-political purposes in various contexts and for different purposes in the Middle Ages.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Abbreviations Maps 1 Prologue: The Making of Slavs in Modern Times  1 The Western Discovery of the Slavs between Baroque and Romanticism  2 Ideas of Slavic Community and Modern “Nation-Building”  3 Slavic Unity and German Anti-Slavism  4 The Slavic Idea in Eastern Europe between Stalinism and the European Union 2 Questions and Methodology 3 The Discovery of the Slavs in the Early Middle Ages  1 Slavic Warriors and Settlers in Byzantium  2 Slavic gentes in the Eyes of Latin Europe  3 Slavs in the Distant Oriental View 4 Early Slavic Realities  1 Archaeology and Early Slavic Culture  2 Open Settlements  3 Living Houses  4 Subsistence Economy  5 Practices of Cult and Religion  6 Local Communities  7 Leaders and War-Bands  8 Strongholds and Trading Places 5 Early Slavic Power Structures (regna)  1 The Khanate of the Proto-Bulgars  2 Small Principalities in the Western Balkans  3 Carinthia  4 Old Moravia 6 The Slavs in the Process of Medieval ‘State-Formation’ and ‘Nation-Building’  1 Bulgaria  2 Bohemia  3 Croatia  4 Kievan Rus’  5 Poland  6 Serbia 7 Incomplete Processes of “State-Formation” and “Nation-Building”  1 Polabian Slavs  2 Pomerania  3 Slavs in the Balkans 8 Slavs Perceived by Non-Slavs through the Middle Ages  1 The Byzantine Perception  2 The Oriental Perception  3 The Latin-European Perception 9 Ideas of Slavic Unity in the Late Middle Ages  1 Bohemia  2 Poland  3 Pomerania and Mecklenburg  4 South-Eastern Europe  5 Kievan Rus’ and Muscovy 10 Epilogue: The Making of the Slavs in the Middle Ages Bibliography Indices

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