Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of boxes
- Illustration acknowledgements
- Introduction
- The Middle Ages as a period in European history
- The terms ‘Middle Ages’, ‘humanism’ and ‘Renaissance’
- The Middle Ages: continuity and change
- The Middle Ages: cultural diversity
- Which Europe?
- Contested areas and new questions
- Medievalism
- The book’s arrangement
- Part I The early Middle Ages, 300–1000
- 1 The end of the Roman Empire in the West
- Governing an empire
- Government structure and bureaucracy
- Emperor and court
- Local government
- Taxation and fiscal policy
- The Roman army and the frontier
- Economic structure and prosperity
- The barbarian world of the North
- The collapse of the Roman order in the West
- The early Migration Period
- The later Migration Period
- Migrations and ethnogenesis
- The barbarian kingdoms in the West
- The nature of barbarian settlement
- Segregation or integration?
- Proto-nation formation
- Polities outside the former Roman Empire
- Balance: the end of Roman civilisation?
- The survival of the Roman Empire in the East
- Justinian
- Implosion and consolidation
- Renewed expansion
- 2 The establishment of two world religions: Christianity and Islam
- The Christian Church in the transition from Antiquity to the Middle Ages
- The relationship between Emperor and Pope
- Material wealth, accumulation and distribution
- Church organisation
- The clergy and its tasks
- Church hierarchy: episcopate and diocese
- Metropolitans and archbishops, patriarchs and popes
- Parishes
- Church councils
- Monasticism
- Orthodoxy and heterodoxy
- The heterodoxies of Donatus and Pelagius
- The iconoclast controversy
- Saints and miracles
- Spreading the faith
- Missions and conversion
- Christianisation and syncretism
- The rise of Islam and the establishment of the Arab Empire
- Dissension and the origins of Shi’ism
- The nature of Arab occupation
- The Abbasid Revolution
- 3 The powerful and the poor: society and economy in the Frankish kingdoms and beyond
- Early medieval society
- Warlords to landlords
- Aristocratic values: allegiance and commendation
- Aristocratic values: honour and blood
- The social position of ordinary free men
- Grundherrschaft, serfdom and slavery
- Large landownership and manorialism
- Trade and gift-exchange
- Reciprocity and redistribution
- Traders, trade routes and trading posts
- Early medieval politics: the Carolingian core
- Frankish royal dynasties and the Carolingian century
- Military conquest and the Frankish armies
- An incipient state
- Creating loyalty: oaths of allegiance, vassals and benefices
- The fiction of a united empire
- Dynamic peripheries
- The British Isles and Viking Scandinavia
- Slav principalities
- Moorish Iberia
- Part II The Central Middle Ages, 1000–1300
- 4 Early kingdoms and principalities
- Charlemagne’s legacy
- What became of the East Frankish and West Frankish kingdoms
- The German kingship
- The restoration of Roman emperorship
- The imperial Church and the contest for supreme power
- The Norman intrusion into southern Italy
- The Mediterranean ambitions of the Hohenstaufen
- Vassal states in central Europe
- France: the concentric model
- The making of England
- The Norman Conquest
- The Anarchy and the House of Plantagenet
- Scandinavia
- Iberia
- The institutionalisation of the state
- The sacralisation of kingship
- Early states as feudal states
- Servants of the state
- The king and his court
- 5 Accelerated growth
- Population growth
- Volume and nature of agricultural production
- The commercialisation of the countryside
- New types of local lordship
- Local lordships and castles
- Local lordship bridled by feudalisation
- Local lordship bridled by the decline of manorialism
- Knights and peasants: image and reality
- Horsemen become knights
- Knighthood and chivalry
- Chivalry and courtliness: new rules for moving in high circles
- Knighthood and nobility: ranking and closure
- Peasants and village communities
- 6 Religious reform and renewal
- Aspirations to reform
- Pope versus emperor: the investiture controversy
- The reform programme
- The impulse for the Crusades
- Papal claims to the highest authority in the world
- The papal monarchy
- Reformation and renewal in monastic life
- Cluny and the Ecclesia Cluniacensis
- The new orders
- Vita apostolica, imitatio Christi and the new spirituality
- The mendicants
- The faithful become visible
- God’s peace and God’s truce
- The formation of a persecuting society
- Among the believers
- Pastoral care
- Churches as the visualisation of Christian knowledge
- Part III Expansion and maturation, 1000–1500
- 7 The beginnings of European expansion
- The West becomes more aggressive
- Clashes of civilisations
- Greeks, Turks and Egyptians
- The multicultural Near East
- Crusades, crusader states and Western colonies in the East
- The later crusades
- Far East meets West: the Mongol invasions
- The Baltic Crusades
- Expansion and trade
- Europe and the First World System
- Europe’s Commercial Revolution
- Mediterranean colonialism and the revival of the slave trade
- Key innovations of the Commercial Revolution
- The transport revolution
- Forms of association
- Trading Posts
- Fairs
- Companies
- Bills of exchange
- Accountancy
- A negative balance of payments
- 8 Thinking about man and the world
- The medieval view of the world and mankind
- Greek origins
- Athens and Jerusalem
- The heavy burden of auctoritas
- The higher education programme of Late Antiquity and its survival in the early Middle Ages
- The Carolingian Renaissance
- The rationalist turn and the twelfth-century Renaissance
- Making sense of the world in new ways
- The formation of universities
- University scholarship in action: grades, curriculum, teaching methods
- The ‘war between science and religion’
- The humanism of the late Middle Ages
- Studia humanitatis and the new humanism in Italy
- The new humanism outside Italy
- 9 Towns and the urbanisation of medieval society
- The phenomenon of the pre-industrial town
- The scale of towns and of urbanisation
- The morphology of the medieval town
- The beginnings of urban society
- Merchant guilds and urban patriciates
- Political participation of the middle classes
- Autonomy and liberty
- Urban law and privileges
- Urban government and public order
- Common good and public health
- Urban networks and hierarchies
- Urban society and economy in the later Middle Ages
- A burgher world view
- Professional structures
- Craft guilds and guild regimes
- Corporative organisation
- Class conflict
- Political participation
- Corporative protectionism
- Part IV The Late Middle Ages, 1300–1500
- 10 Between crisis and contraction: population, economy and society
- War, famine and pestilence
- Famines and subsistence crises
- The damage and suffering of war
- The Black Death and its echo epidemics
- Demographic decline and economic development
- The agrarian crisis of the late Middle Ages
- Symptoms
- Solutions
- Economic crisis or contraction?
- Characteristics of late medieval society
- Openness and closure
- The position of women
- Social contrasts and social conflicts
- Town and country
- Social conflict and revolt in the late Middle Ages
- Peasant uprisings
- Urban revolts
- A new culture of revolt?
- A world of ubiquitous poverty
- 11 The consolidation of states
- From suzerainty to sovereignty
- The course of events
- State-making and nation building through warfare: English and French kingship united?
- The Holy Roman Empire and Italy: stalemate
- Iberia: kings and cortes
- Scandinavian dynastic unions
- Central Europe and the Baltic
- Riurikid Russia
- The end of Byzantium and the formation of the Ottoman Empire
- Driving forces in the consolidation of states
- Dynasties, territories, institutions, nations
- War
- State institutions and growth of government
- Supreme law courts
- Bureaucratisation
- Taxation
- The state’s subjects
- Orders of chivalry
- Balance of power
- 12 Crisis in the Church and the reorientation of the faithful
- Who leads Christendom?
- Spiritual and secular power
- The popes in Avignon and the bureaucratisation of the Curia
- The Great Schism and the conciliar movement
- Religious life
- Observance and devotion
- Mysticism
- The ordinary believers
- Popular devotion
- Room for unbelief?
- Epilogue
- Europe’s position at the end of the Middle Ages globally compared
- Europe accelerates
- The medieval roots of modern culture
- Timeline
- Glossary
- Bibliography of secondary literature
- Index