TY - BOOK ID - 3317734 TI - Charlemagne's survey of the holy land : wealth, personnel, and buildings of a Mediterranean church between Antiquity and the Middle Ages AU - MacCormick, Michael AU - Harvard University Press PY - 2011 VL - *1 SN - 9780884023630 088402363X PB - Cambridge, MA ; London Harvard University Press DB - UniCat KW - Historic buildings KW - Church buildings KW - Christians KW - Carolingians KW - History KW - Charlemagne, KW - Palestine KW - Jerusalem KW - Antiquities KW - Description and travel KW - Church history KW - Historic buildings - Palestine KW - Church buildings - Palestine KW - Christians - Palestine - History - To 1500 - Sources KW - Carolingians - History - Sources KW - Charlemagne KW - Charlemagne, - Emperor, - 742-814 KW - Palestine - Antiquities KW - Jerusalem - Antiquities KW - Palestine - Description and travel - Sources KW - Palestine - Church history - Sources KW - Palestine - History - 638-1917 - Sources UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:3317734 AB - In Charlemagne’s Survey of the Holy Land, Michael McCormick rehabilitates and reinterprets one of the most neglected and extraordinary sources from Charlemagne’s revival of the Roman empire: the report of a fact-finding mission to the Christian church of the Holy Land. The roll of documents translated and edited in this volume preserves the most detailed statistical portrait before the Domesday Book of the finances, monuments (including exact dimensions), and female and male personnel of any major Christian church. Setting these documents in the context of economic trends, archaeological evidence, and a comparison of Holy Land churches and monasteries with their contemporaries west and east, this study shows that the Palestinian church was living in decline as its old financial links with Byzantium slackened. In recounting Charlemagne’s move to outflank the Byzantine emperor, McCormick constructs a microhistory of the Frankish king’s ambitions and formidable organizational talents for running an empire. Supplementing McCormick’s major synthesis, The Origins of the European Economy, this volume will be indispensable reading for anyone interested in medieval rulership and economics, and in the history of the Holy Land, its Christian communities, and its late antique monuments. ER -