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Book
Legal practice and the written word in the early middle ages : Frankish formulae, c. 500-1000
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ISBN: 9780521514996 0521514991 9780511581359 9781107402836 9780511540714 051154071X 0511581351 1107190371 128215561X 9786612155611 051154037X 0511538936 0511538103 0511539770 1107402832 9781107190375 6612155612 9780511538933 9780511538100 9780511539770 Year: 2009 Volume: 75 Publisher: Cambridge: Cambridge university press,

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Abstract

Legal formularies are books of model legal documents compiled by early medieval scribes for their own use and that of their pupils. A major source for the history of early medieval Europe, they document social relations beyond the narrow world of the political elite. Formularies offer much information regarding the lives of ordinary people: sales and gifts of land, divorces, adoptions, and disputes over labour as well as theft, rape or murder. Until now, the use of formularies as a historical source has been hampered by severe methodological problems, in particular through the difficulty of establishing a precise chronological or geographical context for them. By examining Frankish legal formularies from the Merovingian and Carolingian periods, this book provides an invaluable, detailed analysis of the problems and possibilities associated with formularies, and will be required reading for scholars of early medieval history.


Book
The formularies of Angers and Marculf : two Merovingian legal handbooks
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ISBN: 9781846311598 1846311594 1789628628 Year: 2008 Volume: 46 Publisher: Liverpool: Liverpool university press,

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Book
Slavery after Rome, 500-1100
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ISBN: 9780198704058 0198704054 0191773158 0191009024 0198865813 9780191009020 9780191773150 Year: 2017 Publisher: Oxford: Oxford university press,

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'Slavery After Rome, 500-1100' offers a substantially new interpretation of what happened to slavery in Western Europe in the centuries that followed the fall of the Roman Empire. The periods at either end of the early middle ages are associated with iconic forms of unfreedom: Roman slavery at one end; at the other, the serfdom of the twelfth century and beyond, together with, in Southern Europe, a revitalised urban chattel slavery dealing chiefly in non-Christians. How and why this major change took place in the intervening period has been a long-standing puzzle. This study picks up the various threads linking this transformation across the centuries, and situates them within the full context of what slavery and unfreedom were being used for in the early middle ages. This volume adopts a broad comparative perspective, covering different regions of Western Europe over six centuries, to try to answer the following questions: who might become enslaved and why? What did this mean for them, and for their lords? What made people opt for certain ways of exploiting unfree labour over others in different times and places, and is it possible, underneath all this diversity, to identify some coherent trajectories of historical change?

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