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Carolingians --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- Europe --- Histoire --- Moyen age
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The barbarian law codes, compiled between the sixth and eighth centuries, were copied remarkably frequently in the Carolingian ninth century. They provide crucial evidence for early medieval society, including the settlement of disputes, the nature of political authority, literacy, and the construction of ethnic identities. Yet it has proved extremely difficult to establish why the codes were copied in the ninth century, how they were read, and how their rich evidence should be used. Thomas Faulkner tackles these questions more systematically than ever before, proposing new understandings of the relationship between the making of law and royal power, and the reading of law and the maintenance of ethnic identities. Faulkner suggests major reinterpretations of central texts, including the Carolingian law codes, the capitularies adding to the laws, and Carolingian revisions of earlier barbarian and Roman laws. He also provides detailed analysis of legal manuscripts, especially those associated with the leges-scriptorium.
Law, Frankish. --- Carolingians. --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- Franconian law --- Frankish law --- Law --- Law, Franconian --- Franks
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Carolingians --- Theology --- History --- -Christian theology --- Theology, Christian --- Christianity --- Religion --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- -Carolingians --- -History --- Theology - History - Middle Ages, 600-1500
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Carolingians --- Slavic antiquities --- Archaeology, Medieval --- Antiquities, Medieval --- Medieval antiquities --- Medieval archaeology --- Slavs --- Antiquities --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- Civilisation carolingienne --- Civilisation slave --- Influence
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Wala, abbot of Corbie, played a major role in the rebellions against Emperor Louis the Pious, especially in 830, for which he was exiled. Radbert defended his beloved abbot, known to his monks as Arsenius, against accusations of infidelity in an 'epitaph' (funeral oration), composed as a two-book conversation between himself and other monks of Corbie. Whereas the restrained first book of Radbert's Epitaphium Arsenii was written not long after Wala's death in 836, the polemical second book was added some twenty years later. This outspoken sequel covers the early 830s, yet it mostly addresses the political issues of the 850s, as well as Radbert's personal predicament. In Epitaph for an Era, an absorbing study of this fascinating text, Mayke de Jong examines the context of the Epitaphium's two books, the use of hindsight as a rhetorical strategy, and the articulation of notions of the public good in the mid-ninth century.
Carolingians. --- Wala, --- Wala --- Paschasius Radbertus, --- Paschase Radbert --- Carolingiens (dynastie). --- France --- History --- Carolingians --- HISTORY / Europe / General --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- E-books --- Carolingiens
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History of Europe --- Art --- anno 700-799 --- anno 800-1199 --- Iconoclasm --- Carolingians. --- Iconoclasme --- Carolingiens --- Carolingians --- Idols and images --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- History --- Worship --- Iconoclasm - Europe --- Charlemagne
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Carolingians --- Germany --- History --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- -History --- -Carolingians. --- -Carolingians --- Carolingians. --- Germany - History - To 843 --- Germany - History - 843-918 --- Opposition (science politique) --- Empire carolingien
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Carolingians --- Germany --- History --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- -History --- -Carolingians. --- -Carolingians --- Carolingians. --- Holy Roman Empire --- Germany - History - Saxon House, 919-1024 --- Germany - History - Franconian House, 1024-1125
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Carolingians --- Church history --- -Christianity --- Ecclesiastical history --- History, Church --- History, Ecclesiastical --- History --- Christianity --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- France --- Germany --- -Church history --- -Carolingians. --- -France --- -Carolingians --- Carolingians. --- Middle Ages, 600-1500
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L’objet de cet ouvrage collectif est d’envisager la civilisation carolingienne dans tous ses aspects: chaque auteur a eu, sur le sujet de son choix, la pleine liberté, soit de se cantonner à dresser un bilan exhaustif de l’état de la recherche, soit d’allier bilan et perspectives nouvelles en proposant ses propres hypothèses ou pistes de recherches. Les thèmes abordés sont d’une grande diversité: idéologie, conception, pratiques et lieux du pouvoir, liturgie, vie monastique, esprit missionnaire, hiérarchie et mobilité sociale, relations entre le roi et les élites du royaume, laïques et ecclésiastiques. Sans couvrir tout l’espace carolingien, les contributions présentes dans ce livre nous conduisent de Rome vers Aix et Saint-Gall, de l’Italie lombarde vers le cœur du vieux pays franc, de la Saxe vers le pays avar et jusqu’au monde scandinave. Sans couvrir tout le temps carolingien, elles concernent aussi bien les origines de la dynastie, voire l’héritage idéologique, politique ou religieux des deux siècles précédents, que les quatre générations qui suivent le règne de Pépin et les années crépusculaires.
History of Europe --- anno 700-799 --- anno 800-1199 --- Carolingians --- Civilization, Medieval --- History --- Carolingiens --- Congresses --- Historiography --- Congrès --- Historiographie --- Europe --- Histoire --- Civilization [Medieval ] --- Historiography. --- Carolingians - History - Congresses --- Civilization, Medieval - Congresses --- Carlovingians --- Carolinians --- Empire carolingien --- Politique et gouvernement
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