Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300
Author: Elisabeth van Houts
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2019-01-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 0192519743

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300 contains an analysis of the experience of married life by men and women in Christian medieval Europe, c. 900-1300. The study focusses on the social and emotional life of the married couple rather than on the institutional history of marriage, breaking it into three parts: Getting Married - the process of getting married and wedding celebrations; Married Life - the married life of lay couples and clergy, their sexuality, and any remarriage; and Alternative Living - which explores concubinage and polygyny, as well as the single life in contrast to monogamous sexual unions. In this volume, van Houts deals with four central themes. First, the tension between patriarchal family strategies and the individual family member's freedom of choice to marry and, if so, to what partner; second, the role played by the married priesthood in their quest to have individual agency and self-determination accepted in their own lives in the face of the growing imposition of clerical celibacy; third, the role played by women in helping society accept some degree of gender equality and self-determination to marry and in shaping the norms for married life incorporating these principles; fourth, the role played by emotion in the establishment of marriage and in married life at a time when sexual and spiritual love feature prominently in medieval literature.

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300
Author: Elisabeth M. C. Van Houts
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019
Genre: POLITICAL SCIENCE
ISBN: 9780191839542

An analysis of the lived experience of Christian married life in Christian medieval Europe, this study examines the process of getting married and wedding celebrations; the married life of lay couples and clergy, their sexuality, and any remarriage; and alternative living, including concubinage, polygyny, and the single life.

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300
Author: Elisabeth M. C. Van Houts
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2019
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 019879889X

Married Life in the Middle Ages, 900-1300 contains an analysis of the experience of married life by men and women in Christian medieval Europe, c. 900-1300. The study focusses on the social and emotional life of the married couple rather than on the institutional history of marriage, breaking it into three parts: Getting Married - the process of getting married and wedding celebrations; Married Life - the married life of lay couples and clergy, their sexuality, and any remarriage; and Alternative Living - which explores concubinage and polygyny, as well as the single life in contrast to monogamous sexual unions. In this volume, van Houts deals with four central themes. First, the tension between patriarchal family strategies and the individual family member's freedom of choice to marry and, if so, to what partner; second, the role played by the married priesthood in their quest to have individual agency and self-determination accepted in their own lives in the face of the growing imposition of clerical celibacy; third, the role played by women in helping society accept some degree of gender equality and self-determination to marry and in shaping the norms for married life incorporating these principles; fourth, the role played by emotion in the establishment of marriage and in married life at a time when sexual and spiritual love feature prominently in medieval literature.

Right and Left in Early Christian and Medieval Art

Right and Left in Early Christian and Medieval Art
Author: Robert Couzin
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 327
Release: 2021-03-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9004448713

Robert Couzin’s Right and Left in Early Christian and Medieval Art provides the first in-depth study of handedness, position, and direction in the visual culture of Europe and Byzantium from the fourth to the fourteenth century.

Love and Marriage in the Middle Ages

Love and Marriage in the Middle Ages
Author: Georges Duby
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1994
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 9780226167732

Examining the poetry and practice of courtly love and the mores of aristocratic marriages, Duby shows the Middle Ages to be male-dominated. Women were regarded as symbols, as figures of temptation who paradoxically had no desires of their own. Duby argues that the structure of sexual relationships took its cue from the family and from feudalism - both bastions of masculinity

Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages

Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages
Author: Julie Barrau
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2021-10-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 1009064231

How did medieval people define themselves? And how did they balance their identities as individuals with the demands of their communities? Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages intertwines the study of identities with current scholarship to reveal their multi-layered, sometimes contradictory dimensions. Drawing on a wide range of sources, from legal texts to hagiographies and biblical exegesis, and diverse cultural and social approaches, this volume enriches our understanding of medieval people's identities - as defined by themselves and by others, as individuals and as members of groups and communities. It adopts a complex and wide-ranging understanding of what constituted 'identities' beyond family and regional or national belonging, such as social status, gender, age, literacy levels, and displacement. New figures and new concepts of 'identities' thus emerge from the dialogue between the chapters, through an approach based on life-histories, lived experience, ethnogenesis, theories of diaspora, cultural memory and generational change.

Geoffrey Chaucer in Context

Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
Author: Ian Johnson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 499
Release: 2019-07-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1107035643

Provides a rich and varied reference resource, illuminating the different contexts for Chaucer and his work.

Immodest Acts

Immodest Acts
Author: Judith C. Brown
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 226
Release: 1986-12-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0197652220

The discovery of the fascinating and richly documented story of Sister Benedetta Carlini, Abbess of the Convent of the Mother of God, by Judith C. Brown was an event of major historical importance. Not only is the story revealed in Immodest Acts that of the rise and fall of a powerful woman in a church community and a record of the life of a religious visionary, it is also the earliest documentation of lesbianism in modern Western history. Born of well-to-do parents, Benedetta Carlini entered the convent at the age of nine. At twenty-three, she began to have visions of both a religious and erotic nature. Benedetta was elected abbess due largely to these visions, but later aroused suspicions by claiming to have had supernatural contacts with Christ. During the course of an investigation, church authorities not only found that she had faked her visions and stigmata, but uncovered evidence of a lesbian affair with another nun, Bartolomeo. The story of the relationship between the two nuns and of Benedetta's fall from an abbess to an outcast is revealed in surprisingly candid archival documents and retold here with a fine sense of drama.

Love Sex & Marriage in the Middle Ages

Love Sex & Marriage in the Middle Ages
Author: Conor McCarthy
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 409
Release: 2013-10-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 1134397704

First published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Medieval Iberian Crusade Fiction and the Mediterranean World

Medieval Iberian Crusade Fiction and the Mediterranean World
Author: David A. Wacks
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 294
Release: 2019-09-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 1487505019

Reading crusader fiction against the backdrop of Mediterranean history, this book explains how Iberian authors reimagined the idea of crusade through the lens of Iberian geopolitics and social history. The crusades transformed Mediterranean history and inaugurated complex engagements between Western Europe, the Balkans, North Africa, and the Middle East in ways that endure to this day. Narratives of crusades powerfully shaped European thinking about the East and continue to influence the representation of interactions between Christian and Muslim states in the region. The crusade, a French idea that gave rise to Iberian, North African, and Levantine campaigns, was very much a Mediterranean phenomenon. French and English authors wrote itineraries in the Holy Land, chronicles of the crusades, and fanciful accounts of Christian knights who championed the Latin Church in the East. This study aims to explore the ways in which Iberian authors imagined their role in the culture of crusade, both as participants and interpreters of narrative traditions of the crusading world from north of the Pyrenees.