Medieval Frontier Societies

Name/Title

Medieval Frontier Societies

Description

Medieval Frontier Societies studies the nature of frontiers and frontier society in the middle ages and focuses on the frontiers between England and Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, between Castile and Grenada, and on the Elbe, examining the consequences for frontier societies of being located in areas of cross-cultural contact, and often confrontation. Hostile frontiers responded to endemic warfare with a high level of militarization. Institutions, expectations and even local family structures are shown to have been products of an environment of long-term and ubiquitous fighting. But, devices also developed in frontier societies for mediation, arbitration and negotiation. Frontiers constituted areas of cultural contact and cultural clash. Interaction between different religions, laws, languages and mores was often hostile, but could sometimes be flexible and these responses are reflected, for example, in the literature and poetry of the areas involved.

Category

Book
Books & Paper

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Book

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Other Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Getty AAT

Concept

books

Dimensions

Height

22.4 cm

Width

14.4 cm

Book Details

Editor

Robert Bartlett, Angus MacKay

Publisher

Clarendon Press ; Oxford University Press

Date Published

1990

Binding

Binding Type

Hardcover or Case Bound

Publication Language

English

ISBN

0198228813 9780198228813

Notes

400 Pages