Description

Book Synopsis
This is the first single-author study in over fifty years to offer an integrated appraisal of the early Middle Ages as a dynamic and formative period in European history. Written in an attractive and accessible style, it makes extensive use of original sources to introduce early medieval men and women at all levels of society from slave to emperor, and allows them to speak to the reader in their own words. It overturns traditional narratives and instead offers an entirely fresh approach to the centuries from c.500 to c.1000. Rejecting any notion of a dominant, uniform early medieval culture, it argues that the fundamental characteristic of the early middle ages is diversity of experience. To explain how the men and women who lived in this period ordered their world in cultural, social, and political terms, it employs an innovative methodology combining cultural history, regional studies, and gender history. Ranging comparatively from Ireland to Hungary and from Scotland and Scandinavia

Trade Review
Review from previous edition This book is a masterpiece of condensed exposition. It is also a break-through - a truly New Cultural History - in the quiet determination of the author to approach very old themes from angles refreshingly different from those from which they have usually been approached ... It is, above all, the first complete account of the early middle ages as a civilisation in its own right. It catches the living texture of western Europe, from Rome to the Hebrides, for a half millennium of its history. It is truly the study of a civilization in its entirity ... Reading Europe After Rome I was constantly reminded of another synthesis of genius which now lies at the root of the modern study of the high middle ages - that is, Richard Southern's The Making of the Middle Ages ... It was a 'Portrait of an Age'. Julia Smith has done the same for the half millennium which preceded Southern's Middle Ages. * Professor Peter Brown, Princeton University *

Table of Contents
Introduction ; PART I: FUNDAMENTALS ; 1. Speaking and Writing ; 2. Living and Dying ; PART II: AFFINITIES ; 3. Friends and Relations ; 4. Men and Women ; PART III: RESOURCES ; 5. Labour and Lordship ; 6. Getting and Giving ; PART IV: IDEOLOGIES ; 7. Kingship and Christianity ; 8. Rome and the Peoples of Europe ; Epilogue

Europe after Rome

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    A Paperback by Julia M. H. Smith

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      View other formats and editions of Europe after Rome by Julia M. H. Smith

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 6/28/2007 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780192892638, 978-0192892638
      ISBN10: 0192892630

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This is the first single-author study in over fifty years to offer an integrated appraisal of the early Middle Ages as a dynamic and formative period in European history. Written in an attractive and accessible style, it makes extensive use of original sources to introduce early medieval men and women at all levels of society from slave to emperor, and allows them to speak to the reader in their own words. It overturns traditional narratives and instead offers an entirely fresh approach to the centuries from c.500 to c.1000. Rejecting any notion of a dominant, uniform early medieval culture, it argues that the fundamental characteristic of the early middle ages is diversity of experience. To explain how the men and women who lived in this period ordered their world in cultural, social, and political terms, it employs an innovative methodology combining cultural history, regional studies, and gender history. Ranging comparatively from Ireland to Hungary and from Scotland and Scandinavia

      Trade Review
      Review from previous edition This book is a masterpiece of condensed exposition. It is also a break-through - a truly New Cultural History - in the quiet determination of the author to approach very old themes from angles refreshingly different from those from which they have usually been approached ... It is, above all, the first complete account of the early middle ages as a civilisation in its own right. It catches the living texture of western Europe, from Rome to the Hebrides, for a half millennium of its history. It is truly the study of a civilization in its entirity ... Reading Europe After Rome I was constantly reminded of another synthesis of genius which now lies at the root of the modern study of the high middle ages - that is, Richard Southern's The Making of the Middle Ages ... It was a 'Portrait of an Age'. Julia Smith has done the same for the half millennium which preceded Southern's Middle Ages. * Professor Peter Brown, Princeton University *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction ; PART I: FUNDAMENTALS ; 1. Speaking and Writing ; 2. Living and Dying ; PART II: AFFINITIES ; 3. Friends and Relations ; 4. Men and Women ; PART III: RESOURCES ; 5. Labour and Lordship ; 6. Getting and Giving ; PART IV: IDEOLOGIES ; 7. Kingship and Christianity ; 8. Rome and the Peoples of Europe ; Epilogue

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