Women in Early Medieval Europe, 400-1100Women in Early Medieval Europe is a history of the early European middle ages through the eyes of women, combining the rich literature of women's history with original research in the context of mainstream history and traditional chronology. Beginning at the end of the Roman empire, the book recreates the lives of ordinary women but also tells personal stories of individuals, using the few documents produced by women themselves, along with archaeological evidence, art, and the written records of medieval men. |
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Page 5
... later centuries . The book ends with the eleventh century not because that century was the most significant of the Middle Ages , but because changes of that period were particularly transformative for European + Eileen Power ( d . 1940 ) ...
... later centuries . The book ends with the eleventh century not because that century was the most significant of the Middle Ages , but because changes of that period were particularly transformative for European + Eileen Power ( d . 1940 ) ...
Page 8
... later generations , anonymity was the only reward for a woman who accomplished the mundane goals that enabled communities to continue and flourish . Hence , the rulebreakers loom largest in both the medieval ev- idence and in our own ...
... later generations , anonymity was the only reward for a woman who accomplished the mundane goals that enabled communities to continue and flourish . Hence , the rulebreakers loom largest in both the medieval ev- idence and in our own ...
Page 9
... later by the many names of medieval peoples and kings . Hence this book begins with the earth and the bodies that lived upon it at the dawn of the Middle Ages , when the literate still divided the world into more or less Roman regions ...
... later by the many names of medieval peoples and kings . Hence this book begins with the earth and the bodies that lived upon it at the dawn of the Middle Ages , when the literate still divided the world into more or less Roman regions ...
Page 16
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Page 20
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Common terms and phrases
abbess Anglo-Saxon Balthild barbarian Bede bishops Britain Brynhildr Carolingian Celtic Christian church clerics communities crusade culture daughters Dhuoda early medieval Europe early Middle Ages ecclesiastical economic eleventh century empire England European female Frankish Fredegund frontiers Gaul gendered Genovefa Germanic goddesses Gregory of Tours Herlihy Hildegard historians holy household husband Iberia Ibid inheritance invaders invasions Ireland Irish Jewish women kingdoms kings kinsmen labor land Land of Women landscape later laws leaders Leoba Liber Historia Francorum lives Lombard lords male marriage married McNamara Medieval Women memory men's Merovingian monastery monastic mother Muslim nuns pagan participation Paul the Deacon penitentials political population practice queens Radegund religion religious women Roman royal rulers rules sagas saints settlement sexual sisters sixth century social Society story territory texts took towns traditional trans tribal University Press virgin Visigoths Vita warriors wife wives woman writers wrote
Popular passages
Page 4 - By God! if wommen hadde writen stories, As clerkes han withinne hire oratories, They wolde han writen of men moore wikkednesse Than al the mark of Adam may redresse.