Windows on Justice in Northern Iberia, 800�1000

Regular price €192.20
A01=Wendy Davies
ACO
Alfonso III
Anuario De
Anuario De Estudios Medievales
Anuario De Historia Del Derecho
Author_Wendy Davies
Boni Homines
Cantabrian Mountains
Capitularia Regum Francorum
Carlos Estepa
Carolingian comparative studies
Cartulary Copies
Category=NHDJ
Category=NHTB
collective judgement medieval
Court Holder
De La Cogolla
Diplomatic Habit
Dispute Records
Early Irish Law
early medieval law
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eq_history
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Formal Courts
Frankish Empire
High Aristocrats
Iberian legal history
judicial courts practice
Le XIe
Local Knowledge
medieval dispute resolution processes
Northern Iberia
peasant legal agency
Santa Marina
Southern Galicia
Uneven Survival
Visigothic Law

Product details

  • ISBN 9781409464730
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Although it has a rich historiography, and from the late ninth century is rich in textual evidence, northern Iberia has barely featured in the great debates of early medieval European history of recent generations. Lying beyond the Frankish world, in a peninsula more than half controlled by Muslims, Spanish and Portuguese experience has seemed irrelevant to the Carolingian Empire and the political fragmentation (or realignment) that followed it. But Spain and Portugal shared the late Roman heritage which influenced much of western Europe in the early middle ages and by the tenth century records and practice in the Christian north still shared features with parts farther east.

What is interesting, in the wider European context, is that some of the so-called characteristics of the Carolingian world – the public court, collective judgment – are as characteristic of the Iberian world. The suggestion that they disappeared in the Frankish world, to be replaced by 'private' mechanisms, has played a major role in debates about the changing nature of power in the central middle ages: what happened in judicial courts has been central to the grand narratives of Duby and successive historians, for they are a powerful lens into the very real issues of politics and power.

Looking at the practice of judicial courts in Europe west of Frankia allows us to think again about the nature of the public; identifying all the records of that practice allows us to adjust the balance between monastic and lay activity. What these show is that peasants, like other lay people, used the courts to seek redress and gain advantages. Records were not entirely framed nor practice entirely dominated by ecclesiastical interests.

Wendy Davies, FBA, is Professor Emerita of History at University College London, UK