Rio has given us here is not only a set of translations, but also a work of scholarship that makes the formulae vastly more accessible to students and to professionals.<br />
<b>Warren Brown,<i> Early Medieval Europe </i>19 (2)</b>
This book offers the first full English translation of two major sources for the Merovingian kingdoms: the formularies of Angers and Marculf (sixth and seventh centuries). These collections of model legal documents, compiled by scribes as an aid to the composition of future documents, constitute an important source of evidence on government, legal practice and social life during the Merovingian period, both at the local level (for Angers) and at the level of the kingdom’s elite and the entourage of the king (for Marculf). They illuminate aspects of life which would often have been considered too trivial to be worth mentioning in narrative sources, and can include instructions dealing with subjects as diverse as appointing a bishop, making a gift, borrowing money, divorcing, selling an infant child, confiscating property from a rebel, writing Christmas greetings, and settling disputes over murders, thefts or kidnappings. As well as presenting the translations, the introduction also gives a brief outline of the characteristics of this type of source as a whole, with the aim of putting these texts into perspective and providing a methodological handle for them.
Les mer
Offers the English translation of two major sources for the Merovingian kingdoms: the formularies of Angers and Marculf (sixth and seventh centuries). This book illuminates aspects of life which would often have been considered too trivial to be worth mentioning in narrative sources.
Les mer
- Acknowledgements Abbreviations
- Introduction
- The scope of this book The scope of formulae
- The problem with formulae
- Authorship and audience: what the manuscript evidence can tell us The language of formulae
- Formulae and the written word
- Formulae and surviving documents
- Dating formulae: original collections vs. manuscript tradition Local context and diffusion
- To conclude
- A note on this translation
- Part One: The Formulary of Angers
- Introduction
- Translation
- Part Two: The Formulary of Marculf
- Introduction
- The scope of the collection
- Date and place of origin
- Marculf and Landeric
- Dating the collection
- Marculf and St Denis
- A note on the printed editions
- Translation
- Book One
- Book Two Supplement
- Additamenta: additional texts from the manuscripts of Marculf
- a, b, c: three more texts from the manuscripts ofMarculf
- Appendix I: The original date of the Angers collection: the state of the question
- Appendix 2: The gesta municipalia
- Appendix 3: The Marculf collection: manuscripts and editions
- The manuscript tradition
- Editions of Marculf and the hierarchy of manuscripts
- Map
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Les mer
300–800 AD is the time of late antiquity and the early middle ages: the transformation of the classical world, the beginnings of Europe and of Islam, and the evolution of Byzantium.
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781846311598
Publisert
2008-10-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Liverpool University Press
Vekt
413 gr
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
147 mm
Aldersnivå
00, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Translated with commentary by