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- Property, Power, and Authority in Rus and Latin Europe, ca. 1000–1236
Property, Power, and Authority in Rus and Latin Europe, ca. 1000–1236
Series: Beyond Medieval Europe
244 Pages, Trim size: 156 x 234 mm
- Hardcover
- 9781942401483
- Published: July 2018
$135.00
£113.00
This book intertwines two themes in medieval studies, which so far have never been brought together: comparative studies of Latin and Orthodox Europe and a debate on the "feudal revolution" – the changes that occurred during the transition from Carolingian to post-Carolingian Europe. The book broadens the linguistic and geographical scope of the debate by comparing texts written in "learned" and "vulgar" Latin, Church Slavonic, Anglo-Norman, and East Slavonic, the vernacular of Kievan Rus. From this comparison, the Kingdom of the Rus' – a terra incognita for most medievalists, generally assumed to be profoundly different from the West –emerges as a regional variation of European society. In particular, the finding that contractual relations, traditionally described in scholarly literature as "feudo-vassalic," were present in the Kingdom of the Rus suggests that current explanations for the origins of such relations may overemphasize factors unique to the medieval West and overlook deeper pan-European processes.
Introduction
1. Rus and Latin Europe: Words, Concepts, and Phenomena
2. Medieval Texts and Professional Belief Systems: Latin, Church Slavonic, and Vernacular Political Narratives
3. Elite Domination in Rus' and Latin Europe: Princely Power and Banal Lordship
4. Interprincely Agreement and a Question of Feudo-Vassalic Relations
5. Conclusions
Bibliography
Yulia Mikhailova holds a PhD in Medieval History from the University of New Mexico.
Elegant writing always looks effortless and the same is true of persuasive historical research. Mikhailova merits such praise. Her work brings together two major medieval historiographical themes usually treated in isolation from one another: western feudo-vassalic relations and the nature of power, authority, and land tenure in Rus (medieval Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia), in order to suggest that the latter had some similarities to the former. ~Talia Zajac, The Medieval Review
[K]önnen Mikhailovas Ausführungen aber dennoch als neuerlicher Anstoß dazu dienen, das von ihr vermutete und von vielen geleugnete Phänomen des Feudalismus in der Rus’ und die damit zusammenhängenden Probleme nochmals systematisch und vorurteilsfrei zu untersuchen. ~Hartmut Rüß, Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas / jgo.e-reviews 70, nos. 1-2 (2022): 204-6
- Early Slavic Studies Association book prize