Medieval Germany, 500 - 1300 a political interpretation

Medieval Germany, 500-1300 is a new interpretation of the emergence of Germany in the crucial centuries when a European civilisation was being forged for the first time. Germany was different: there never was a 'German people' until right at the end of the Middle Ages. Instead, we have to...

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1. Verfasser: Arnold, Benjamin (VerfasserIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Toronto u.a. Univ. of Toronto Press 1997
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Zusammenfassung:Medieval Germany, 500-1300 is a new interpretation of the emergence of Germany in the crucial centuries when a European civilisation was being forged for the first time. Germany was different: there never was a 'German people' until right at the end of the Middle Ages. Instead, we have to study distinct races such as the Bavarians and the Saxons, the Franks and the Swabians, each with their own dialects, customs and laws. Medieval Germany, while highly diverse, was at the same time the basis of a supra-national Western Roman Empire founded by Charlemagne and continued by Otto the Great and his successors. So Germany was at once provincial and universal. The institutional reality which bound together these paradoxes was the kingdom. Like other European communities at the time, the diverse regions and peoples owed allegiance to a king. And in Germany regal office produced an extraordinary variety of military, juridical, religious, economic, dynastic and ideological methods of rule.
Beschreibung:X, 247 S.
ISBN:0802041914
0-8020-4191-4
0802080537
0-8020-8053-7