Women of the Twelfth Century
Georges Duby author Jean Birrell translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of Chicago Press
Published:28th Feb '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Georges Duby's account of 12th-century women is based on the genre that commemorated the virtues of noblewomen who had died and the role they came to play in the history of their lineage. From these genealogical works a picture emerges of the lives these women led, the values they held, and the way in which they were viewed by the ecclesiastical and chivalric writers who immortalized them. The first section of the text outlines the ways in which the dead - in both memory and legend - served to bond noble society in the 12th century, Drawing on the "Gesta" by Dudo of Saint Quentin, the second section reflects on the roles that wives, concubines, and other women played during times of war and in the great exchanges of power that established the grand lineages of the Middle Ages. The final part of the book reconstructs women as wives, mothers and widows through the work of Lambert, Priest of Ardres.
ISBN: 9780226167848
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 270g
144 pages