Land and Lordship
Structures of Governance in Medieval Austria
Otto Brunner author Howard Kaminsky translator James Van Horn Melton translator Howard Kaminsky editor James Van Horn Melton editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pennsylvania Press
Published:29th Apr '92
Should be back in stock very soon
Originally published in 1939 and available here in English, Land and Lordship has been one of the most influential works of the twentieth-century medieval scholarship.
Otto Brunner contends that prevailing notions of medieval social and constitutional history had been shaped by the nineteenth-century nation state and its "liberal" order. Whereas a sharp distinction between the public and the private might be appropriate to descriptions of contemporary society, such a dichotomy could not be projected back onto the Middle Ages. Focusing particularly on forms of lordship in late medieval Austria, Brunner found neither a "state" in the modern sense nor any distinction between the public and private spheres.
Behind the apparent disorder of late medieval political life, however, Brunner discovered a coherent legal and constitutional order rooted in the the rights and obligations of noble lordship. In carefully reconstructing this order, Brunner's study weaves together social, legal, constitutional, and intellectual history.
ISBN: 9780812281835
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
498 pages