The Languages of Gift in the Early Middle Ages
Paul Fouracre editor Wendy Davies editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd Jan '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A pioneering volume on the culture of gift in the medieval period from Anglo-Saxon England to the Islamic world.
This pioneering volume explores how people in the early medieval world visualized and thought about gift. The culture of medieval gift has often been treated as archaic and exotic; this book, by contrast, reveals people across the globe going about their lives in individual, down-to-earth and sometimes familiar ways.This book is a collection of original essays on gift in the early Middle Ages, from Anglo-Saxon England to the Islamic world. Focusing on the languages of gift, the essays reveal how early medieval people visualized and thought about gift, and how they distinguished between the giving of gifts and other forms of social, economic, political and religious exchange. The same team, largely, that produced the widely cited The Settlement of Disputes in Early Medieval Europe (Cambridge University Press, 1986) has again collaborated in a collective effort that harnesses individual expertise in order to draw from the sources a deeper understanding of the early Middle Ages by looking at real cases, that is at real people, whether peasant or emperor. The culture of medieval gift has often been treated as archaic and exotic; in this book, by contrast, we see people going about their lives in individual, down-to-earth and sometimes familiar ways.
"...solid and wideranging." -Felice Lifshitz, Journal of Interdisciplinary History
ISBN: 9781107698789
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
Weight: 430g
322 pages