The Feud in Early Modern Germany
The practice of feuding amongst noblemen and princes represented a substantial threat to law and order, yet it was widely accepted and deeply embedded in late medieval and early modern German society. Hillay Zmora offers a new interpretation of this violent social practice, which has long confounded historians and social scientists. His groundbreaking study explains feud violence in its social context, demonstrating that, paradoxically, nobles feuded mostly not against strangers but with neighbours, relatives and their feudal lords. Focusing on the ambivalent relationships and symbolic communication between nobles, this study explores how values, norms and moral sentiments linked to reciprocity provided the most powerful incentives to engage in violent conflict. It will be essential reading for historians, anthropologists, psychologists and anyone who seeks to understand the link between culture, moral systems and endemic violence.
- Illuminates a new dimension to noble culture
- Applies and challenges evolutionary theory to offer a new dimension on the links between human moral systems and conflict and violence
- Explains feud violence in terms of symbolic communication and social codes, and will be of interest to historians, anthropologists, psychologists and social scientists
Reviews & endorsements
'Ever since Otto Brunner, the phenomenon of the feud in the late Middle Ages and the early modern period has been a constant (and contested) subject-matter in the historiography. But despite all the debates and controversies that have surrounded this theme, the time seems ripe for a new synthesis which, building on recent research, offers overarching interpretations. Such a synthesis is presented by Hillay Zmora … an important interpretation that will stimulate further research of the noble feud in the late Middle Ages and the beginning of the modern era.' Sven Rabeler, translated from Historische Zeitschrift
'[Zmora's] compelling topic, thoughtful argumentation, and lively prose will not fail to interest specialists and nonspecialists alike.' Sarah L. Leonard, The Historian
Product details
October 2015Paperback
9781107530430
226 pages
229 × 152 × 12 mm
0.31kg
18 b/w illus. 1 map 4 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction: the struggle over the feud in early modern Germany
- 2. The rules of the game
- 3. Values and violence: the morals of feuding
- 4. The wages of success: reproduction and the proliferation of conflicts
- 5. Enemies of the state? Feuding nobles, ruling princes, and the struggle for mastery in early modern Germany
- 6. The politics of civility: the decay of the feud.