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Law and Authority in the Early Middle Ages

Law and Authority in the Early Middle Ages

Law and Authority in the Early Middle Ages

The Frankish <I>leges</I> in the Carolingian Period
April 2020
Available
Paperback
9781107446892

    The barbarian law codes, compiled between the sixth and eighth centuries, were copied remarkably frequently in the Carolingian ninth century. They provide crucial evidence for early medieval society, including the settlement of disputes, the nature of political authority, literacy, and the construction of ethnic identities. Yet it has proved extremely difficult to establish why the codes were copied in the ninth century, how they were read, and how their rich evidence should be used. Thomas Faulkner tackles these questions more systematically than ever before, proposing new understandings of the relationship between the making of law and royal power, and the reading of law and the maintenance of ethnic identities. Faulkner suggests major reinterpretations of central texts, including the Carolingian law codes, the capitularies adding to the laws, and Carolingian revisions of earlier barbarian and Roman laws. He also provides detailed analysis of legal manuscripts, especially those associated with the leges-scriptorium.

    • Examines the uses of the leges barbarorum in Carolingian Europe, contributing to a long-standing debate in English and German historiography on the use of written law codes in early medieval Europe
    • Contributes to the study of early medieval kingship, dispute settlement, ethnic identity and literacy
    • Brings German scholarship to the attention of English speakers, providing Anglophone readers with a guide to otherwise inaccessible work

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Faulkner offers a valuable exploration of the early medieval, Frankish leges and capitularies, centred on their use and reuse throughout the Carolingian period.' Thom Gobbitt, Early Medieval Europe

    See more reviews

    Product details

    April 2020
    Paperback
    9781107446892
    314 pages
    230 × 153 × 20 mm
    0.5kg
    8 b/w illus. 10 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. The minor leges part I. Problems, background, lex ribuaria, ewa ad amorem
    • 2. The minor leges part II. Saxony and the lex saxonum
    • 3. The additional capitularies
    • 4. The reading of normative texts: Benedictus Levita and Regino
    • 5. The manuscripts of the leges-scriptorium
    • Conclusion
    • Editions
    • Bibliography
    • General index
    • Index of legal texts
    • Index of manuscripts.
      Author
    • Thomas Faulkner

      Thomas Faulkner was awarded his PhD from the University of Cambridge in 2010. Since then he has continued his research independently. He has given papers in Cambridge, Heidelberg, Auxerre, Copenhagen and the Institute of Historical Research in London. He has lectured on late antique and early medieval law at the University of Cambridge, and has published his first article, 'The Carolingian kings and the leges barbarorum' (Historical Research 86, 2013). Forthcoming publications include an edition of ordeal manuals found in Anglo-Saxon manuscripts for the Early English Laws project, and contributions to the Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity, on legal texts, practices and concepts.