ABSTRACT

Marginality assumes a variety of forms in current discussions of the Middle Ages. Modern scholars have considered a seemingly innumerable list of people to have been marginalized in the European Middle Ages: the poor, criminals, unorthodox religious, the disabled, the mentally ill, women, so-called infidels, and the list goes on. If so many inhabitants of medieval Europe can be qualified as "marginal," it is important to interrogate where the margins lay and what it means that the majority of people occupied them. In addition, we scholars need to reexamine our use of a term that seems to have such broad applicability to ensure that we avoid imposing marginality on groups in the Middle Ages that the era itself may not have considered as such. In the medieval era, when belonging to a community was vitally important, people who lived on the margins of society could be particularly vulnerable. And yet, as scholars have shown, we ought not forget that this heightened vulnerability sometimes prompted so-called marginals to form their own communities, as a way of redefining the center and placing themselves within it. The present volume explores the concept of marginality, to whom the moniker has been applied, to whom it might usefully be applied, and how we might more meaningfully define marginality based on historical sources rather than modern assumptions. Although the volume’s geographic focus is Europe, the chapters look further afield to North Africa, the Sahara, and the Levant acknowledging that at no time, and certainly not in the Middle Ages, was Europe cut off from other parts of the globe.

part 1|34 pages

Race

chapter 1|16 pages

The space between Borno and Palermo

Slavery and its boundaries in the late medieval Saharan-Mediterranean region 1

chapter 2|16 pages

Race and vulnerability

Mongols in thirteenth-century ethnographic travel writing 1

part 2|65 pages

Geography

chapter 3|12 pages

Anglo-Saxons, evangelization, and cultural anxiety

The impact of conversion on the margins of Europe

chapter 4|13 pages

Malory’s Sandwich

Marginalized Arthurian geography and the Global Middle Ages

chapter 5|21 pages

The past and future margins of Catalonia

Language politics and Catalan imperial ambitions in Guillem de Torroella’s La Faula

chapter 6|17 pages

Why kings? 1

part 3|55 pages

Gender

chapter 7|18 pages

Measuring the margins

Women, slavery, and the notarial process in late fourteenth-century Mallorca

chapter 9|18 pages

Reviled and revered

The importance of marginality in the pastoral care of beguines

part 4|39 pages

Law

chapter 10|19 pages

How marginal is marginal?

Muslims in the Latin East

part 5|38 pages

Body

chapter 13|17 pages

Disabled devotion

Original sin and universal disability in the Prik of Conscience