ABSTRACT

This book compares the cultures of the different social groups living in the Low Countries in the early Middle Ages. Clergy, nobility, peasants and townsmen greatly varied in their attitudes to labor, property, violence, and the handling and showing of emotions. Künzel explores how these social groups looked at themselves as a group, and how they looked at the other groups. Image and self-image could differ radically. The results of this research are specified and tested in four case studies on the interaction between group cultures, focusing respectively on the influence of oral and written traditions on a literary work, rituals as a means of conflict management in weakly centralized societies, stories as an expression of an urban group mentality, and beliefs on death and the afterlife.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

part 1|74 pages

Group cultures

chapter 1|14 pages

The clergy

Self-image and ideology

chapter 2|18 pages

Image and self-image of the aristocracy

chapter 3|22 pages

Church views on peasants

Cultural exchange between the Church and the peasantry

part 2|165 pages

Exemplary studies

chapter 6|39 pages

Rituals of humiliation and triumph

Stavelot, 1065–1071

chapter 7|70 pages

Early manifestations of urban mentalities

Sint-Truiden, Trier and Cambrai, ca. 1050–1150

chapter 8|29 pages

A tournament of the dead

Religious diversity in an exemplum by Caesarius of Heisterbach

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion