ABSTRACT

This book explores a striking common feature of pre-modern ruling systems on a global scale: the participation of childless and celibate men as integral parts of the elites. In bringing court eunuchs and bishops together, this collection shows that the integration of men who were normatively or physically excluded from biological fatherhood offered pre-modern dynasties the potential to use different reproduction patterns. The shared focus on ruling eunuchs and bishops also reveals that these men had a specific position at the intersection of four fields: power, social dynamics, sacredness and gender/masculinities. The thirteen chapters present case studies on clerics in Medieval Europe and court eunuchs in the Middle East, Byzantium, India and China. They analyze how these men in their different frameworks acted as politicians, participated in social networks, provided religious authority, and discuss their masculinities. Taken together, this collection sheds light on the political arena before the modern nation-state excluded these unmarried men from the circles of political power.

chapter |40 pages

Introduction

Celibate and childless men placed into a Shared Focus: Ruling eunuchs and bishops between the intersections of power, networks, sacredness and gender 1

part 1|68 pages

Bishops and eunuchs as parts of the ruling elites

chapter 2|14 pages

Guarding the harem, protecting the state

Eunuchs in a fourth/tenth-century Abbasid court

chapter 3|13 pages

Muʾnis al-Muẓaffar

An exceptional eunuch

chapter 4|17 pages

Harem and eunuchs

Liminality and networks of Mughal authority

part 2|66 pages

Networks and kinships

chapter 5|18 pages

Celibate, but not childless

Eunuch military dynasticism in medieval China

chapter 6|20 pages

Spiritual heirs and families

Episcopal relatives in early medieval Francia 1

part 4|69 pages

Gender and masculinities

chapter 11|17 pages

Byzantine court eunuchs and the Macedonian dynasty (867–1056)

Family, power and gender

chapter 12|22 pages

Eunuchs in the Fatimid empire

Ambiguities, gender and sacredness

chapter 13|28 pages

Under pressure

Secular–mendicant polemics and the construction of chaste masculinity within the thirteenth-century Latin church

chapter |47 pages

Bibliography