ABSTRACT

A collection of papers in English by one of the foremost historians of the social and economic structure of medieval rural communities, who here examines local societies in rural northern Spain and Portugal in the early middle ages. Principal themes are scribal practice and the analysis of charter texts; gift, sale and wealth; justice and judicial procedures. Always with a concern for personal relationships and interactions, for mobility, for decision-making and for practice, a sense of land and landscape runs throughout. The Spanish and Portuguese experience has seemed irrelevant to the great debates of early medieval European history that occupy historians. But Spain and Portugal shared the late Roman heritage which influenced much of western Europe in the early middle ages, and by the tenth century records and practice in Christian Iberia still shared features with the Carolingian world. This book offers a substantial corpus of Iberian evidence to set beside Frankish, Italian, English and Scandinavian material and thereby makes it possible for northern Iberia to play a part in these great debates of medieval European history. (CS1084).

part II|148 pages

Production and exchange

chapter 7|19 pages

When Gift is Sale

Reciprocities and commodities in tenth-century Christian Iberia

chapter 10|18 pages

Water Mills and Cattle Standards

Probing the economic comparison between Ireland and Spain in the early middle ages

chapter 12|19 pages

The Management of Land-Use in Old Castile

The early strands of the Becerro Galicano of San Millán de la Cogolla

part III|62 pages

Judicial practice

chapter 14|16 pages

Settling Disputes in Early Medieval Spain and Portugal

A contrast with Wales and Brittany?

chapter 15|15 pages

Judges and Judging

Truth and justice in northern Iberia on the eve of the millennium

chapter 16|14 pages

Boni Homines in Northern Iberia

A particularity that raises some general questions