ABSTRACT

This book explores the practical and symbolic resources of legitimacy which the elites of medieval Scandinavia employed to establish, justify, and reproduce their social and political standing between the end of the Viking Age and the rise of kingdoms in the thirteenth century. Geographically the chapters cover the Scandinavian realms and Free State Iceland. Thematically the authors cover a wide palette of cultural practices and historical sources: hagiography, historiography, spaces and palaces, literature, and international connections, which rulers, magnates or ecclesiastics used to compete for status and to reserve haloing glory for themselves. The volume is divided in three sections. The first looks at the sacral, legal, and acclamatory means through which privilege was conferred onto kings and ruling families. Section Two explores the spaces such as aristocratic halls, palaces, churches in which the social elevation of elites took place. Section Three explores the traditional and novel means of domestic distinction and international cultural capital which different orders of elites – knights, powerful clerics, ruling families etc. – wrought to assure their dominance and set themselves apart vis-à-vis their peers and subjects. A concluding chapter discusses how the use of symbolic capital in the North compared to wider European contexts.

chapter |35 pages

Introduction

Nordic Elites in Transformation, c. 1050–1250, Legitimacy and Glory

section Section I|90 pages

Glorifying Kings

chapter 1|22 pages

Canonizing Kings

Nordic Royal Hagiography as Legitimation and Glorification

chapter 2|22 pages

Prosperity and Peace

Glorification of Rulers in Medieval Scandinavia

chapter 3|22 pages

Kings, Gods, Poets, and Priests

Varieties and Transformations of Circuits of Charismatic Legitimation in Norway

section Section II|75 pages

Spaces of Elevation

chapter 5|25 pages

Building Glory

Elite Palaces in Early and High Medieval Scandinavia

chapter 7|27 pages

Elite Soldiers of Christ

Elevating the Secular Elite on Danish Church Walls, Twelfth to Thirteenth Centuries

section Section III|116 pages

Elevating Social Orders

chapter 9|23 pages

Father and Son, Brother and Friend

The Papal Curia and the Status of the Nordic Ecclesiastical Elite

chapter 10|21 pages

Travels, Translations, and Cultural Brokerage

Courtly Literature as a Means of Elite Legitimation in Thirteenth-Century Norway

chapter 11|29 pages

Legitimation Through Narrative

Glorious Pasts as Arguments in Political Discourse

chapter 12|17 pages

Legitimation and Its Problems

The Sagas and the Icelandic Elite in the Thirteenth Century

chapter 13|7 pages

Postscript