Available Formats
Rethinking the Carolingian Reforms
By (Author) Arthur Westwell
Edited by Ingrid Rembold
Edited by Carine van Rhijn
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
7th August 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history: medieval period, middle ages
Historiography
History of religion
944.014
Paperback
296
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 16mm
343g
Carolingian culture has often been treated as an elite affair with little effect beyond a restricted circle close to the royal court. To do justice to the diversity of extant material, our traditional focal points need to be recontextualised. Many understudied manuscripts testify to a much wider circle of people, be it the anonymous schoolmaster who developed a better method of teaching Latin, the equally unnamed cleric who created new forms of liturgy, or all the people in monastic libraries who copied, reorganised, commented on and studied each others books. These anonymous figures were not passive recipients of royal prescriptions. They were active agents who helped shape and reshape the ideas and ideals of their world, and their texts and manuscripts should be studied side by side with those composed by well-known authors. In so doing, a much more dynamic and collaborative image of Carolingian culture emerges.
Arthur Westwell is wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter at the Universitt Regensburg
Ingrid Rembold is a Lecturer in Medieval History at the University of Manchester
Carine van Rhijn is a Lecturer in Medieval History at Utrecht University