This book explores how state power was defined in Late Antiquity
and Medieval forms of state in Central, Eastern, and Northern
Europe. Providing a range of geographic examples for researchers
and postgraduate students to expand beyond their own area of
specialisation. The authors offer answers to what exactly was a
"statehood without a state" when it came to semi-peripheral and
peripheral areas that were also perceived through the prism of the
idea of a world system, network theory, or the concept of so-called
negotiating borderlands. Providing new research in the field of
networks and early medieval power. These questions are answered by
established scholars from different countries and perspectives,
providing a range of case studies for researchers and postgraduate
students to further their own understanding of the topic.
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