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Women, Wealth, and Community in Perpignan, c. 1250-1300 - Christians, Jews, and Enslaved Muslims in a Medieval Mediterranean Town (Hardcover, New Ed)
Loot Price: R4,378
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Women, Wealth, and Community in Perpignan, c. 1250-1300 - Christians, Jews, and Enslaved Muslims in a Medieval Mediterranean Town (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Women, Wealth, and Community in Perpignan, c. 1250-1300
investigates the gender system at work in medieval Perpignan. Using
a series of notarial registers - unique as surviving records for
the social history of the thirteenth-century realms of Aragon and
Majorca, the political confederations to which this town belonged -
Rebecca L. Winer opens a window onto the experiences of women and
their families. Her interpretive framework reveals medieval
assumptions about the distinct natures of Christian, Jewish, and
enslaved Muslim women by analyzing which actions were curbed,
controlled, or fostered in these different groups. Sensitive to
questions of social rank and marital status, the book departs from
traditional women's history by asking how a woman's religious
identity factored in determining her economic and legal options in
this society. As a frontier town, Perpignan lends itself well to an
analysis of relations among Christians, Jews, and Muslim slaves.
The later thirteenth century also provides an ideal focus for this
inquiry since the politics of Christian expansion and the economics
of the western Mediterranean meant that Jewish communities
flourished. intermittent conflict and both groups' slave trade
almost exclusively in each other's people. Winer reconstructs how
the members of these three communities negotiated shared space,
conducting all manner of exchanges, making (endogamous) marriages,
wills, commercial contracts, and arranging for the care of children
whose fathers were lost to war or disease. The first section of the
book focuses on women's legal status, work and control of financial
resources in the two dominant communities, Christian and Jewish,
across the social spectrum. It goes on to compare the ways in which
mothers' relationships to their children were understood in the
Christian and Jewish communities. The book concludes by entering
the homes of Christian and Jewish masters to reveal the
multi-faceted positions of Muslim and newly baptized slave women,
whose oppression completes the picture of the gender hierarchy in
Perpignan. With its analysis of how class, gender, and religious
difference shaped everyday practice, Women, Wealth, and Community
in Perpignan, c. relations and medieval studies.
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