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This volume presents the first substantial exploration of crusading
and masculinity, focusing on the varied ways in which the symbiotic
relationship between the two was made manifest in a range of
medieval settings and sources, and to what ends. Ideas about
masculinity formed an inherent part of the mindset of societies in
which crusading happened, and of the conceptual framework informing
both those who recorded the events and those who participated.
Examination and interrogation of these ideas enables a better
contextualised analysis of how those events were experienced,
comprehended and portrayed. The collection is structured around
five themes: sources and models; contrasting masculinities;
emasculation and transgression; masculinity and religiosity and
kingship and chivalry. By incorporating masculinity within their
analysis of the crusades and of crusaders the contributors
demonstrate how such approaches greatly enhance our understanding
of crusading as an ideal, an institution and an experience.
Individual essays consider western campaigns to the Middle East and
Islamic responses; events and sources from the Iberian peninsula
and Prussia are also interrogated and re-examined, thus enabling
cross-cultural comparison of the meanings attached to medieval
manhood. The collection also highlights the value of employing
gender as a vital means of assessing relationships between
different groups of men, whose values and standards of behaviour
were socially and culturally constructed in distinct ways.
First modern study devoted to one of the twelfth-century's most
enigmatic, influential and fascinating figures. Henry of Blois (d.
1171) was a towering figure in twelfth-century England. Grandson of
William the Conqueror and brother to King Stephen, he played a
central role in shaping the course of the civil war that
characterized his brother's reign. Bishop of Winchester and abbot
of Glastonbury for more than four decades, Henry was one of the
richest men in the kingdom, and effectively governed the English
Church for a time as Papal Legate. Raised and tonsured at Cluny, he
was an intimate friend of Peter the Venerable and later saved the
great abbey from financial ruin. Towards the end of his life he
presided, albeit reluctantly, over the trial of Thomas Becket.
Henry was a remarkable man: an administrator of exceptional talent,
a formidable ecclesiastical statesman, a bold and eloquent
diplomat, and twelfth-century England's most prolific patron of the
arts. In the first major book-length study of Henry to be published
since 1932, nine scholars explore new perspectives on the most
crucial aspects of his life and legacy. By bringing ecclesiastical
and documentary historians together with archaeologists and
historians of art, architecture, literature and ideas, this
interdisciplinary collection will serve as a catalyst for renewed
study of this fascinating man and the world in which he operated.
Essays offering new approaches to the changing forms of medieval
religious masculinity. The complex relationship between masculinity
and religion, as experienced in both the secular and ecclesiastical
worlds, forms the focus for this volume, whose range encompasses
the rabbis of the Babylonian and Palestinian Talmud,and moves via
Carolingian and Norman France, Siena, Antioch, and high and late
medieval England to the eve of the Reformation. Chapters
investigate the creation and reconstitution of different
expressions of masculine identity, from the clerical enthusiasts
for marriage to the lay practitioners of chastity, from crusading
bishops to holy kings. They also consider the extent to which lay
and clerical understandings of masculinity existed in an unstable
dialectical relationship, at times sharing similar features, at
others pointedly different, co-opting and rejecting features of the
other; the articles show this interplay to be more far more
complicated than a simple linear narrative of either increasing
divergence, or of clerical colonization of lay masculinity. They
also challenge conventional historiographies of the adoption of
clerical celibacy, of the decline of monasticism and the gendered
nature of piety. Patricia Cullum is Head of History at the
University of Huddersfield; Katherine J. Lewis is Senior Lecturer
in History at the University of Huddersfield. Contributors: James
G. Clark, P.H. Cullum, Kirsten A. Fenton, Joanna Huntington,
Katherine J. Lewis, Matthew Mesley, Catherine Sanok, Michael L.
Satlow, Rachel Stone, Jennifer D. Thibodeaux, Marita von
Weissenberg
A richly informed volume that deserves the attention of all
scholars interested in this remarkable figure. - SEHEPUNKTE First
modern study devoted to one of the twelfth-century's most
enigmatic, influential and fascinating figures. Henry of Blois (d.
1171) was a towering figure in twelfth-century England. Grandson of
William the Conqueror and brother to King Stephen, he played a
central role in shaping the course of the civil war that
characterized his brother's reign. Bishop of Winchester and abbot
of Glastonbury for more than four decades, Henry was one of the
richest men in the kingdom, and effectively governed the English
Church for a time as Papal Legate. Raised and tonsured at Cluny, he
was an intimate friend of Peter the Venerable and later saved the
great abbey from financial ruin. Towards the end of his life he
presided, albeit reluctantly, over the trial of Thomas Becket.
Henry was a remarkable man: an administrator of exceptional talent,
a formidable ecclesiastical statesman, a bold and eloquent
diplomat, and twelfth-century England's most prolific patron of the
arts. In the first major book-length study of Henry to be published
since 1932, nine scholars explore new perspectives on the most
crucial aspects of his life and legacy. By bringing ecclesiastical
and documentary historians together with archaeologists and
historians of art, architecture, literature and ideas, this
interdisciplinary collection will serve as a catalyst for renewed
study of this fascinating man and the world in which he operated.
Essays offering new approaches to the changing forms of medieval
religious masculinity. The complex relationship between masculinity
and religion, as experienced in both the secular and ecclesiastical
worlds, forms the focus for this volume, whose range encompasses
the rabbis of the Babylonian and Palestinian Talmud,and moves via
Carolingian and Norman France, Siena, Antioch, and high and late
medieval England to the eve of the Reformation. Chapters
investigate the creation and reconstitution of different
expressions of masculine identity, from the clerical enthusiasts
for marriage to the lay practitioners of chastity, from crusading
bishops to holy kings. They also consider the extent to which lay
and clerical understandings of masculinity existed in an unstable
dialectical relationship, at times sharing similar features, at
others pointedly different, co-opting and rejecting features of the
other; the articles show this interplay to be more far more
complicated than a simple linear narrative of either increasing
divergence, or of clerical colonization of lay masculinity. They
also challenge conventional historiographies of the adoption of
clerical celibacy, of the decline of monasticism and the gendered
nature of piety. P.H. CULLUM is Student Experience Co-ordinator for
Music, Humanities and Media at the University of Huddersfield;
KATHERINE J. LEWIS is Senior Lecturer in History at the University
of Huddersfield. Contributors: James G. Clark, P.H. Cullum, Kirsten
A. Fenton, Joanna Huntington, Katherine J. Lewis, Matthew Mesley,
Catherine Sanok, Michael L. Satlow, Rachel Stone, Jennifer D.
Thibodeaux, Marita von Weissenberg
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