Women In Dark Age And Early Medieval Europe c.500-1200

£33.29

Women In Dark Age And Early Medieval Europe c.500-1200

General and world history European history History Gender studies: women and girls

Author: Helen Jewell

Dinosaur mascot

Collection: European Culture and Society

Language: English

Published by: Bloomsbury Academic

Published on: 4 October 2006

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 192 pages

ISBN: 9781350307100


Introduction

The period 1200-1550 opened in a time of population expansion but went on to suffer the demographically cataclysmic effects of the plague, beginning with the Black Death of 1347-51. The period dawned with a confident papacy and the Albigensian crusade against heretics and ended with the Catholic church torn apart by the Protestant Reformation. Huge challenges were affecting society in various ways, but they did not always affect men and women in the same ways.

Overview of the Book

Helen M. Jewell provides a lively survey of western European women’s activities and experiences during this timeframe. The core chapters investigate:

- The function of women in the countryside and towns

- The role of women in the ruling and landholding classes

- Women within the context of religion

Analysis and Themes

This practical centre of the book is embedded in an analysis of the gender theories inherited from the earlier Middle Ages which continued to underpin laws which restricted women’s activity, an education system which offered them inferior institutional provision, and a church which denied them ministry. Three individuals who vastly exceeded these expectations, crashing through the ‘glass ceilings’ of their day, are brought together in a fascinating final chapter.

Conclusion

Combining a historiographical survey of trends over the last thirty years with more recent scholarship, this is an indispensable introduction for anyone with an interest in women’s history from the late Medieval period through to the Reformation.

Show moreShow less