Studies have shown that people in the Middle Ages were inherently more violent than at other times. New book explores how this violence played out in Medieval Italy 568-1154
Conflict and Violence in Medieval Italy 568-1154
ed by Christopher Heath and Robert Houghton
Amsterdam University Press 2021
ABSTRACT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 Introduction: Discordant Minds and Hostile Nations (Christopher Heath and Robert Houghton)
2 Morbidity and Murder: Lombard Kingship’s Violent Uncertainties 568-774 (Christopher Heath)
3 Insurgency and Counterinsurgency in Lombard Italy (c600-700) (Guido M. Berndt)
4 Troubled Times: Narrating Conquest and Defiance between Charlemagne and Bernard (774-818) (Francesco Borri)
5 ‘Nec patiaris populum Domini ab illis divinitus fulminandis Agarenis discerpi’: Handling ‘Saracen’ Violence in Ninth-Century Southern Italy (Kordula Wolf)
6 Formosus and the ‘Synod of the Corpse’: Tenth Century Rome in History and Memory (David Barritt)
7 Sex, Denigration and Violence: A Representation of Political Competition between Two Aristocratic Families in Ninth Century Italy (Edoardo Manarini)
8 ‘Italy and her [German] Invaders’: Otto III’s and Frederick Barbarossa’s Early Tours of Italy – Pomp, Generosity and Ferocity (Penelope Nash)
9 ‘I Predict a Riot’: What Were the Parmense Rebelling Against in 1037? (Robert Houghton)
10 The Strange Case of Deusdedit and Pandulf: Two Accounts of Honorius II’s Election (Enrico Veneziani)
Afterword (Ross Balzaretti)
