Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Foreword by T. N. Bisson
- Abbreviations
- 1 The survival and extinction of the slave system in the early medieval West (fourth to eleventh centuries)
- 2 Society and mentalities in Visigothic Spain
- 3 From the Rhône to Galicia: origins and modalities of the feudal order
- 4 Descriptions of fortresses in the Book of Miracles of Sainte-Foy of Conques
- 5 The formation of Catalan feudalism and its early expansion (to c. 1150)
- 6 Feudal conventions in eleventh-century Catalonia
- 7 The noble and the ignoble: a new nobility and a new servitude in Catalonia at the end of the eleventh century
- 8 Rural communities in Catalonia and Valencia (from the ninth to the mid-fourteenth centuries) (in collaboration with Pierre Guichard)
- 9 From one servitude to another: the peasantry of the Frankish kingdom at the time of Hugh Capet and Robert the Pious (987–1031)
- 10 Marc Bloch, historian of servitude: reflections on the concept of ‘servile class’
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
5 - The formation of Catalan feudalism and its early expansion (to c. 1150)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Foreword by T. N. Bisson
- Abbreviations
- 1 The survival and extinction of the slave system in the early medieval West (fourth to eleventh centuries)
- 2 Society and mentalities in Visigothic Spain
- 3 From the Rhône to Galicia: origins and modalities of the feudal order
- 4 Descriptions of fortresses in the Book of Miracles of Sainte-Foy of Conques
- 5 The formation of Catalan feudalism and its early expansion (to c. 1150)
- 6 Feudal conventions in eleventh-century Catalonia
- 7 The noble and the ignoble: a new nobility and a new servitude in Catalonia at the end of the eleventh century
- 8 Rural communities in Catalonia and Valencia (from the ninth to the mid-fourteenth centuries) (in collaboration with Pierre Guichard)
- 9 From one servitude to another: the peasantry of the Frankish kingdom at the time of Hugh Capet and Robert the Pious (987–1031)
- 10 Marc Bloch, historian of servitude: reflections on the concept of ‘servile class’
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
Summary
It might perhaps be useful to begin by surveying developments during recent years in defining the concept of feudalism and, more particularly, of Catalan feudalism.
Only fifteen or twenty years ago, when historians spoke of féodalisme, or rather of féodalité, they meant, for the most part, a juridical system based on vassalage and the fief. The study of this system belonged, therefore, to institutional rather than to social history. Even when such studies extended to society, its upper strata was almost all that was considered; no other ‘feudal’ relations, in fact, were conceived of than those which bound vassals (indeed, only noble vassals) to their lords. When the history of the peasantry was addressed (which was rare), it was always outside the feudal context. The research of the last twenty years, associated with a more interdisciplinary approach, has discredited this excessively narrow juridical conception of the feudal order. As early as 1978 the conference at Rome on the feudal structures of the Mediterranean West, despite reservations on the part of some participants, proposed a wide definition of feudalism, seen both as a ‘system of institutions’ and as a ‘structure of production and profit’. It is this definition which will be used here, and without reservation.
As for Catalan feudalism, twenty years ago it was hardly perceived except as a marginal and imperfect variant of a feudal order designated as classic, that of the region between the Loire and the Rhine.
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- Chapter
- Information
- From Slavery to Feudalism in South-Western Europe , pp. 149 - 169Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991