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
2 - Society and mentalities in Visigothic Spain
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
On 1 January 414, a splendid wedding took place in Narbonne: Athaulf, King of the Visigoths, married Galla Placidia, daughter of Theodosius the Great and sister of Honorius, Emperor of the Roman West. The German king wore a toga, poets chanted nuptial songs and fifty young slaves dressed all in silk presented the bride with fifty plates laden with gold and silver. The marriage was symbolic and immensely famous at the time; it was seen as the achievement at long last of a union of Rome and Germany, of the Latin and barbarian worlds. Some, like the historian Idatius even regarded it as the fulfilment of the prophecy of Daniel foretelling the marriage between the king of the North and the daughter of the South. Alas, within two years, Athaulf was dead, stabbed by one of his warriors at Barcelona, and Galla Placidia, beaten and violated, was eventually sent back to her brother for a ransom of 6,000 barrels of corn. Thus, between Narbonne and Barcelona, began the 300-year-long history of Visigothic Spain, a history whose beginnings, in their high hopes and high drama, seem like an encapsulation of all that followed. It was a brutal history; a time of senseless violence, cruel tortures and plunder (Galla Placidia herself, along with the gold and silver displayed at her wedding, was part of the booty seized by the Visigoths when, four years earlier, they had captured and sacked Rome).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- From Slavery to Feudalism in South-Western Europe , pp. 60 - 103Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991