Book contents
- Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages
- Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Entwined Lives and Multiple Identities
- Part II Historians, Lawyers and Exegetes: Writing Lives and Identities
- 9 Ademar of Chabannes and the Normans:
- 10 Lives, Identities and the Historians of the Normans
- 11 Ruth in the Twelfth Century:
- 12 Jacob and Esau and the Interplay of Jewish and Christian Identities in the Middle Ages
- 13 Identity, Gender and History in Wace’s Roman de Rou and Roman de Brut
- 14 Glanvill:
- 15 Dunstan, Edgar and the History of Not-So-Recent Events
- Index
10 - Lives, Identities and the Historians of the Normans
from Part II - Historians, Lawyers and Exegetes: Writing Lives and Identities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2021
- Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages
- Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Entwined Lives and Multiple Identities
- Part II Historians, Lawyers and Exegetes: Writing Lives and Identities
- 9 Ademar of Chabannes and the Normans:
- 10 Lives, Identities and the Historians of the Normans
- 11 Ruth in the Twelfth Century:
- 12 Jacob and Esau and the Interplay of Jewish and Christian Identities in the Middle Ages
- 13 Identity, Gender and History in Wace’s Roman de Rou and Roman de Brut
- 14 Glanvill:
- 15 Dunstan, Edgar and the History of Not-So-Recent Events
- Index
Summary
This chapter's thesis is that it is only through an analysis that integrates personal, contextual, ethical and literary factors that we can understand the place of the eleventh- and twelfth-century historians of the Normans within the identity and the history – and the identities and the histories – of the Normans. It is about the dialogue between the personal and the public. To do this, what we can know of the personal biographies, life experiences and beliefs of the historians must be combined with an analysis of genre and context. Viewed in this way the historians become the reflectors of events as well as their recorders. Cultural memory and analyses associated with the so-called 'Vienna School' are of great importance to the argument. The historians are also seen as working within contemporary forms of moral discourse that sought to make sense of, and even to improve, the disturbed and often violent world of their times. The chapter concludes with some references to interaction with contemporary historians writing in England.
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- Lives, Identities and Histories in the Central Middle Ages , pp. 180 - 202Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021