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Land, Family and Women in Continental Europe, 701-1200
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 July 2017
Extract
In reconstructing the social and economic history of the early Middle Ages, perhaps the single, most salient obstacle to our research is the scant amount of information we possess concerning the household economy of the lay family, how the family managed its lands and divided its labors among its members. Our sources, overwhelmingly ecclesiastical in provenience, tell us fairly much of the organization of Church properties, and, through a few surviving royal records, we have some information too about royal estates. But at all times in medieval Europe, non-royal lay families owned or controlled the larger portion of the soil. We must try to learn more about how these propertied families managed their estates, and how internal family structure may have been affected by, or in turn may have influenced broader economic and social changes.
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References
1 The author would like to express his thanks to Professor A. R. Lewis of the University of Texas for the opportunity to read and to benefit from the manuscript of his address on the position of women in Southern France and Cataloni a given a t the annual dinner of the Mediaeval Academy of America, at the meeting of the American Historical Association inNew York, December, 1960.Google Scholar
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