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Produktbild: Lost Letters of Medieval Life

Lost Letters of Medieval Life English Society, 12-125

45,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

02.12.2014

Herausgeber

Martha Carlin + weitere

Verlag

University Of Pennsylvania Press

Seitenzahl

360

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,5/2,5 cm

Gewicht

612 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8122-2336-1

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

02.12.2014

Herausgeber

Verlag

University Of Pennsylvania Press

Seitenzahl

360

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,5/2,5 cm

Gewicht

612 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-8122-2336-1

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Lost Letters of Medieval Life
  • List of Illustrations
    Preface
    List of Abbreviations
    A Note on Money

    Introduction
    -The Lost Letters
    -Early Formularies
    -British Library, Additional MS 8167
    -Bodleian Library, Fairfax MS 27
    -Other Related Formularies
    -England, 1200¿1250
    -Oxford, c. 1200¿1250
    -Literacy in Early Thirteenth-Century England
    -Language and Structure of the Letters
    -Editorial Principles

    Chapter 1. Money
    Credit, Debt, and Commerce
    1. Legal Agreement for Pledging a Rural Estate
    2. An Earl Orders Wine from His Vintner
    3. How the Vintner Should Respond if the Earl Has a Good Credit Rating
    4. How the Vintner Should Respond if the Earl Does Not Repay His Debts
    5. An Earl Orders Cloth from His Draper, to Whom He Owes Money
    6. An Earl Orders Furs from His Skinner, to Whom He Owes Money
    7. The Manner in Which One Should Write a Positive or Negative Response to a Request
    8. Letter of Refusal from a Skinner Ruined by a Fire
    9. A Friend Requests Five Marks to Buy Wool
    10. A Friend Requests a Loan to Buy Wool and Cloth at the Fair
    11. A Man Sends Pledges That His Neighbor Can Use to Secure a Loan
    The Jews
    12. A Friend Begs for Money to Repay a Loan
    13. A Letter of Response: Buying a Horse for One's Lord
    14. A Letter of Refusal: Rejecting a Subordinate's Request for a Second Loan
    Household Provisioning and Hospitality
    15. Instructions for Writing Orders or Prohibitions: An Earl Orders His Steward to Send Him a Supply of Wine and Ale
    16. A Friend Warns Another to Buy Grain Against a Coming Dearth
    17. An Archdeacon Sends Word to a Dean About an Impending Visitation by the Bishop
    18. A Rural Dean Warns a Priest of an Imminent Visit from the Bishop and Advises Him to Obtain an Appropriate Variety of Foods
    19. The King Orders a Sheriff to Commandeer Wine for His Use and Transport for It, and to Deal Sharply with Any Resistance
    Accounts
    20. The Manner of Keeping Accounts
    21. Model Manorial Account for a Six-Year Period [September 29, 1222-September 29, 1228]
    22. Instructions for Keeping a Travel Account, Followed by a Daily Household Account
    23. Further Instructions for Keeping Travel Accounts, Followed by Another Daily Household Account

    Chapter 2. War and Politics
    War
    24. An Earl Summons His Knights to Military Service Overseas
    25. A Knight Responds to a Summons for Military Service by Asking for a Cash Loan to Meet His Expenses
    26. A Man Asks a Friend to Make His Excuses to the King for Being Unable to Respond to a Summons
    27. A Man Cautions a Friend That He Should Provide for the Knights Committed to His Custody or His Fortune Might Suffer at Court
    28. A Man Advises His Friend to Guard Well the Imprisoned Knights in His Charge
    29. The Sheriff of Cambridge Orders the Serjeants of a Hundred to Summon Those Who Owe the King Military Service to Assemble at Portsmouth to Go Overseas
    30. The King Writes to the Earl of Chester Requesting Aid Against the Welsh Under Prince Llywelyn
    31. The King Summons an Army to the Defense of His Interests in Wales
    32. The King's Liege Men Warn Him About Secret Confederacies Between Some of His Own Men and the Welsh, Which Threaten the Success of His Campaign
    33. A Warning to a Friend to Get His Grain off the Road, Because the King Is About to Go to Wales and Will Seize All Provisions That He Finds Along the Way
    Politics
    34. King Henry III of England Requests an Aid for the Marriage of His Sister
    35. A Magnate Replies to the King Acknowledging the King's Right but Reminding Him Not to Overburden His Subjects When He Has Income of His Own
    36. The Bishops and Church Dignitaries Recommend to the Magnates and Knights of England that They Take Counsel over the King's Position on Taxation
    37. A Knight Seeks Advice Concerning the King's Supposed Willingness to Marry Noble Young Women to Men Below Their Social Station
    38. His Colleague Reassures the Knight that Disparagement Is Against the Articles of Magna Carta, and Assures Him of His Assistance

    Chapter 3. Lordship and Administration
    Law and Order
    39. A Constable Orders His Bailiffs to Discover Who Are the Robbers Plaguing Their Jurisdictions and to Stop Them
    40. The King Orders a Sheriff to Find and Hang the Thieves Who Have Been Burgling Village Homes by Night
    41. The Sheriff Informs the King of the Result of His Pursuit of the Robbers
    42. A Landowner in the King's Service Complains to a Sheriff that His Men Are Being Harassed by the Sheriff's Officers for Suit of County and Hundred Despite His Exemption
    43. A Man Asks a Sheriff to Release Goods Seized for an Unpaid Fine Owed to the King
    44. A Man Asks a Friend to Come to London with Him to Act for Him in a Canon Law Suit
    45. A Letter to a Friend Requesting Legal Assistance on Another's Behalf
    46. A Man Asks a Friend for the Services of His Attorney to Appear in His Place at the Royal Court
    Lordship and Manorial Administration
    47. An Earl Asks an Agent to Get Him Money for a Replacement Mount
    48. A Lord Responds with Threats to an Attack on His Dependents
    49. A Villein Refuses a Request for the Loan of a Plow and Oxen Because He Needs Them Himself
    50. A Tenant Informs on a Landowner's Corrupt Bailiff
    51. The Same Bailiff Sends His Rebuttal to His Lord
    52. A Knight Orders a Bailiff Accused of Fraud to Present His Accounts for Inspection
    53. A Landowner Sends a List of Instructions to His Bailiff
    Ecclesiastical Administration
    54. Bishop H[ugh] of Lincoln Orders His Official to Prohibit Two Men from Leaving a Town Until a Major Lawsuit Between Them Has Been Settled by a Forthcoming Diocesan Assembly
    55. An Archdeacon Writes to a Rural Dean to Charge Him with the Collection of a Clerical Tax, and to Order Him to Correct the Misbehavior of Chaplains in His Deanery
    56. A Bishop's Official Writes to an Archdeacon's Official to Certify the Credentials of a Chaplain Who Wishes to Move to the Latter's District
    57. A Chaplain Who Is Worried About Losing His Job Writes to a Fellow-Chaplain for Advice and Help
    Forests and Hunting
    58. The King Orders a Sheriff to Inquire into the Poaching of Game in a Royal Forest
    59. The King Orders a Sheriff to Arrest the Corrupt Foresters Under His Command Who Have Been Selling Oak Trees from the Royal Forest
    60. A Sheriff Tells the King that He Cannot Comply with a Command to Provide Venison, Because the Adjoining Forests Belong to the King of Scots, Whose Foresters Refuse to Allow Him to Take Game There
    61. A Baron Asks Another Baron to Send Him Game and Fish to Stock His New Park and Fishpond, and in Return He Sends Hunting Dogs, Hawks, and Falcons
    62. A Baron Asks a Baron to Have the Latter's Son Train His Goshawk, Which He Sends
    Tournaments
    63. An Earl Invites a Baron to Join His Tournament Retinue
    64. A Knight Orders His Bailiff to Provide for His Arrival with Edmund de Lacy, Constable of Chester, and Twenty Knights, Who Are on Their Way to a Tournament at Blyth
    65. The Earl of Warenne Beseeches the Count of Aumale to Come to a Tournament that He Has Sponsored, Because He and His Knights Are Rusty from Lack of Practice and Need His Help
    66. An Earl Writes to Another Earl to Request a Brief Pause Between Tournaments, to Enable Everyone to Take a Little Break Before Resuming Combat
    67. An Earl Asks a Baron to Send Him a Destrier Equipped for a Tournament
    68. The Baron Agrees to Lend His Destrier to the Earl, Because His Legal Affairs Will Prevent Him from Attending the Tournament Himself

    Chapter 4. Family and Community
    News, Gossip, and Family
    69. A Serjeant Writes to His Master, a Knight, to Justify His Refusal to Obey the Orders of the Knight's Wife
    70. A Man Warns His Friend that He Has Seen the Latter's Wife Naked in Bed with Another Man, and Sends Her Girdle as Evidence
    71. Bishop H[ugh] of C[arlisle] Orders His Archdeacon to Inquire About Adulterers in His Archdeaconry
    72. An Archdeacon Orders a Dean to Investigate the Alleged Bribing of a Chaplain by an Adulterer to Conceal His Affair
    73. A Rural Dean Offers to Cover Up an Allegation Against a Chaplain of Adultery with the Wife of One of His Parishioners
    74. A Steward Writes to His Lord About a Gravely Ill Knight Whose Wife and Daughter Have Gone Elsewhere
    75. A Man of Property Writes Home to His Wife, Niece, and Servants
    76. A Wife Writes to Her Absent Husband
    77. A Knight in the Queen's Service Asks His Wife to Send Him Linen Cloth and Sheets
    78. A Man Asks a Friend to Take His Son into His Service
    Student Life
    79. A Student Tells His Friends that He Is Going to Become a Monk
    80. A Student at Paris Writes to His Father for Money
    81. A Student at Oxford Writes to His Father for Money
    82. A Student at Oxford Writes to His Mother for Money
    83. A Son Responds to a Letter from His Father
    84. A Master Tells His Student to Stop Wasting Time
    Neighborliness and Community
    85. An Angry Letter of Refusal
    86. A Friend Requests Assistance for a Kinsman
    87. A Man Who Assisted His Friend's Kinsman Requests Reimbursement for His Expenses
    88. A Man Refuses to Aid His Friend's Shiftless Kinsman and Warns Against Lending Him Further Funds
    89. A Man Thanks His Friend for a Loan and Promises to Repay It with Grain After the Harvest
    90. A Neighbor Requests the Loan of a Plow and Plowshare Until He Can Get Some Iron to Have a Plowshare Made for His Own Plow
    91. A Neighbor Requests Financial Assistance Following a Burglary
    92. The Burglary Victim's Neighbor Agrees to Assist Him
    93. A Peasant Writes to Another About His Adversities

    Chapter 5. A Knight's Correspondence: Building a Barn and a Windmill
    94. A Knight Informs His Friend, a Royal Forester, that the King Has Granted Him Four Oak Trees with Which to Build a Windmill
    95. The Royal Forester Responds with an Offer of Assistance
    96. The Royal Forester Orders His Serjeants to Assist the Knight
    97. The Knight Hires a Carpenter to Finish the Windmill and Build a Barn
    98. The Knight Orders the Bailiff of His Manor to Attend to Various Tasks, to Organize the Delivery of the Timber for the New Windmill and Barn, and to Prepare Provisions for the Forthcoming Visit of the Knight and His Household
    99. The Bailiff Reports to the Knight that He Has Taken Care of Everything, and that He Has Borrowed Money on the Knight's Behalf to Cover the Expenses
    100 The Knight Asks His Wife to Join Him at the Manor Where the Mill and Barn Are Under Construction, and to Stay on After His Return to Court

    Bibliography
    Index
    Acknowledgments

    * * * *

    Illustrations

    Frontispiece. Bodleian Library, Oxford, Fairfax MS 27, fol. 4v.. . . ii
    Map 1 England and Wales in the early thirteenth century.
    Map 2 France in the early thirteenth century.
    Figure 1. Short cross penny of John or Henry III.
    Figure 2. Weighing coin to ensure that it is of full weight.
    Figure 3. A draper's assistant measures out cloth.
    Figure 4. A rich man's fur-lined cloaks.
    Figure 5. A skinner and his assistant display fur linings to customers .
    Figure 6. Caricature of devils mocking a Jewish coin-clipper and moneylenders.
    Figure 7. Count Thibaut VI of Blois on his warhorse.
    Figure 8. A forester is shot by poachers .
    Figure 9. Seal of Aubreye de Harcourt.
    Figure 10. Death in a tournament of Gilbert Marshal, earl of Pembroke.
    Figure 11. Potiphar's wife uses Joseph's cloak as evidence of attempted rape .
    Figure 12. A girdler's shop or stall.
    Figure 13. King David commits adultery with Bathsheba.
    Figure 14. The Prodigal Son loses his clothing at dice.
    Figure 15. Threshing and winnowing grain.
    Figure 16. A windmill with its tail pole.