Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgement
- List of abbreviations
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 GERMAN KINGSHIP AND ROYAL MONASTERIES: THE HISTORICAL AND HISTORIOGRAPHICAL CONTEXT
- 2 ITINERANT KINGSHIP, ROYAL MONASTERIES AND THE SERVITIUM REGIS
- 3 SERVITIUM REGIS AND MONASTIC PROPERTY
- 4 MONASTERIES IN THE SAXON HEARTLAND
- 5 MONASTERIES IN WESTPHALIA
- 6 MONASTERIES IN THE SAXON–HESSIAN BORDER REGION
- 7 MONASTERIES IN HESSE AND THURINGIA
- CONCLUSION
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge studies in medieval life and thought Fourth series
INTRODUCTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgement
- List of abbreviations
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 GERMAN KINGSHIP AND ROYAL MONASTERIES: THE HISTORICAL AND HISTORIOGRAPHICAL CONTEXT
- 2 ITINERANT KINGSHIP, ROYAL MONASTERIES AND THE SERVITIUM REGIS
- 3 SERVITIUM REGIS AND MONASTIC PROPERTY
- 4 MONASTERIES IN THE SAXON HEARTLAND
- 5 MONASTERIES IN WESTPHALIA
- 6 MONASTERIES IN THE SAXON–HESSIAN BORDER REGION
- 7 MONASTERIES IN HESSE AND THURINGIA
- CONCLUSION
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge studies in medieval life and thought Fourth series
Summary
This book explores and analyses the political, economic and religious relations between the royal monastic institutions in tenth-and eleventh-century Germany and the Ottonian and early Salian monarchs. In its broadest sense, it examines the structures of power, the problems of rulership and the realities of power and control in a pre-modern society. Specifically, the study focuses on practical aspects of itinerant kingship – that is, governing while constantly in motion – and on the servitium regis – those payments and services that churches and monasteries specially allied with the king were obliged to provide to him in return for royal patronage and protection – as a crucial economic underpinning of the German kings' itinerary. In regard to itinerant kingship and the servitium regis, far less research has been devoted to the role of royal monasteries and convents than to the role of the bishoprics and the royal residences or Pfalzen. Consequently, I investigated royalmonastic relations in this context to determine how this relationship functioned in actual practice. In the process, I reevaluated the economic support that the royal monasteries provided to the king and his itinerant court, and examined how the demands of this support affected both the monastic ideal and the institutional development of monasticism in Germany.
I argue that the size and the political structure of the realm over which the Ottonian and Salian kings came to rule forced them to govern in a highly itinerant mode.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993