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Preface

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2013

Janet Burton
Affiliation:
University of Wales
Phillipp Schofield
Affiliation:
Aberystwyth University
Björn Weiler
Affiliation:
Aberystwyth University
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Summary

The 2011 conference was generously supported by the Royal Historical Society, the Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies at Aberystwyth and Bangor, the Department of History and Welsh History at Aberystwyth University, and the Lampeter campus of the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. We would like to thank sponsors, speakers and participants for having made the conference a fruitful and – we hope – enjoyable experience.

While there was no set theme, the papers here presented can be grouped into a series of overlapping clusters: participation in power; social identity; the intellectual and cultural representation of politics; and uses of the past. John Maddicott draws attention to the variety of venues available to those not part of the traditional elites to participate in and respond to the affairs of the realm. Attention is paid to the kind of news that circulated among non-elites, but also the localities where such news was heard, disseminated, and debated, and why these debates mattered. Phillipp Schofield tackles the shifting role of peasants in manorial court litigation, pointing out that they were increasingly transformed from users to consumers of the law. That is, while land litigation remained often stable in its procedures, inter-personal litigation allowed peasants to establish the court as a locus of peasant legal, social and economic agency. Harmony Dewez, John McEwan, Jörg Peltzer, Karen Stöber, and Olga Méndez González explore manifestations and instruments of social identity.

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Thirteenth Century England XIV
Proceedings of the Aberystwyth and Lampeter Conference, 2011
, pp. ix - x
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2013

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