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Text and Textuality in Early Medieval Iberia: the Written and the World, 711-1031

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posted on 2024-03-01, 12:33 authored by Graham BarrettGraham Barrett

This book is a study of the functions and conceptions of writing and reading, documentation and archives, and the role of literate authorities in the Christian kingdoms of the northern Iberian Peninsula between the Muslim conquest of 711 and the fall of the Islamic caliphate at Córdoba in 1031. Based on the first complete survey of the over 4,000 surviving Latin charters from the period, it is an essay in the archaeology and biography of text: part one concerns materiality, tracing the lifecycle of charters from initiation and composition to preservation and reuse, part two addresses connectivity, delineating a network of texts through painstaking identification of more than 2,000 citations of other charters, secular and canon law, the Bible, liturgy, and monastic rules. Few people may have been able to read or write, yet the extent of textuality was broad and deep, in the authority conferred upon text and the arrangements made to use it: via charter and scribe, society and social arrangements came increasingly to be influenced by norms originating from a network of texts. By profiling the intersection and interaction of text with society and culture, this book reconstructs textuality, how the authority of the written and the structures to access it framed and constrained actions and cultural norms, and proposes a new model of early medieval reading. As they cited other texts, charters circulated fragments of those texts; we must rethink the relationship of sources and audiences to reflect fragmentary transmission, in a textuality of imperfect knowledge.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)

Publisher

Oxford University Press

ISBN

9780191916199,9780192895370

Date Submitted

2023-05-15

Date Accepted

2023-07-20

Date of First Publication

2023-07-20

Date of Final Publication

2023-07-20

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-02-24

ePrints ID

53523