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Philip E. Bennett, Marianne Ailes (éd.) : Charlemagne in the Francophone World and Occitania
Explores the transmission and reception of the medieval legends of Charlemagne in the literatures of the French-speaking areas of France, Burgundy and England, and Occitania. The spread of Charlemagne’s myth after his death was even more (...)
Pauline Ferrier-Viaud, Flavie Leroux (dir.) : Conjugalités à la cour de France (Moyen Âge - XIXe siècle)
Le mariage et la conjugalité à la cour de France ont, jusqu’à présent, été trop souvent considérés comme un sous-sujet de l’histoire politique. Familles royales et princières ont ainsi été au centre de l’attention, éclairant les enjeux (...)
Anna Katharina Rudolph : Rewriting History and the Myth of the French Nation. The Hagiography of Radegund of Poitiers from Medieval to Modernity
This multidisciplinary analysis of the cult of Radegund of Poitiers, from the sixth century to the twenty-first, illuminates the roles saints play at the intersection of gender and politics. No other medieval saint was so politically charged or (...)
Manuel Borrego, Rubén González Cuerva, Giuseppe Mrozek Eliszezynski (dir.) : Les Favoris dans l’Europe du XVIIe siècle. Discours et représentations
La figure du favori tout-puissant, anomalie institutionnelle non exclusive au XVIIe siècle, acquit durant cette période une présence européenne généralisée, suscitant une production écrite importante. Sa dimension continentale ne passa pas (...)
Wojtek Jezierski, Lars Kjaer (éd.) : Guests, Strangers, Aliens, Enemies. Ambiguities of Hospitality in the Middle Ages, c. 1000–1350
Many of our oldest and best-loved stories are about killing guests and betraying hosts. Hospitality is celebrated, in medieval texts and in medieval studies, as a way of binding individuals together and strengthening social cohesion, but both (...)
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