Fotografía de autor
17+ Obras 237 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: Ian N. Wood

También incluye: Ian Wood (1)

Obras de I. N. Wood

Obras relacionadas

The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 1, c.500-c.700 (2005) — Contribuidor — 104 copias
Transformation of the Roman World AD 400-900 (1997) — Contribuidor — 59 copias
The Cambridge Companion to Bede (2010) — Contribuidor — 42 copias
A Companion to Roman Britain (2003) — Contribuidor — 31 copias
The Settlement of Disputes in Early Medieval Europe (1970) — Contribuidor — 26 copias
Gender in the Early Medieval World: East and West, 300-900 (2004) — Contribuidor — 24 copias
Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity? (1992) — Contribuidor — 22 copias
After empire : towards an ethnology of Europe's barbarians (1995) — Contribuidor — 14 copias
Property and power in the early Middle Ages (1995) — Contribuidor — 14 copias
Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages (2001) — Contribuidor — 11 copias
Constantine the Great: York's Roman Emperor (2006) — Contribuidor — 10 copias
The Sixth Century: Production, Distribution, and Demand (1998) — Contribuidor — 8 copias
The Languages of Gift in the Early Middle Ages (2010) — Contribuidor — 7 copias
La fin de l'Empire romain d'Occident: Rome et les Wisigoths de 382 à 531 (2015) — Prólogo, algunas ediciones5 copias

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Miembros

Reseñas

Ian Wood takes as his focus here how historians' understandings of the early medieval period changed between the eighteenth century and the present day, and how the social and political circumstances within which these historians worked shaped their interpretations of the past. Wood covers an impressively broad array of sources from across Western Europe to make his case—from Henri, comte de Boulainvilliers' Etat de la France in the 1720s, to the French Revolution, to British imperialists and German fascists, right through to Peter Brown and his students in the twenty-first century—and does so in some analytical detail.

He is, however, less strong on the historiographies of early medieval Ireland and England, or Visigothic Spain. Wood is largely concerned with the historiography of the Romanist-Germanist debate, and so justifies the exclusion of these "fringe" regions on the grounds that the fall of Rome wasn't particularly significant in those areas. Hrm. That said, an author does have to draw a line somewhere, and this is already 400 very dense pages. What is clear from The Modern Origins of the Early Middle Ages is that such work could and should be done on these other national historiographies.

This book would be profitably read by any postgraduate student of history, and should be required reading for aspiring medievalists.
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Denunciada
siriaeve | Dec 12, 2022 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
17
También por
32
Miembros
237
Popularidad
#95,614
Valoración
4.1
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
35
Idiomas
4

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