Kümper H. Did Medieval Canon Law Invent Our Modern Notion of Rape? Revisiting the Idea of Consent and the Individual Will before and after 1200. In: Kirsi S, Per A, Helle V, Helle MS, eds. Law and Marriage in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Period. Proceedings of the Carlsberg Academy Conferences on Medieval Legal History. Vol 8. Kopenhagen; 2012: 127-138
This thesis focuses on the sex trade in three late medieval cities, London, Paris and Toulouse, in a...
This essay explores one of the distinctive features of Western Christian thought in the Middle Ages:...
According to medieval canon law, a marriage could be declared invalid if the consent had been given ...
This research focuses on sexual assault in medieval England by examining twelfth to fourteenth-centu...
This study in progress examines the intersection of medieval rape laws and the rising popularity of ...
This dissertation focuses on the relationship between the law and Christian ideals during the high m...
Dedicated to medieval canon law expert Kenneth Pennington, this work discusses the contribution of m...
Although many and diverse kinds of medieval sources tell about pedophilia and pedosexuality, this to...
In the last half of the twelfth century, canon law established the rule that a marriage could be dec...
James A. Brundage. Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe. Chicago: University of Chicag...
Why study medieval canon law? Dominated for generations by German and French historians, the field i...
The article examines the epistemological imbalance that currently exists in the area of biblical a...
This thesis examines victim/survivor experiences of rape and other sexual violations in late medieva...
Church law explicitly allowed individuals to marry without familial consent from the twelfth century...
One of the most important aspects of the marriage legislation in medieval canon law is the doctrine ...
This thesis focuses on the sex trade in three late medieval cities, London, Paris and Toulouse, in a...
This essay explores one of the distinctive features of Western Christian thought in the Middle Ages:...
According to medieval canon law, a marriage could be declared invalid if the consent had been given ...
This research focuses on sexual assault in medieval England by examining twelfth to fourteenth-centu...
This study in progress examines the intersection of medieval rape laws and the rising popularity of ...
This dissertation focuses on the relationship between the law and Christian ideals during the high m...
Dedicated to medieval canon law expert Kenneth Pennington, this work discusses the contribution of m...
Although many and diverse kinds of medieval sources tell about pedophilia and pedosexuality, this to...
In the last half of the twelfth century, canon law established the rule that a marriage could be dec...
James A. Brundage. Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe. Chicago: University of Chicag...
Why study medieval canon law? Dominated for generations by German and French historians, the field i...
The article examines the epistemological imbalance that currently exists in the area of biblical a...
This thesis examines victim/survivor experiences of rape and other sexual violations in late medieva...
Church law explicitly allowed individuals to marry without familial consent from the twelfth century...
One of the most important aspects of the marriage legislation in medieval canon law is the doctrine ...
This thesis focuses on the sex trade in three late medieval cities, London, Paris and Toulouse, in a...
This essay explores one of the distinctive features of Western Christian thought in the Middle Ages:...
According to medieval canon law, a marriage could be declared invalid if the consent had been given ...