LEGITIMACY THROUGH LITERATURE: POLITICAL CULTURE IN EARLY-ELEVENTH-CENTURY ROUEN Corinna Maxine Carol Matlis Cornell University 2017 This dissertation examines the interplay between early-eleventh-century Norman literature and the Norman ducal family’s project of establishing its legitimacy to rule. The dissertation considers Dudo of Saint Quentin’s arcane history of the Norman dukes, Warner of Rouen’s two esoteric satires, and two further anonymous satires produced in Rouen c. 996-1026 (the reign of Duke Richard II). These works constitute the secular Norman literature during this period. Although the texts’ audiences are unknown, it is clear that the ducal family, local clerics, and potentially nobility throughout the region and Franc...
This thesis focuses on conflict within families in Normandy, c. 1025 to 1135. Despite the occurrence...
The Draco Normannicus of Stephen of Rouen, a twelfth-century monk of Bec, uses an unconventional non...
Cartwright Charlotte, Matilda of Flanders in Normandy: a study of eleventh century female power, Thè...
This is a study of three aristocratic families significant in Normandy and England in the eleventh c...
This is the final version of the article. It was first published by Wiley at http://onlinelibrary.wi...
Authorial interventions have for some time been an area of interest among medieval scholars since th...
This book presents exciting new research on the society and culture of medieval Rouen by British and...
This thesis re-evaluates the chronology of Lower Normandyâs integration into the duchy growing aroun...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
The twelfth century in western Europe was marked by tensions and negotiations between Church, aristo...
Matilda of Flanders, as she is commonly known, was the wife of William II, count/duke of Normandy an...
Rouen, one of the leading cities of medieval Western Europe, has long awaited detailed consideration...
In 966, by the end of the reign of its third duke, Richard I, Normandy had overcome the crises that ...
This thesis focuses on conflict within families in Normandy, c. 1025 to 1135. Despite the occurrence...
The Draco Normannicus of Stephen of Rouen, a twelfth-century monk of Bec, uses an unconventional non...
Cartwright Charlotte, Matilda of Flanders in Normandy: a study of eleventh century female power, Thè...
This is a study of three aristocratic families significant in Normandy and England in the eleventh c...
This is the final version of the article. It was first published by Wiley at http://onlinelibrary.wi...
Authorial interventions have for some time been an area of interest among medieval scholars since th...
This book presents exciting new research on the society and culture of medieval Rouen by British and...
This thesis re-evaluates the chronology of Lower Normandyâs integration into the duchy growing aroun...
This dissertation challenges the traditional notions of the Anglo-Normans as rapacious colonizers of...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This thesis is a study in how the political culture of the reign of Henry III was conditioned by its...
The twelfth century in western Europe was marked by tensions and negotiations between Church, aristo...
Matilda of Flanders, as she is commonly known, was the wife of William II, count/duke of Normandy an...
Rouen, one of the leading cities of medieval Western Europe, has long awaited detailed consideration...
In 966, by the end of the reign of its third duke, Richard I, Normandy had overcome the crises that ...
This thesis focuses on conflict within families in Normandy, c. 1025 to 1135. Despite the occurrence...
The Draco Normannicus of Stephen of Rouen, a twelfth-century monk of Bec, uses an unconventional non...
Cartwright Charlotte, Matilda of Flanders in Normandy: a study of eleventh century female power, Thè...