Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Boydell & Brewer
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
3. Women, Seals, and Charters: Gendered Affirmation and Legitimation at the Hospital of St John Brussels
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- List of Illustrations vii
- List of Contributors viii
- Preface xi
- Introduction 1
-
PART I: GENDER, DOCUMENTARY MEMORY AND LAY COMMUNITY
- 1. Gender, Justice, and Community: Women’s Legal Networks in Early Medieval England 15
- 2. The Peasant Widows of Early Medieval Castile 32
- 3. Women, Seals, and Charters: Gendered Affirmation and Legitimation at the Hospital of St John Brussels 52
-
PART II: GENDERED APPROACHES TO CHARTERS: MEMORY AND ERASURE
- 4. Enough Facts to Forge a Memory: the charters of Queen Matilda III (1135‒52) 73
- 5. Confronting the Void: Countess Ermengarde of Brittany (c. 1070–1147) and Medieval Charters 88
- 6. Remembering Female Lordship: the Case of Queen Berengaria of Navarre, Lord of Le Mans (1204/05–1230) 105
-
PART III: GENDER, DYNASTY AND HISTORICAL WRITING
- 7. Ottonian Women, Textual Memory, and Dynastic Legitimacy 145
- 8. Emma of Normandy and the Gendered Iconography of Crowns 163
- 9. Not all chroniclers? Orderic Vitalis and Women in the Historia Ecclesiastica 182
- 10. Anger, Violence, and the Exercise of Power in High Medieval French Chronicles 198
-
PART IV: GENDER AND DOCUMENTARY CULTURE IN MONASTIC CONTEXTS
- 11. Women, Memory and Benedictine reform: the monasteries of Santa María de Piasca and San Salvador de Oña 217
- 12. Women and Memory in Burgundian Charters 235
- 13. Memory and Documentary Culture at Holy Trinity Abbey, Caen in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries 254
- 14. Encased in Silk. The Women of Bouxières and Their Archives 271
- Index 289
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- List of Illustrations vii
- List of Contributors viii
- Preface xi
- Introduction 1
-
PART I: GENDER, DOCUMENTARY MEMORY AND LAY COMMUNITY
- 1. Gender, Justice, and Community: Women’s Legal Networks in Early Medieval England 15
- 2. The Peasant Widows of Early Medieval Castile 32
- 3. Women, Seals, and Charters: Gendered Affirmation and Legitimation at the Hospital of St John Brussels 52
-
PART II: GENDERED APPROACHES TO CHARTERS: MEMORY AND ERASURE
- 4. Enough Facts to Forge a Memory: the charters of Queen Matilda III (1135‒52) 73
- 5. Confronting the Void: Countess Ermengarde of Brittany (c. 1070–1147) and Medieval Charters 88
- 6. Remembering Female Lordship: the Case of Queen Berengaria of Navarre, Lord of Le Mans (1204/05–1230) 105
-
PART III: GENDER, DYNASTY AND HISTORICAL WRITING
- 7. Ottonian Women, Textual Memory, and Dynastic Legitimacy 145
- 8. Emma of Normandy and the Gendered Iconography of Crowns 163
- 9. Not all chroniclers? Orderic Vitalis and Women in the Historia Ecclesiastica 182
- 10. Anger, Violence, and the Exercise of Power in High Medieval French Chronicles 198
-
PART IV: GENDER AND DOCUMENTARY CULTURE IN MONASTIC CONTEXTS
- 11. Women, Memory and Benedictine reform: the monasteries of Santa María de Piasca and San Salvador de Oña 217
- 12. Women and Memory in Burgundian Charters 235
- 13. Memory and Documentary Culture at Holy Trinity Abbey, Caen in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries 254
- 14. Encased in Silk. The Women of Bouxières and Their Archives 271
- Index 289