University of Pennsylvania Press
Count and Bishop in Medieval Germany
About this book
In this examination of the functions of lordship in a medieval society, Benjamin Arnold seeks answers to some of the most fundamental questions for the period of political and institutional history: How did the lords maintain control over the people, land, and resources? How was their rule sustained and justified?
Arnold chooses to analyze the Eichstätt region, an area on the borders of three major German provinces: Bavaria, Franconia, and Swabia. The region was the geographical and political dimension within which succeeding bishops, with great tenacity and inventiveness, survived the threat of dominion by their secular neighbors, the counts. The bishops of Eichstätt were able to emerge with a durable territorial structure of their own, which they succeeded in recasting, between 1280 and 1320, into a credible and long-lasting principality.
Modern ideas of political progress, Arnold contends, tend to be unfair to medieval institutions that have not left easily recognizable descendants. He argues that it would be more prudent to observe in the territorial fragmentation of Germany not the triumph of chaos but the outcome of a reasonably orderly social and legal process that provided alternative institutions to those of a centralized or national monarchy.
Author / Editor information
Benjamin Arnold is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Reading.
Topics
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Frontmatter
I -
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Content
VII -
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Abbreviations
IX -
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Illustrations
XI -
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Preface
XIII -
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Introduction: Land and Lordship in the Medieval German Empire
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1. Regions and Political Power in Medieval Germany
24 -
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2. The See of Eichstätt and Its Neighbors
44 -
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3. Counts, Bishops, and Knights, 1125 – 1245
64 -
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4. The Bishopric and Its Neighbors after the Treaty of Eichstätt in 1245
89 -
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5. The End of the County of Hirschberg, 1280–1305
111 -
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6. Eichstätt and the Hirschberg Inheritance
138 -
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7. Bishop and Count in the West of Eichstätts Region
153 -
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Conclusion: Eichstätt in Bavarian and German History
171 -
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Maps and Genealogical Tables
181 -
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Selected Bibliography
191 -
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Index
203