Out of Love for My Kin: Aristocratic Family Life in the Lands of the Loire, 1000-1200

Out of Love for My Kin: Aristocratic Family Life in the Lands of the Loire, 1000-1200

by Amy Livingstone
Out of Love for My Kin: Aristocratic Family Life in the Lands of the Loire, 1000-1200

Out of Love for My Kin: Aristocratic Family Life in the Lands of the Loire, 1000-1200

by Amy Livingstone

eBook

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Overview

In Out of Love for My Kin, Amy Livingstone examines the personal dimensions of the lives of aristocrats in the Loire region of France during the eleventh and twelfth centuries. She argues for a new conceptualization of aristocratic family life based on an ethos of inclusion. Inclusivity is evident in the care that medieval aristocrats showed toward their families by putting in place strategies, practices, and behaviors aimed at providing for a wide range of relatives. Indeed, this care—and in some cases outright affection—for family members is recorded in the documents themselves, as many a nobleman and woman made pious benefactions "out of love for my kin."

In a book made rich by evidence from charters—which provide details about life events including birth, death, marriage, and legal disputes over property—Livingstone reveals an aristocratic family dynamic that is quite different from the fictional or prescriptive views offered by literary depictions or ecclesiastical sources, or from later historiography. For example, she finds that there was no single monolithic mode of inheritance that privileged the few and that these families employed a variety of inheritance practices. Similarly, aristocratic women, long imagined to have been excluded from power, exerted a strong influence on family life, as Livingstone makes clear in her gender-conscious analysis of dowries, the age of men and women at marriage, lordship responsibilities of women, and contestations over property. The web of relations that bound aristocratic families in this period of French history, she finds, was a model of family based on affection, inclusion, and support, not domination and exclusion.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801457722
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 02/23/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Amy Livingstone is H. O. Hirt Chair and Professor of History at Wittenberg University. She is coeditor of Medieval Monks: Ideals and Realities.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Aristocrats and Their Families1. The Lands of the Loire, 1000–12002. Aristocratic Family Life3. Aristocratic Family Life Writ Small: The Fréteval, Mondoubleau, and Dives Kindred4. Inheritance: Diversity and Continuity5. Marriage and the Disposition of Property: A Sign of Status?6. Marriage: Practicalities, Ideologies, and Affection7. For Better, Not Worse: Wives and Husbands as Partners in Family and Lordship8. Contestations: Asserting and Reasserting a Place in the FamilyConclusion: Out of Love for My KinAppendix. Genealogical Charts
1. The Counts of Chartres
2. The Viscounts of Châteaudun to c. 1200
3. The Viscounts of Chartres
4. The Vidames of Chartres
5. The Lords of Alluyes-Gouet
6. The Lords of Montigny
7. The Fréteval-Mondoubleau-Dives Kindred
8. The Lords of Fréteval
9. The Dives Family
10. The Lords of Mondoubleau
11. The Descendants of Ingelbald Brito and Domitilla of Vendôme
12. The Lords of Lisle
13. The Lords of Langeais
Works Cited
Index

What People are Saying About This

Constance Brittain Bouchard

Amy Livingstone has addressed a central question about medieval family structure. Out of Love for My Kin is clearly based on an intimate knowledge of an enormous amount of primary information—to the extent that she often appears personally acquainted with the families discussed—and she is up to date on the vast modern literature as well.

Fredric Cheyette

Amy Livingstone has come to know the eleventh- and twelfth-century aristocratic families of the Loire region so well that she writes of them almost as though they were her own extended parentela. Here at last we have an account of medieval familial practices that uses the full range of available sources (and they are mountainous for this region stretching from Chartres to the Loire estuary) and that views a full range of familial activities. It is hardly surprising that we quickly discover that everything we thought we knew about the subject turns out to be partial or simply wrong (the supposed shift to strict patrilineage, for example). Livingstone’s book is a major contribution to the current reshaping of our conceptions of eleventh- and twelfth-century society.

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