Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
- Der ernsthafte König oder die Hölle schon auf Erden: Gewalt im Dienste des Seelenheils
- Lazarus’s Vision of Hell: A Significant Passage in Late-Medieval Passion Plays
- Violence and Late-Medieval Justice
- La noblesse face à la violence: arrestations, exécutions et assassinats dans les Chroniques de Jean Froissart commandées par Louis de Gruuthuse (Paris, B.N.F., mss. fr. 2643–46)
- The Music of the Medieval Body in Pain
- The Emergence of Sexual Violence in Quattrocento Florentine Art
- Some Lesser-Known Ladies of Public Art: On Women and Lions
- The Self in the Eyes of the Other: Creating Violent Expectations in Late-Medieval German Drama
- Cleansing the Social Body: Andrea Mantegna’s: Judith and the Moor (1490–1505)
- Aggression and Annihilation: Spanish Sentimental Romances and the Legends of the Saints
- Der Malleus Maleficarum (1487) und die Hexenverfolgung in Deutschland
- “For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
- Zur Bedeutung von Gewalt in der Reynaert-Epik des 15. Jahrhunderts
- Terror and Laughter in the Images of the Wild Man: The Case of the 1489 Valentin et Orson
- Rereading Rape in Two Versions of La fille du comte de Pontieu
- The French Kill Their King: The Assassination of Childeric II in Late-Medieval French Historiography
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- Spectator Responses to an Image of Violence: Seeing Apollonia
- Der ernsthafte König oder die Hölle schon auf Erden: Gewalt im Dienste des Seelenheils
- Lazarus’s Vision of Hell: A Significant Passage in Late-Medieval Passion Plays
- Violence and Late-Medieval Justice
- La noblesse face à la violence: arrestations, exécutions et assassinats dans les Chroniques de Jean Froissart commandées par Louis de Gruuthuse (Paris, B.N.F., mss. fr. 2643–46)
- The Music of the Medieval Body in Pain
- The Emergence of Sexual Violence in Quattrocento Florentine Art
- Some Lesser-Known Ladies of Public Art: On Women and Lions
- The Self in the Eyes of the Other: Creating Violent Expectations in Late-Medieval German Drama
- Cleansing the Social Body: Andrea Mantegna’s: Judith and the Moor (1490–1505)
- Aggression and Annihilation: Spanish Sentimental Romances and the Legends of the Saints
- Der Malleus Maleficarum (1487) und die Hexenverfolgung in Deutschland
- “For They Know Not What They Do”: Violence in Medieval Passion Iconography
- Zur Bedeutung von Gewalt in der Reynaert-Epik des 15. Jahrhunderts
- Terror and Laughter in the Images of the Wild Man: The Case of the 1489 Valentin et Orson
- Rereading Rape in Two Versions of La fille du comte de Pontieu
- The French Kill Their King: The Assassination of Childeric II in Late-Medieval French Historiography
Summary
This special edition of Fifteenth-Century Studies expands upon previous anthologies concentrating on violence in late-medieval and early renaissance Europe in that it includes an unprecedented array of studies, each of which is the product of a distinct discipline and methodology. Unlike Violence and Civil Order in Italian Cities 1200–1500 (ed. Lauro Martines [Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972]), a collection of twelve closely-related articles by historians of pre-modern Italy, the present publication provides scholars with seventeen essays which examine the fundamental nature of violence, present its various manifestations, and explore wide-ranging perceptions of this brutal phenomenon in France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. Most articles appear in English, but some are in German and one in French; whereas the majority address late-medieval phenomena, a few focus primarily on early renaissance issues. The essays offer diverse glimpses into subjects which have gone unexplored hitherto and therefore remained little-known: this compilation of articles widens, adjusts, and clarifies our view of the period, representing also the pluralistic character of today's scholarship. In so doing, the contributions build upon such monographs as Robert Muchembled's La Violence au village: sociabilité et comportements populaires en Artois du XVe au XVIIe siècle (Turnhout: Brepols, 1989), Christiane Raynaud's La Violence au moyen âge XIIIe–XVe siècle, d’après les livres d’histoire en français (Paris: Le Léopard d’Or, 1990), David Nirenberg's Communities of Violence: Persecution of Minorities in the Middle Ages (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), Jody Enders's The Medieval Theater of Cruelty: Rhetoric, Memory, Violence (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1999), and Michael Papio's Keen and Violent Remedies: Social Satire and the Grotesque in Masuccio Salernitano's “Novellino” (New York: Peter Lang, 2000).
While the most researched society and culture in the present anthology seems to be that of late-medieval France, the articles discussing violence within this region introduce a broad spectrum spanning royal and public justice, historical culture, religious and secular literature, royal and courtly illuminations, theater and music. These essays addressing France examine not only such texts as the Mystères de la Passion and the Passion Isabeau, but also the earliest extant version of Valentin et Orson, and La fille du comte de Pontieu, and such images as Jean Fouquet's Martyrdom of Saint Apollonia, miniatures from the Chroniques de Froissart commissioned by Louis de Gruuthuse, from Les Fleurs des Chroniques, and the Grandes Chroniques de France.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fifteenth-Century Studies Vol. 27A Special Issue on Violence in Fifteenth-Century Text and Image, pp. 1 - 6Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002