Family, Commerce, and Religion in London and Cologne: Anglo-German Emigrants, c.1000–c.1300 (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought: Fourth Series)
Cambridge University Press, 11/5/1998
EAN 9780521632928, ISBN10: 0521632927
Hardcover, 296 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm
Language: English
This book explores the full range of social, economic, religious and cultural contacts between England and the German city of Cologne during the central Middle Ages, c.1000 to c.1300. A wealth of original archive material reveals an extensive network of English and German emigrants who were surprisingly successful in achieving assimilation into their new homeland. From beguines to English sterling, pilgrims to emigrants, crusaders and merchants to teachers, there existed a complex world of Anglo-German associations. The book therefore maintains the thesis that the Anglo-German nexus should be given a higher profile in current historiography on the Middle Ages, and that the book should stand as a contribution towards the reconfiguration of medieval history away from the boundaries created by modern political and intellectual categories. It will also encourage historians to reconsider their basic assumptions about what constituted 'medieval Europe'.
Preface
Part I. The Historical Background, Anglo-German Foundations and the City of Cologne
1. The London guildhall and Cologne's rise to dominance in the eleventh and twelfth centuries
2. The rise of the Hansa towns and the decline of Cologne's dominance in the thirteenth century
3. Anglo-German currency exchange
Cologne and English sterling
Part II. Anglo-German Family, Property and Inheritance Ties
4. The formation of individual and family identity in medieval Cologne
property and surnames
5. Anglicus in Colonia
the social, economic and legal status of the English in Cologne during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
6. Cologne families with English connections
the Zudendorps
7. Cologners in England
Part III. Anglo-German Religious and Cultural Life
8. Confraternities, expatriate monks, pious legends and pilgrims
9. Clerics, canon law, crusaders and culture
Conclusion
a reappraisal of the Anglo-German nexus
Appendices I-IV
Bibliography.