Consonant with the church's insistence on individual responsibility and with the general enfranchisement of the population, this way of holding property and of dividing inheritances spread to become characteristic of all but the most servile elements of society in Toulouse and the Toulousain during the course of the twelfth century. [...] With the exception of substantial segments of the population, such as serfs, the new dispensation ushered in or symbolized by the Gregorians witnessed the emancipation at first of the higher service cadres of the town and countryside and then of the humbler classes. [...] The collections of the consuls of Toulouse, those of the counts and of their successors the kings of France are threadbare in the twelfth century, but reasonably thick in the thirteenth. [...] Some places are well served; others are practically unknown.24 In the City, the southern and larger section of the town, much is known about the "salvetat," an area running roughly from the Chateau Narbonnais to the Hospital of Saint-Remezy, because of the preservation of the archives of the Hospitalers to which was added the smaller and already partly destroyed collection of the Templars in the e [...] The destruction of the archives of the monastery of Moissac and of its dependencies in the City, the monastery and church of the Daurade, that is, and the church of the Dalbade, means that the riverine section of the City to the north of the "salvetat" is little known.
Authors
- Bibliography, etc. Note
- Includes bibliographical references
- Control Number Identifier
- CaOOCEL
- Dewey Decimal Classification Number
- 305.4/0944/86209022
- Dewey Decimal Edition Number
- 20
- General Note
- Issued as part of the desLibris books collection
- Geographic Area Code
- e-fr---
- ISBN
- 9781771101257 9780888441010
- LCCN
- HQ1147.F7
- LCCN Item number
- M86 1990eb
- Modifying agency
- CaBNVSL
- Original cataloging agency
- CaOTU
- Physical Description | Extent
- 1 electronic text (xiv, 235 p.)
- Publisher or Distributor Number
- CaOOCEL
- Rights
- Access restricted to authorized users and institutions
- System Control Number
- (CaBNVSL)slc00213241 (OCoLC)236351269 (CaOOCEL)420493
- System Details Note
- Mode of access: World Wide Web
- Transcribing agency
- CaOTU
Table of Contents
- Contents 8
- Preface 10
- Abbreviations 11
- Maps 12
- 1: Intentions and Sources 16
- A. Historiography 16
- B. Monographs and Ideology 19
- C. Scribes and Archives 23
- D. Types of Documents 30
- E. Law Books 32
- F. Special Documents, Inquests and Trials 34
- 2: Society 37
- A. Public Office and Law 37
- B. The Family 42
- C. Practical Equalities? 51
- D. Religion 56
- 3: Sex 62
- A. Divergences and Alternatives 62
- B. Women and Men: Lézat 66
- C. Sex and Love 78
- 4: Relationships 81
- A. Prostitution 81
- B. Concubinage 84
- C. Marriage 94
- 5: Matrimony 103
- A. Contracts 103
- B. Family 115
- C. Economics 120
- D. Widowhood 123
- 6: Contexts 128
- A. Class and Family 128
- B. Equality? 131
- C. Violence 138
- Appendix 1: Charters dealing with Women 146
- Appendix 2: Tables 178
- A. Charitable Bequests 178
- B. Tables about Matrimony 180
- Appendix 3: Families 188
- A. Astro 188
- B. Raina 198
- C. Sobaccus 200
- D. Tonenquis 205
- Appendix 4: Lézat and Moissac 210
- A. Peter de Dalbs and the Dalbs Family 210
- B. The Daurade and Lézat versus Moissac 213
- C. Witnesses against Peter de Dalbs 216
- D. Women mentioned in the Testimony 218
- Appendix 5: Visitation of Lézat 222
- A. Circumstances ca. 1265 222
- B. Alphabetical List of the Monks 223
- C. Order of the Depositions 226
- Bibliography 228
- A. Archival Documents and Manuscript Texts 228
- B. Published Documents and Texts 234
- C. Secondary Studies 235
- Index 240
- A 240
- B 241
- C 242
- D 243
- E 243
- F 243
- G 244
- H 244
- I 245
- J 245
- K 245
- L 245
- M 245
- N 247
- O 247
- P 247
- Q 248
- R 248
- S 248
- T 249
- U 250
- V 250
- W 250
- Y 250