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Towards a trans-regional approach to early medieval Iberia

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 20:23 authored by Graham Barrett, Alvaro Carvajal Castro, Igor Santos Salazar, Guillermo Tomas Faci, Andre Evangelista Marques, Leticia Agundez San Miguel, Ainoa Castro Correa, Marcos Fernandez Ferreiro, Jonathan Jarrett, David Peterson, Rosa Quetglas Munar, Jose Carlos Sanchez Pardo

The past few decades have witnessed great change in the study of the early Middle Ages in the Northern Iberian Peninsula. Spanish and Portuguese historiographies have moved away from older grand narratives such as ‘Reconquest and Repopulation’, which traced a centuries-long process encompassing the ultimate victory of Christianity over Islam and the construction of distinct nations or national societies. The basic tenets of these and other essentialist approaches to a period traditionally seen as the cradle of Spain and Portugal have been questioned and now superseded by a clearer awareness of the territorial diversity characterising the 8th to 11th centuries. Yet the ballast of both nationalism and regionalism has obstructed meaningful comparison amongst the Iberian regions to date. Drawing on the work of the research group EarlyMedIberia, this article argues for a new trans-regional approach to Northern Iberia, looking beyond political and geographical boundaries to consider the whole in a comparative light, and stressing the commonalities between regional and local societies. It does so by providing an overview of the extant charter material from before 1100 (indicating the principal editions) and by reviewing the major historiography. The conclusion proposes a closer assessment of the differences and similarities amongst regional historiographies, based on a more nuanced understanding of how they have been moulded by the specificities of the charter corpus in each region, as the first step towards a more integrated, contextualised, and rigorously comparative approach to the early Middle Ages in Northern Iberia.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Humanities and Heritage (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

History Compass

Volume

20

Issue

6

Pages/Article Number

1-18

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1478-0542

eISSN

1478-0542

Date Submitted

2022-06-23

Date Accepted

2022-05-17

Date of First Publication

2022-06-03

Date of Final Publication

2022-06-03

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-06-23

ePrints ID

49838