Monks and their enemies: a comparative approach

Speculum 66 (4):764-796 (1991)
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Abstract

In a pioneering study Georges Duby showed how the system of justice that had prevailed in the Carolingian era ceased to function in the Mâconnais of the tenth century. His observations about the breakdown of public institutions opened up a new field of research, for they suggested the development in the tenth century of a unique set of judicial institutions and practices, different in kind from the traditional public order of the Roman and Roman-influenced Carolingian worlds. This was an important change, and a number of scholars turned their attention to the developments described by Duby

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