Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies

This article begins by considering the achievement of the Les cartulaires volume of essays (1993), particularly in launching a field of inquiry. It reflects on how this field has developed since the early 1990s, especially what has characterised the research and the kinds of themes and questions his...

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Main Author: Joanna Tucker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2024-03-01
Series:Studia Historica. Historia Medieval
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/uno/index.php/Studia_H_Historia_Medieval/article/view/31535
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author Joanna Tucker
author_facet Joanna Tucker
author_sort Joanna Tucker
collection DOAJ
description This article begins by considering the achievement of the Les cartulaires volume of essays (1993), particularly in launching a field of inquiry. It reflects on how this field has developed since the early 1990s, especially what has characterised the research and the kinds of themes and questions historians have explored. It situates the latest work on cartularies within the broader development of the field, such as long established interests in cartulary function, typologies, codicology and scribes, and the influences of editorial practices, as well as emerging ideas about reading cartularies. The article highlights how varied and multi-dimensional all of this work has been, and addresses some questions that arise from this. As a result, it offers fresh ways to understand and conceptualise the field.
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series Studia Historica. Historia Medieval
spelling doaj-art-70d69fd6efb4443eae5b047fcbbf4ef92025-02-06T17:49:08ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaStudia Historica. Historia Medieval2445-35952024-03-0142192410.14201/shhme202342192437004Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartulariesJoanna Tucker0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7464-9492University of GlasgowThis article begins by considering the achievement of the Les cartulaires volume of essays (1993), particularly in launching a field of inquiry. It reflects on how this field has developed since the early 1990s, especially what has characterised the research and the kinds of themes and questions historians have explored. It situates the latest work on cartularies within the broader development of the field, such as long established interests in cartulary function, typologies, codicology and scribes, and the influences of editorial practices, as well as emerging ideas about reading cartularies. The article highlights how varied and multi-dimensional all of this work has been, and addresses some questions that arise from this. As a result, it offers fresh ways to understand and conceptualise the field.https://revistas.usal.es/uno/index.php/Studia_H_Historia_Medieval/article/view/31535les cartulaires bookmedievalmanuscriptscharterscartularies
spellingShingle Joanna Tucker
Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies
Studia Historica. Historia Medieval
les cartulaires book
medieval
manuscripts
charters
cartularies
title Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies
title_full Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies
title_fullStr Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies
title_full_unstemmed Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies
title_short Recognising Cartulary Studies Thirty Years after Les cartularies
title_sort recognising cartulary studies thirty years after les cartularies
topic les cartulaires book
medieval
manuscripts
charters
cartularies
url https://revistas.usal.es/uno/index.php/Studia_H_Historia_Medieval/article/view/31535
work_keys_str_mv AT joannatucker recognisingcartularystudiesthirtyyearsafterlescartularies