, Brepols, 2023 Hardback, xiv + 501 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:2 b/w, 9 maps b/w, Language: English. ISBN 9782503588490.
Summary In many countries in Northern and Eastern Europe, the period after 1000 saw the emergence of new Christian kingdoms. This process was soon reflected in works of historiography that traced the foundation and development of the new polities. Many of these texts had a lasting impact on the formation of political, ethnic, and religious identities of these states and peoples. This volume deals with some of these earliest histories narrating the past of the new polities that had emerged after 1000 in Northern, East Central, and Eastern Europe, as well as in the Adriatic regions. They have often been understood as 'national histories', but a closer look brings out the differences in their aims and construction. One question addressed here is to what extent these historians built on models of identification developed in earlier historiography. The volume provides an overview of several fundamental texts in which identities in the new Christian kingdoms were negotiated, and of recent research on these texts. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction: The Historiography of New Peoples and Polities in Northern and Eastern Europe? WALTER POHL and VERONIKA WIESER Scandinavian and Baltic Origins Adam of Bremen's Use of Earlier History IAN WOOD National Identity in Scandinavian Chronicles (Saxo and Snorri) SVERRE BAGGE Orkney, l fr Tryggvason, and the Conversion to Christianity ROSALIND BONT Biblical Motifs and the Shaping of Ethnic Categories in the Chronicle of Henry of Livonia STEFAN DONECKER and PETER FRAUNDORFER Cosmas of Prague, the Gesta principum Polonorum, and their Western Contexts The Legenda Christiani, the Chronica Bohemorum, and the Bohemian Slavs PAVL NA RYCHTEROV Space and Identity in the Chronica Bohemorum of Cosmas of Prague JAN HASIL Helmold of Bosau and our Reading of his Chronica Slavorum JAN KL P?T? Creating Dynastic Identity: Gallus Anonymus's Chronicle ZBIGNIEW DALEWSKI 'By the Crown of My Empire! The Things I Behold Are Greater than I Had Been Led to Believe!': The Narrative Pattern Sheba Visits Salomon in Medieval Narratives (Gallus's Chronicle, Chronicon Salernitanum, and P lerinage de Charlemagne) JACEK BANASZKIEWICZ Hungarian Origins and their Political Uses Hungarian Origins and Carolingian Politics in Regino of Pr m's Chronicle MAXIMILIAN DIESENBERGER Us and Them: The Description of Foreigners and Indigenous Peoples in Master P.'s and Simon of K za's Gesta (Thirteenth Century) D NIEL BAGI Christian Identity versus Heathendom: Hungarian Chroniclers Facing the Pagan/Nomadic Past and the Present L SZL VESZPR MY Histories of Origins from the Adriatic and the Balkans Circles of Identity: The Narratives of Thomas of Split and Domnius de Cranchis of Bra? NEVEN BUDAK Grado as Aquileia Nova and Split as Salona Nova? Local Historiography and Local Identity PETER ?TIH Patria Venecia: John the Deacon's Search for Venetian Origins FRANCESCO BORRI The 'Dioclean Tradition' in Serbian Literature of the Early Thirteenth Century ALEKSANDAR UZELAC The Rus' Primary Chronicle, the Old Testament, and the Byzantine Background The Debate over Authorship of the Rus' Primary Chronicle: Compilations, Redactions, and Urtexts DONALD OSTROWSKI Creating Time, Forging Identity, Building a State: The Primary Chronicle of Rus' OLEKSIY TOLOCHKO Historiography of the New Europe: Comparative Perspectives WALTER POHL Index