Power and wealth
- Rachel Stone
Research Output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding Chapter Peer-review
Abstract
Most early medieval nobles were distinguished by their wealth as well as their power. The highest Merovingian nobility were already extraordinarily rich by European standards. Such wealth took a variety of forms. Most significant was land, vital not only as a source of rent and marketable crops, but as a key component in patronage networks. The importance of land is shown by a passing comment in the Gesta Fontanellensis about an abbot who had given away monastic land in benefice: ‘Indeed, such rectors are worse than pagans, since were a pagan to burn the place with fire, yet he would not take the land with him.’
Carolingian wills show both the quantity of treasure that nobles held, and its cultural significance: the will of Eberhard and Gisela makes important symbolic legacies of weapons and clothing as well as books. Poetry, too, expresses the emotional force of precious objects: Waltharius, the Paderborn epic and Ermoldus’ poems are full of gold and jewels. There was also a long tradition of religious texts identifying such ‘treasure’ with goodness.
Carolingian wills show both the quantity of treasure that nobles held, and its cultural significance: the will of Eberhard and Gisela makes important symbolic legacies of weapons and clothing as well as books. Poetry, too, expresses the emotional force of precious objects: Waltharius, the Paderborn epic and Ermoldus’ poems are full of gold and jewels. There was also a long tradition of religious texts identifying such ‘treasure’ with goodness.
Publication Information
Output type
Research Output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding Chapter Peer-review
Original language
EnglishPublication milestones
- Published - 05/11/2011
Publication status
Published - 05/11/2011
Publisher
Cambridge University Press, United States, United KingdomISBN (Print)
9781139017473Chapter Number
7External Publication IDs
- ORCID: /0000-0002-6966-7503/work/26778254
Host publication title
Morality and Masculinity in the Carolingian EmpireHost publication editors
- Rachel Stone
