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The Shaping of German Identity
Authority and Crisis, 1245–1414
German identity, a key force in history, took shape during the late Middle Ages. This book explains how and why.
Len Scales (Author)
9780521573337, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 26 April 2012
636 pages, 4 maps 1 table
23.5 x 15.8 x 3.4 cm, 1.15 kg
'Scales has brought together an immense amount of material dealing with the topic of German identity in the later medieval period … this volume will be valuable to specialists and graduate students.' David S. Bachrach, Austrian History Yearbook
German identity began to take shape in the late Middle Ages during a period of political weakness and fragmentation for the Holy Roman Empire, the monarchy under which most Germans lived. Between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries, the idea that there existed a single German people, with its own lands, language and character, became increasingly widespread, as was expressed in written works of the period. This book - the first on its subject in any language - poses a challenge to some dominant assumptions of current historical scholarship: that early European nation-making inevitably took place within the developing structures of the institutional state; and that, in the absence of such structural growth, the idea of a German nation was uniquely, radically and fatally retarded. In recounting the formation of German identity in the late Middle Ages, this book offers an important new perspective both on German history and on European nation-making.
Introduction: German questions
1. Modern history: inventing the medieval German nation
2. Ruled out: monarchy, government and 'state' in Germany
3. Realm of imagination: communicating power after the Hohenstaufen
4. Shades of a kingdom: in search of a German political community
5. The matter of Rome: universalising political identities
6. Roman empire, German nation: the German imperial tradition
7. Trojans, Giants and other Germans: peoplehoods forgotten, remembered and relocated
8. Rome's Barbarians: accounting for the Germans
9. East: applying identities
10. Being German (I): place and name
11. Being German (II): language and locality
Conclusion: endings and beginnings
Bibliography.
Subject Areas: Social & cultural history [HBTB], Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500 [HBLC], European history [HBJD]