What is Medieval History?. John H. Arnold

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eigentlich gewesen ist (‘only to show what actually [or, more accurately, ‘essentially’] happened’).6 Moreover, while Ranke had broad interests in the Renaissance and Reformation periods, his followers tended to restrict their focus to high political history, based on study of governmental archives, which meant that pre-existing interests in social and cultural history were sidelined as rather ‘amateurish’ pursuits.

      The Annales mode of historiography continued strongly, never following a strict orthodoxy, but, rather, a broad perspective and set of complementary inclinations. Georges Duby and Jacques Le Goff developed Bloch’s legacy, the former pursuing in particular the important shifts in socioeconomic structures, the latter more interested in the cultural mentalité of the period. For all the French medievalists, Marxism provided a useful set of intellectual tools, and in the case of Duby in particular, encouraged the careful study of economic relations in understanding social structures. There had been earlier Marxist works of medieval history – Gaetano Salvemini had published a book on late thirteenth-century Florence in 1899 that considered its society in terms of class structures – but it was the Annales that brought theory sustainedly to bear on the period.

      Overall, the shifts within medieval history in the twentieth century largely followed broader currents in historiography. The Rankean period of professionalization focused its energy particularly on studies of high politics, with accompanying interests in the history of the law and the development of national constitutions. Over time, historiography came to admit medieval society and economics as legitimate areas that expanded the possibilities of the discipline; religion, for example, could be analysed as a sociocultural phenomenon rather than simply ecclesiastical governance. Women became a topic for sustained study particularly in the 1970s (though pioneering work in this area dates back to the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, for example by the economic historian Eileen Power), and the presence and treatment of minorities – Jews, lepers, heretics, homosexuals, slaves and ‘Saracens’ – in the 1980s (though excellent work on Jews and heretics had already appeared some decades earlier), and in both cases American scholars largely led the way. New philosophies of history, often rather loosely and not very helpfully termed ‘postmodernism’, have occasioned medievalist engagement, most explicitly (both pro- and anti-) in the US and France.12 The shifts had many causes, some stretching out into academia far beyond the particular field of medievalism,

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