Bloch, Marc - Feudal Society - ( Item 140321 )
To buy this item online using any major credit or debit card or Paypal, click the appropriate delivery option below
depending on where you are in the world.
Option 1 - Buy item for 50.90 with 1st class post TO A UK ADDRESS ONLY
Option 2 - Buy item for 49.60 with 2nd class post TO A UK ADDRESS ONLY
Option 3 - Buy item for 65.00 with Airmail TO AN ADDRESS IN USA OR CANADA
Option 4 - Buy item for 65.00 with Airmail TO AN ADDRESS IN THE REST OF THE WORLD (including the EU)
Bloch, Marc - Feudal Society - ( Item 140321 )
Published in London by Folio Society. 2012. First Thus. Fine Hardback. No inscriptions or bookplates. Fine slipcase. The text contains both volumes of the original work in a single volume. Bound in buckram. Blocked with a design by Adam McCaulay. 648 pages. Frontispiece and 32 pages of colour plates. Book size: 10" × 6.75". Set in Dante. In this seminal history, Marc Bloch reveals the bonds of loyalty that held medieval society together. Jacques Le Goff introduces. 'I will love what thou lovest; I will hate what thou hatest.' In his classic history, Marc Bloch quotes this oath as an example of the bond between lord and vassal known today as feudalism. The medieval world was held together by ties of loyalty between individuals, which formed a chain stretching from the highest to the lowest ranks. First published in English in 1961, this is a ground-breaking history of the people and institutions of medieval Europe up to the 13th century. Feudalism developed towards the end of the first millennium AD, 'in the fiery crucible of the German invasions'. Few kings had the resources to marshal an army, hence the growth of smaller armies of knights. In the absence of law and order, peasants gifted their lands to a lord, in return for protection and sustenance. Bloch analyses every aspect of feudalism and its contexts, from religion, economy, kinship and the judiciary to the subtler ways in which it moulded the medieval mind. There were terrible penalties for disloyalty; one knight was sent to a monastery for the rest of his life having killed his lord in battle – his sentence had been commuted from that of having his hands cut off. Chivalry and Christianity also informed the feudal relationship, and vice versa. One of the foremost French historians of the 20th century, Marc Bloch was a founding member of the Annales school of history, which emphasised the deep forces of social history rather than focusing on wars and politics. He was a professor of economic history at the Sorbonne until the outbreak of the Second World War, when he joined the French Resistance. Bloch was killed by the Gestapo in June 1944.
Price 49.60 (inc UK postage) Other items you may like
Others by the same author
Safe and Secure Online Buying
To buy online, please click the appropriate button above. You will be transferred to secure pages hosted by Paypal, the largest online transaction processor in the world. You can pay with any major credit or debit card or by Paypal.
Money Back Guarantee, Secure Packaging and Fast Response
We are a major online trader with excellent feedback from satisfied customers on Ebay (over 25,000 customers). We will refund your costs for items returned within seven days for any reason. If we are at fault we will also refund your return postage. Items are sent in top grade book boxes for protection. Large items or multiple purchases may be boxed. Items will be despatched within a day of receipt of your order, usually on the same day if ordered before noon.