The early medieval history of the European periphery in the 9th century and its relations with the Carolingian and the Byzantine Empire have in the last two decades become a focal point for medievalists. In a number of research papers studying the areas beyond the eastern borders of the Carolingian Empire, interest has been shown for the northeastern hinterlands of the Adriatic coast, that is, the area in which the Duchy of Croatia was formed during the 9th century. The question at the heart of these medievalists' interest is the appearance of Croats in recorded history. The modern solutions to this question are not unanimous, as they range from a collective migration in the 7th century to the creation of a Croatian elite in the first half of the 10th. Also, due to the lack of primary sources, various methodological templates have been used to make sense of the past, applied chiefly—until recently—by non‐Croatian historians. Meanwhile, the developmental perspective of the 9th century has often been disregarded due to the ever‐present fragmentation of research—especially regarding the interrelated shaping of social and identity structures during the Carolingian and post‐Carolingian era—although this has proven essential as a means of historical inquiry when primary sources are scarce. The formation and survival of structures in early medieval Croatia during the 9th and 10th centuries should be considered in terms of the long‐term binarity of identities at the juncture of the Carolingian and the Byzantine Empire, as this paper will attempt to do.
This paper examines the narrative strategies of the oldest two medieval Eastern Adriatic historical accounts regarding the emergence of the Early Medieval gentes in local history. Seen through the framework of Othering, these accounts display complicated images within images rather than a linear narrative. At the same time, two categories of the Other seem to appear in them -the present, preferable Other, and the past, undesirable Other. By employing such strategies, the two histories depict all the gentes in an almost identical manner, and in accordance with the established images, with only some layers of actual historical background. [1]
During the 14th century, the state and governmental development brought forward the need to simplify a complex social reality. The management of this complexity eventually led to the formation of more tightly connected social groups, some of which can be considered as corporate groups. At the same time, different identities became clearly visible. Both processes can be observed in the Kingdom of Croatia during the Angevin reorganization of their dominions. The paper argues that these processes, among other things, nurtured the emergence of a pre-modern Croatian nation.
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