Ottonian Germany 2013
DOI: 10.7765/9781526112774.00008
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The Chronicon of Thietmar of Merseburg

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Cited by 7 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…1‐3 and MGH SS 3), a number of more recent English translations of charters and narrative sources have increased their accessibility and utility, particularly for non‐specialists and classroom use, and include significant helpful apparatuses such as genealogies, maps, and commentary, as well as substantial introductions which place the works in historical context and provide good overviews of the political milieux in which the authors were writing (e.g. Bachrach & Bachrach, ; Fanning & Bachrach, ; Gilsdorf, ; Hill, ; MacLean, ; Squatriti, ; and Warner, ; for the usefulness of Widukind and Thietmar as windows into contemporary views about kingship see Bagge, :23‐94 and 95‐188 respectively). The picture we have today of Ottonian rule has been pieced together from these broad kinds of sources, and suggests a model of kingship that utilized a variety of methods and tools for governing.…”
Section: Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…1‐3 and MGH SS 3), a number of more recent English translations of charters and narrative sources have increased their accessibility and utility, particularly for non‐specialists and classroom use, and include significant helpful apparatuses such as genealogies, maps, and commentary, as well as substantial introductions which place the works in historical context and provide good overviews of the political milieux in which the authors were writing (e.g. Bachrach & Bachrach, ; Fanning & Bachrach, ; Gilsdorf, ; Hill, ; MacLean, ; Squatriti, ; and Warner, ; for the usefulness of Widukind and Thietmar as windows into contemporary views about kingship see Bagge, :23‐94 and 95‐188 respectively). The picture we have today of Ottonian rule has been pieced together from these broad kinds of sources, and suggests a model of kingship that utilized a variety of methods and tools for governing.…”
Section: Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He had been living, unjustly and knowingly, with the wife of a man who had been excommunicated. (Warner, :243‐44)…”
Section: Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He did not listen to them, however, and gave her to his son in marriage, with the approval of all the leading men of Italy and Germany. 67 Why, then, would Otto I accept Theophanu instead of the hoped for purple-born princess? As Karl Leyser inimitably put it, "Ottonian emperorship, just because of its origins and bestowed by the hands of a louche pope from a family of erstwhile Greek clients, urgently needed authentication."…”
Section: Sanctity and Memory In Medieval Saxonymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thietmar of Merseburg reports in his Chronicon that John Tzimiskes "sent across the sea to our emperor, not the desired maiden, but rather his niece, Theophanu." 11 Widukind of Corvey (ca. 925-after 973 CE) identifies Theophanu simply as a "girl," without attempting to establish her family relationships.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Distinctive norms and perceptions lead communities not only to prefer particular packages of public goods, but to demand self‐rule – that is, the power to provide themselves with the public goods they desire. In the words of the medieval chronicler Thietmar of Merseburg: ‘Rule by foreigners is the greatest punishment’ (Warner, 2001, p. 81).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%