Skip to main content

IMC 2010: Sessions

Session 104: Popular Politics and Resistance in East and West

Monday 12 July 2010, 11.15-12.45

Organiser:Bernard Gowers, Keble College, University of Oxford
Moderator/Chair:Thomas Brown, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh
Paper 104-aPopular Heresy in Early Medieval Europe: Was There Any?
(Language: English)
R. I. Moore, School of Historical Studies, Newcastle University
Index terms: Religious Life, Social History
Paper 104-bResistance and Rebellion in the Umayyad Period
(Language: English)
Andrew Marsham, Department of Islamic & Middle Eastern Studies, University of Edinburgh
Index terms: Islamic and Arabic Studies, Politics and Diplomacy, Social History
Paper 104-c(Peasant) Politics as Normal in the Carolingian West
(Language: English)
Bernard Gowers, Keble College, University of Oxford
Index terms: Politics and Diplomacy, Social History
Abstract

This session explores questions of popular politics and resistance around the Mediterranean in the early Middle Ages, through case studies ranging from the Umayyads to the Carolingian west. It will consider what 'popular politics' might involve, within and between rural communities, and in relation to overarching authorities. What forms might resistance take? How did 'elite' and 'popular' political cultures interact? What was the role of religion in ordering and articulating these practices? When Latin Europe and the central Islamic lands are placed alongside each other, are the most significant differences between or within the two spheres?