"}},"i":0}}]}"> [d][66][77][104] Althoff's book nevertheless restricted itself to the East and West Frankish kingdoms.[105] Althoff was, in addition, very clear just how "preliminary and in need of elaboration" his results remained.[66][77] He saw his own published research as an "interim balance sheet ... in a long-term effort adequately to understand and describe the operation and structures of medieval overlordship".[105]
The extent to which he dealt with the earlier Middle Ages remained limited. For the Merovingian period he imputes relatively little significance to the place of "ritual". He writes of "modest beginnings ... to the curtailment of the king's power ... still very little circumscribed by ritual procedures and processes".[77] Althoff picks out the meeting between the pope and King Pepin at Ponthion in 754 as a milestone, not simply in terms of its obvious political consequences for the enduring power relationship centred on the papacy and what became the Holy Roman empire, but also in terms of "the development of Frankish ritual culture".[77][106] In the ninth and tenth centuries which followed he identified a growing "need for ritual procedures".[107] The led, in the tenth and eleventh centuries, to a "broadening of ritual behaviour patterns".[66][77] The tenth and eleventh centuries were indeed the principal focus of the book. Althoff observed wryly that the ritual of royal self-humiliation introduced by Henry IV came to a "somewhat abrupt end" with the so-called "walk to"Canossa.[77][108] Althoff attached decisive importance to the events in Canossa: "... the effect of the events in Canossa was enduring. Not the least of its consequences was undoubtedly a reconfiguration of ritual behaviour patterns".[77][106] The king's voluntary self-subordination could indeed be presented at a symbolic illustration of subordination to the pope. But due to the numerous subsequent accusations that the king had failed to stand by his agreements, ritual statements were seen to lose their power to bind the parties.[77] Althoff's book was critically reviewed in Historische Zeitschrift by Hanna Vollrath[de], who complained that the author was purporting to "explain general shifts from one specific ritual event".[106]
Althoff's extensive research into the medieval "rules of the political game" and rituals found their way repeatedly into his 1996 biography of Otto III. The king himself was consigned firmly to a supporting role. Althoff expressed his scepticism over whether it could or would ever be possible to capture in a book the individual personality of any medieval ruler. Instead, he wrote that he wanted to use the biography format as a vehicle for a "source-oriented description of the framework and constraints surrounding medieval kingship, using the example of Otto III".[82][109][110] Althoff's idiosyncratic approach to biography attracted criticism from a number of academic commentators who found its underlying premise unpersuasive.[111]Michael Borgolte was critical that in "tying up Ottonian kingship in customs and rituals", Althoff had lost sight of the personality of Otto III, identified in its titles as the subject of the book.[112]Franz-Reiner Erkens[de] had similar criticisms.[111]
More criticism of Althoff's researches on the centrality of medieval rituals came from Philippe Buc (then Professor at Stanford). Buc found it inappropriate to use twentieth century theories derived from Social science and Anthropology as prisms through which to view early medieval source narratives. For Buc, medieval rituals were deliberate constructs, the realities of which were unknowable and unprovable. He called for a proper (and greater) account to be taken of the contextual connection between sources and their authors' intentions. The newly developed (and increasingly accepted) concept of "medieval ritual" was excessively dependent on a superficial understanding of early medieval sources.[113][114] In a later review of Gerd Althoff, Die Macht der Rituale (Darmstadt, 2004), Buc underscored despite differences Althoff's pathbreaking work.[115]
Ottonian historiography
Another recurring focus of Althoff's work is the source-value of Ottonian historiography. Like Johannes Fried at Frankfurt, he used Ottonian historiography as an opportunity to assess the distorting impact of oral transmission on the written historiographical records dating from (in this instance) the tenth century.[116] According to Fried, those distortions were so powerful that the events on which the resulting written sources were based were "never identical with the actual events".[117]Widukind of Corvey's Res gestae Saxonicae, widely seen as among the most important contemporary historical sources on the Ottonian period, was condemned by Fried as "saturated with errors".[117] Althoff came to a completely different set of conclusions on Widukind's dependability. He insisted that there were particularly good reasons to place trust in the Res gestae Saxonicae, on account of its dedication to Matilda, the teenage daughter of Otto the Great who in 967/968, when the work was completed, was the only member of the imperial family north of the Alps. In this context Althoff inferred a clear didactic motive on the part of Widukind: "... to make the emperor's young daughter politically capable".[118] From what was written, Matilda could see which men she was going to be dealing with, how the histories of the leading families had shaped current relationships, and what conflicts each had fought with the Ottonians. That this was a core purpose of the Res gestae Saxonicae was also apparent, according to Althoff, from the simple weighting of the book. Rather than giving equal weight to all the significant "deeds of the Saxons", the entire Italian policy was confined to a single chapter, while the missionary policy to the east and the complex negotiations after 955 that led, in 968, to the establishment of the Archbishopric of Magdeburg received no mention. From this selective approach, Althoff concluded, "the key witness [Widukind] is trustworthy".[118][119]
Building his argument, Althoff contends that in tenth century Ottonian historiography the liberty to change the "accepted version of truth" was severely restricted in respect of any issues in which the self-defined "good and great" had an interest. Changes made at the discretion of the chronicler were not possible. It was certainly the case, however, that the "accepted version of truth" might contain whitewashing and emphases that were incorporated to satisfy the expectations of the "good and great".[120] Althoff asked about the problems that had triggered the creation of a piece of historiographocal work, and from his conclusions on that point he inferred "a connection between actual concerns at the time when the work was produced and the resulting motives and objectives of the author(s)".[121] It was, he pointed out, often crisis situations that prompted religious communities to produce hagiographies and historiographies.[122] Numerous anecdotes, dreams and visions, frequently included in tenth century historiography, carry an argumentative kernel of criticism against the powerful.[123] Althoff demonstrated that in the historical writings produced at the great monetaries of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim, open criticism of the rulers appeared in instances where rulers had not properly look after the interests of the religious.[124] He was also able to adduce the results of new research findings, such as those drawn from various types of "memorial sources" and conflict resolution research.[125]
Gerd Althoff and Johannes Fried
Indications emerged during the 1990s that there was more to the differences between Gerd Althoff and Johannes Fried at Frankfurt than a mere disagreement on the value of certain tenth century sources on Ottonian history. In 1995 Althoff published a review of Fried's book, published the previous year, "Der Weg in die Geschichte" which, in the words of one commentator, purported to depict the "beginnings of German history .... often a contentious theme".[126] Althoff's review triggered a broader dispute on the role of imagination and "fantasy" in the work of a historian.[127] Althoff challenged the academic seriousness of the book. He criticised what he saw as Fried's tendency, in the book, to place excessive confidence in certain sources leading to predetermined conclusions and found the overall style of the book "decidedly suggestive". He complained that Fried had failed to make clear the frontier between "speculation" and "embellishments and imaginings".[127] Althoff also indicated that he had detected regression from conclusions to selected evidence (rather than the logical sequence involving progression from evidence to conclusions) was evident in his complaint of what he described as Fried's tendency to impute motives from facts.[127] He also made the criticism that Fried was including significant statements that were not covered by any sources, which was a particular problem when dealing with timed and places for which few sources were available. The unverifiability of these statements meant that their use violated of a basic ground rule of academic research.[127] Althoff's stinging attack appeared in issue 260 of Historische Zeitschrift and covered eleven pages. Johannes Fried's rebuttal of it appeared in the same edition of the journal and covered twelve pages. Althoff, he asserted, had been ripping his "quotes out of context" and imputating to him statements which did not appear in the book.[128] Althoff's own contribution involved coming up with nothing but hypotheses, never arriving at any reliable conclusions.[128] Althoff, he indicated, only regarded historical conclusions as valid if they were own - branded by Fried as "Althoffiana" - and was neither able nor willing to countenance any other viewpoint.[128] Other historians joined in: there were, however, few who were prepared to criticise Fried or his book in so sharp a manner.[126]Peter Moraw, Franz-Reiner Erkens and Arnold Esch (historian)[de] were all supportive of Fried's position.[129] Hanna Vollrath commended the book as "history writing in the best sense".[130]Michael Borgolte, also impressed, found it "at the same time a work both of modern and postmodern history writing", and "the representative work on medieval history of our time".[131]
Another point of contention between Althoff and Fried involved Fried's intpretation of the elevation in status of the PiastBolesław I at the elaborately choreographed (and suibsequently much disputed between historians) Gnesen meeting between Bolesław and the emperor, which took place in the year 1000. In 1989 Fried set forward the thesis that the Gnesen meeting represented the limitation of an uprising by Bolesław (subsequently viewed in mainstream Polish sources as the first King of Poland) to an essentially pragmatic acknowledgement of acts that had already taken place on the ground.[132] In his 1996 biography of Otto III Althoff set forward a contrasting image of Gnesen as an exceptionally honourable demonstration, sealing a friendship alliance between emperor and king.[82] The traditional actions - the exchange of gifts and the demonstration of unity through several days of feasting - were common features of early medieval friendship ritual.[133]
Differences between Althoff and Fried were again on display following Fried's re-evaluation of the emperor's so-called "Canossa Humiliation",[134] published in 2008, and still attracting attention in the press in 2009.[135][136] Althoff rejected Fried's intperpretation of Canossa as a form of peace treaty between the emperor and the pope. He asserted that Fried's view was based on "misunderstandings and selective choice of traditions".[137][138] Other historians were also critical of Fried's reinterpretation of Canossa.[139] Fried reacted a few years later by restating his view of Canossa in more detail and, despite a stated intention to back his arguments "Sine ira et studio" in a style that others found polemical. Those who disagreed with his position were not identified by name - other than in the footnotes - because he did not wish to "cheapen" the debate.[140][141] Fried quoted Althoff directly, but without identifying him by name, instead referring merely to a "former author" ("... damals-Autor").[142] Althoff waited until 2014 before going into print with a further refutation of Fried's thesis that the Canossa was no more than a ritualised of peace treaty. He had collected fresh evidence which reflected an alternative official understanding on the part of the papacy. According to this research, the king-emperor was under an absolute duty of obedience to the pope. And disobedience would constitute a heresy: that would trigger exclusion from the Community of Believers. Althoff concluded that this uncompromising policy on the part of the pope with regard to the king and the princes precluded any possibility of Henry having concluded some sort of interim political alliance with the pope without informing the princes.[143][144]
Impact
Based on his own research during and since the 1980s, Gerd Althoff has played a central role in the re-evaluation of kingship in the Early and High Middle Ages. He has done this through his analysis of conflicts among leading families, his observations on the political significance of social networks in the period, his research into rituals and his conclusions on the central importance of co-operation and consultation in the political process.[145][146] According to David Warner rituals and ceremonies have now become part of the "mainstream of virtually every area of historical scholarship".[147][148]Hans-Werner Goetz went further in 2003, asserting that early medieval kingship was principally defined by ritual and the symbolism of overlordship [e][149] During recent decades a whole succession of historical works has been published covering processions, the interactions and meetings of rulers, burial cerminies and other ritualised activities.[150][151]
Althoff's interest on the Medieval "political rules of the game" was not just taken up by German medievalists. The themes were also increasingly researched and discussed between mainstream Anglo-Saxon and Frenchmedievalists.[152][153] Althoff's articles also found their way into American standard works.[154][155] During the early part of the twentieth century English language versions of several of his contributions were published.[156][157] Althoff's research was generally well received internationally among specialist medievalist literary critics. His contributions served to intensify and enrich the dialogue between Literary Historians and Medievalist scholars, concerning medieval sources and literary texts.[158] His research results on medieval rituals and symbols, conflict management and resolution, and on "political rules of the game" have provide the starting point for numerous studies in MedievalLiterature.[159][160][161] Significant numbers of legal historians, on the other hand have vehemently rejected Althoff's conclusions that downplay the central role traditionally accorded by medievalists to records involving the law, court processes and trial verdicts.[162][163][164]
Althoff's former students have sustained the research focus on the representations of Medieval Lordship, and on the role of symbolism in communication and conflict. His precepts have also been applied to the interpretation of political conflict in later centuries. In 1997 Monika Suchan applied Althoff's "political rules of the game" to the so-called Investiture Controversy of the eleventh and twelfth centuries.[165][166] Hermann Kamp published research on the role of mediators in conflict resolution through the entire Middle Ages.[167] Steffen Krieb concerned himself with the conflict resolution aspects of the so-called "German throne dispute" (1198-1215).[168] Claudia Garnier chose to concentrate more directly on political networking in the later Middle Ages, as well as on conflict resolution and mediation/arbitration. She investigated the consequences of the increasing tendency for the "political rules of the game" to be written out during the period. Written agreements became more common after the twelfth century. But written documents did not replace important symbolic actions. Instead they supplemented the ritual aspects by spelling out in writing those details that could not be adequately defined through symbolic actions alone.[169][170] Garnier also tackled the history of the political petitions. In doing this, she took account both of Althoff's "political rules of the game" and of the part that petitions played in political communication between rulers and other top echelons in the polity.[171]Christiane Witthöft[de] received her doctorate in 2002 for work on "Forms of Symbolic Communication in the Historiography and Literature of the Late Middle Ages".[172] In 2005 Theo Broekmann published his research conclusions on the invoking of rituals to settle conflicts between rules and nobility in the eleventh and twelfth century Kingdom of Sicily. Broekmann was able to show that the obligation that kings north of the Alps demonstrated to the supposedly Chrisitan virtues of "Clementia" and "Misericordia" played no part in the treatment of defeated rebels in Sicily. Instead, the Staufer kings relied on Norman traditions which meant conducting conflicts through brutality and strength, with a powerful sense of "king's justice" to the fore.[173]
Notes
↑ A version of this lecture, complete with extensive referencing and sourcing, appeared in Frühmittelalterliche Studien vol.30 (pages 60 - 79) in 1996.
1997: "Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter. Kommunikation in Frieden und Fehde" and 2003: "Inszenierte Herrschaft. Geschichtsschreibung und politisches Handeln im Mittelalter".
↑ Heinrich Mitteis: "Politische Prozesse des frühen Mittelalters in Deutschland und Frankreich", 1927
↑ "...um Ketten von Handlungen, Gesten und auch Worten […], die Mustern verpflichtet sind, sie wiederholen und so einen Wiedererkennungseffekt erzielen".'"`UNIQ--ref-0000008C-QINU`"'
↑ "... vor allem durch Rituale und Herrschaftsrepräsentation geprägt"
↑ Gerd Althoff: Das Necrolog von Borghorst. Edition und Untersuchung. Münster 1978.
1 2 3 Gerd Althoff: Adels- und Königsfamilien im Spiegel ihrer Memorialüberlieferung. Studien zum Totengedenken der Billunger und Ottonen. München 1984.
↑ G. Althoff (1996). "Empörung, Tränen, Zerknirschung. 'Emotionen' in der öffentlichen Kommunikation des Mittelalters". Frühmittelalterliche Studien. 30: 60–79. doi:10.1515/9783110242287.60. S2CID201733666.
1 2 3 Gerd Althoff: Zur Bedeutung symbolischer Kommunikation für das Verständnis des Mittelalters. In: Frühmittelalterliche Studien, vol. 31 (1997), pp. 370–389
↑ Christel Meier[de]: 50 Jahre Frühmittelalterliche Studien. In: Frühmittelalterliche Studien, vol. 50 (2016), pp. 1–13, hier: p. 12f.
↑ Christel Meier. "Übersicht über die Teilprojekte"(PDF). Träger, Felder, Formen pragmatischer Schriftlichkeit im Mittelalter: Bericht über die Arbeit des Sonderforschungsbereichs 231 an der Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität Münster 1986 –1999. Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster. p.17. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
1 2 Thomas Zotz (1989). "Amicitia und Discordia". Zu einer Neuerscheinung über das Verhältnis von Königtum und Adel in frühottonischer Zeit (book review). pp.169–175. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
↑ Franz Staab (book review) (1989). "Heinrich I. und Otto der Große. Neubeginn auf karolingischem Erbe. 2 volumes by Gerd Althoff, Hagen Keller Heinrich I. und Otto der Große. Neubeginn auf karolingischem Erbe. 2 volumes by Gerd Althoff, Hagen Keller". Vol.249/1. Historische Zeitschrift. pp.158–159.
↑ Gerd Althoff, Hagen Keller: Heinrich I. und Otto der Große. Neubeginn auf karolingischem Erbe. Bd. 1–2, Göttingen u. a. 1985, p. 14.
↑ Hagen Keller & Gerd Althoff: "Die Zeit der späten Karolinger und der Ottonen. Krisen und Konsolidierungen 888–1024". Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 2008, 475 pages, ISBN978-3-608-60003-2.
↑ Karl Schmid: "Der Freiburger Arbeitskreis'. Gerd Tellenbach zum 70. Geburtstag", in Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins, vol. 122 (1974), pp. 331–347
↑ Gerd Althoff: Der Sachsenherzog Widukind als Mönch auf der Reichenau. Ein Beitrag zur Kritik des Widukind-Mythos. In: Frühmittelalterliche Studien, vol. 17 (1983), pp. 251–279. (online)
↑ Eckhard Freise: Die Sachsenmission Karls des Großen und die Anfänge des Bistums Minden. In: An Weser und Wiehen. Beiträge zur Geschichte und Kultur einer Landschaft. Festschrift für Wilhelm Brepohl. Minden 1983, pp. 57–100, here p. 81. (online) Ausführlicher Eckhard Freise: Widukind in Attigny. In: 1200 Jahre Widukinds Taufe. Paderborn 1985, pp. 12–45, hier: p. 35ff. (online).
↑ Stefan Esders; Gunnar Folke Schuppert (2015). "Mittelalterliches Regieren in der Moderne oder Modernes Regieren im Mittelalter? | Schriften zur Governance-Forschung". pp.15–57. ISBN978-3-8487-2264-8.
↑ Theodor Mayer: "Die Ausbildung der Grundlagen des modernen deutschen Staates im hohen Mittelalter", in: Hellmut Kämpf: "Herrschaft und Staat im Mittelalter" Darmstadt 1956, pp. 284–331
↑ Ernst-Dieter Hehl (1995). Amicitiae und Pacta. Bündnis, Einung, Politik und Gebetsgedenken im beginnenden 10. Jahrhundert by Gerd Althoff | book review. Vol.261. Historische Zeitschrift. pp.187–188.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Memoria, Schriftlichkeit, symbolische Kommunikation. Zur Neubewertung des 10. Jahrhunderts", in Christoph Dartmann, Thomas Scharff, Christoph Friedrich Weber (compiler-editors): "Zwischen Pragmatik und Performanz. Dimensionen mittelalterlicher Schriftkultur". Turnhout 2011, pp. 85–101, here: p91.
↑ Hagen Keller: "Gruppenbindungen, Spielregeln, Rituale", in Claudia Garnier & Hermann Kamp (editor-compilers): "Spielregeln der Mächtigen: mittelalterliche Politik zwischen Gewohnheit und Konvention". Darmstadt 2010, pp. 19–31, here p. 22.
↑ Review by Wilfried Hartmann in "Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters" vol. 39, pp. 661–662. DA 39, 1983
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Huld. Überlegungen zu einem Zentralbegriff der mittelalterlichen Herrschaftsordnung", in "Frühmittelalterliche Studien", vol. 25 (1991), pp. 259–282 Monographien und Editionen
↑ Karin Leitzinger (2010). "Fest und Politik"(PDF). Höfisches Fest und Doppelter Kursus in den Artusromanen Hartmanns von Aue. Universität Wien. pp.92=97. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
↑ Steffen Patzold: Konflikte im Kloster, Studien zu Auseinandersetzungen in monastischen Gemeinschaften des ottonisch-salischen Reichs. Husum 2000. pp. 25–27
↑ Steffen Patzold: "Konflikte als Thema in der modernen Mediävistik", in "Hans-Werner Goetz: Moderne Mediävistik. Stand und Perspektiven der Mittelalterforschung". Darmstadt 1999, pp. 198–205, here p. 202.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Ungeschriebene Gesetze. Wie funktioniert Herrschaft ohne schriftlich fixierte Normen?", in Gerd Althoff: "Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter". Darmstadt 1997, pp. 282–304.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Introduction", in "Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter. Kommunikation in Frieden und Fehde". Darmstadt 1997, pp. 1–17, here: p. 2
1 2 Gerd Althoff: Königsherrschaft und Konfliktbewältigung im 10. und 11. Jahrhundert", in "Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter. Kommunikation in Frieden und Fehde". Darmstadt 1997, pp. 21–55
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Gerd Althoff: Die Macht der Rituale. Symbolik und Herrschaft im Mittelalter. Darmstadt 2003, pp. 13, 32, 42, 53-57, 68, 76-83, 108, 133, 136, 154, 170-187.
1 2 Gerd Althoff: Das Privileg der deditio. Formen gütlicher Konfliktbeendigung in der mittelalterlichen Adelsgesellschaft. In: Althoff: Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter. Kommunikation in Frieden und Fehde. Darmstadt 1997, pp. 27-52, 99–125
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Colloquium familiare – Colloquium secretum – Colloquium publicum. Beratung im politischen Leben des früheren Mittelalters", in: Frühmittelalterliche Studien vol. 24 (1990) pp. 145–167.
↑ Timothy Reuter (2001). "Rules of the game in Medieval Politics"(PDF). book review of a volume of eleven articles - most of which had already been individually published in learned journals - by Gerhard Althoff. Max Weber Stiftung – Deutsche Geisteswissenschaftliche Institute im Ausland (German Historical Institute London Bulletin), Bonn. pp.40–46. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
↑ Klaus Zehrfeld (compiler). "Karl der Grosse gegen Herzog Tassilo III. von Bayern". Der Prozess vor dem Königsgericht in Ingelheim 788. GEROTAX Taxi Betriebs und Handels GmbH (München für Kenner), München. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
↑ Martin Gerstenberg (18 July 2013). "Das politische Theater .... Die deditio"(PDF). Dynastie, Designation und demonstratives Handeln - Die Thronfolgefrage während der Herrschaft Edwards des Bekenners. Historisches Institut der Universität Stuttgart. pp.138–143, here 138. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
↑ Gerd Althoff: Die Historiographie bewältigt. Der Sturz Heinrichs des Löwen in der Darstellung Arnolds von Lübeck. In: Bernd Schneidmüller (Hrsg.): Die Welfen und ihr Braunschweiger Hof im hohen Mittelalter. Wiesbaden 1995, pp. 163–182;
↑ Gerd Althoff: Otto III. und Heinrich II. in Konflikten. In: Bernd Schneidmüller, Stefan Weinfurter (Hrsg.): Otto III. und Heinrich II. Eine Wende. Sigmaringen 1997, pp. 77–94, here: p. 80.
↑ Gerd Althoff: Vom Konflikt zur Krise. Praktiken der Führung und Beilegung von Konflikten in der spätsalischen Zeit. In: Bernd Schneidmüller, Stefan Weinfurter (editor-compiler): Salisches Kaisertum und neues Europa. Die Zeit Heinrichs IV. und Heinrichs V. Darmstadt 2007, pp. 27–45, here: p. 44.
↑ "gerd althoff autogrammadresse". Institut Technologique FCBA Pôle Biotechnologies Sylviculture Avancée (BSA), Cestas. 3 August 2020. Retrieved 23 November 2020.
↑ Gerd Althoff: Genugtuung (satisfactio). Zur Eigenart gütlicher Konfliktbeilegung im Mittelalter. In: Joachim Heinzle (Hrsg.): Modernes Mittelalter. Neue Bilder einer populären Epoche. Frankfurt am Main 1994, pp. 247–265, here: p. 248.
↑ Joachim Stieber (30 November 2012). "Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger: Rituale". Ritual and Ceremonial in Early Modern European Politics as a Dimension of a Cultural History of Representative Institutions and Constitutional Government: An Introduction to the Scholarship of Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger on Representative Institutions in Early Modern Germany with Its Inclusion of Symbolic-expressive Communication Through Ritual and Ceremonial in a Cultural History of Politics. Taylor & Francis online: Parliaments, Estates and Representation Volume 32, 2012 - Issue 2: 171–187. doi:10.1080/02606755.2012.719700. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
1 2 3 Hanna Vollrath (1 December 2007). "Haben Rituale Macht?". Anmerkungen zu dem Buch von Gerd Althoff: Die Macht der Rituale. Symbolik und Herrschaft im Mittelalter. De Gruyter (Historische Zeitschrift). pp.385–400. ISSN2196-680X. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
↑ Christoph Gumb (6 July 2011). "Die Sichtbarkeit der Macht". Drohgebärden. Repräsentationen von Herrschaftim Wandel. Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. p.10. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
1 2 Franz-Reiner Erkens: "Mirabilia mundi. Ein kritischer Versuch über ein methodisches Problem und eine neue Deutung der Herrschaft Ottos III", in "Archiv für Kulturgeschichte", vol. 79 (1997), pp. 485–498.
↑ Michael Borgolte: "Biographie ohne Subjekt, oder wie man durch quellenfixierte Arbeit Opfer des Zeitgeistes werden kann", in "Göttingische Gelehrte Anzeigen", vol. 249 (1997), pp. 128–141, here p. 139.
↑ Philippe Buc: "The dangers of ritual. Between early medieval texts and social scientific theory". Princeton 2001, pp. 19, 58, 95, 122–124, 260.
1 2 Gerd Althoff: "Widukind von Corvey. Kronzeuge und Herausforderung", on: Gerd Althoff: "Inszenierte Herrschaft. Geschichtsschreibung und politisches Handeln im Mittelalter". Darmstadt 2003, pp. 78–104, here: p. 101
↑ Katharina Vaerst (2009). Footnote 785. Verlagshaus Monsenstein und Vannerdat OHG Münster: Wissenschaftliche Schriften der WWU Münster. p.191 | Laus inimicorum: Erzählstrukturen der ottonischen Historiographie und ihr Kommunikationspotential ... G. Althoff, der wichtigste Repräsentant der Gegenseite, ist dagegen mit aller bei dieser Frage gebotenen methodischen Vorsicht zu dem Schluss gekommen: „der Kronzeuge ist vertrauenswürdig.“. ISBN978-3-8405-0012-1. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Geschichtsschreibung in einer oralen Gesellschaft", in: "Inszenierte Herrschaft. Geschichtsschreibung und politisches Handeln im Mittelalter". Darmstadt 2003, pp. 105–125
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Causa scribendi und Darstellungsabsicht. Die Lebensbeschreibungen der Königin Mathilde und andere Beispiele", in: Michael Borgolte, Herrad Spilling (editor-compilers.): "Litterae Medii Aevi. Festschrift für Johanne Autenrieth zu ihrem 65. Geburtstag". Sigmaringen 1988, pp. 117–133, here: p. 126;
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Genealogische und andere Fiktionen in mittelalterlicher Historiographie", in: "Fälschungen im Mittelalter. Internationaler Kongreß der Monumenta Germaniae Historica", München, vom 16. bis 19. September 1986 (Schriften der Monumenta Germaniae Historica, 33/1), Hannover 1988, pp. 417–441, here p. 434;
↑ Gerd Althoff: "König Konrad I. in der ottonischen Memoria", in: Hans-Werner Goetz (editor-compiler): "Konrad I. Auf dem Weg zum „Deutschen Reich“?" Bochum 2006, pp. 317–328, here: p. 326
1 2 3 4 Gerd Althoff (1995). "Von Fakten zu Motiven. Johannes Frieds Beschreibung der Ursprünge Deutschlands". Historische Zeitschrift. Vol.260. pp.107–117.
1 2 3 Johannes Fried: Über das Schreiben von Geschichtswerken und Rezensionen. Eine Erwiderung. In: Historische Zeitschrift, vol. 260 (1995), pp. 119–130
↑ Lothar Kolmer: "Wie Historiker streiten: Einige Anmerkungen zur Fried-Althoff-Kontroverse", in: Gerhard Ammerer, Christian Rohr, Alfred Stefan Weiss (co-producers): "Tradition und Wandel. Beiträge zur Kirchen-, Gesellschafts- und Kulturgeschichte. Festschrift für Heinz Dopsch". München 2001, pp. 80–96, here: p. 95.
↑ Hanna Vollrath: "Geschichtswissenschaft und Geschichtsschreibung. Zur Diskussion um das Buch „Der Weg in die Geschichte“ von Johannes Fried", in: "Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft", vol. 43 (1995), pp. 451–459, here: p. 459.
↑ Michael Borgolte: "Mittelalterforschung und Postmoderne. Aspekte einer Herausforderung", in: "Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft", vol. 43 (1995), pp. 615–627, here pp. 625, 627.
↑ Johannes Fried: Otto III. und Boleslaw. Das Widmungsbild des Aachener Evangeliars, der „Akt von Gnesen“ und das frühe polnische und ungarische Königtum. Eine Bildanalyse und ihre historischen Folgen. Wiesbaden 1989, pp. 123–125.
↑ Gerd Althoff, Hagen Keller: "Spätantike bis zum Ende des Mittelalters. Die Zeit der späten Karolinger und der Ottonen. Krisen und Konsolidierungen 888–1024". vol.10, Stuttgart 2008 (revised edition), p. 315.
↑ Johannes Fried: "Der Pakt von Canossa. Schritte zur Wirklichkeit durch Erinnerungsanalyse", in: Wilfried Hartmann, Klaus Herbers (co-editor-producers): "Die Faszination der Papstgeschichte. Neue Zugänge zum frühen und hohen Mittelalter". Köln 2008, pp. 133–197.
↑ Johannes Fried: "Wir sollten nach Canossa gehen und die Legende vergessen", in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 28 January 2009, Nr. 23, p. N4
↑ Gerd Althoff (28 April 2009). "Kein Gang nach Canossa?". Der Frankfurter Historiker Johannes Fried vertritt eine provokante These: Die Demütigung des Königtums in Canossa habe gar nicht stattgefunden. Sein Münsteraner Kollege Gerd Althoff prüft die Quellen auf die Stichhaltigkeit dieser Aussage. Konradin Medien GmbH., Leinfelden-Echterdingen. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Falsche Memorik statt klassischer Methodik", in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 28 February 2009, Nr. 50, p. 38.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Das Amtsverständnis Gregors VII. und die neue These vom Friedenspakt in Canossa", in: "Frühmittelalterliche Studien, vol. 48, 2014, pp. 261–276
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Memoria, Schriftlichkeit, symbolische Kommunikation. Zur Neubewertung des 10. Jahrhunderts" in: Christoph Dartmann, Thomas Scharff & Christoph Friedrich Weber (editor-compilers): "Zwischen Pragmatik und Performanz. Dimensionen mittelalterlicher Schriftkultur". Turnhout 2011, pp. 85–101.
↑ Gerd Althoff. "Koerper – Emotionen – Rituale"(PDF). Institut für Medienwissenschaft in Kooperation mit der Universitätsbibliothek der Philipps-Universität Marburg. pp.13–35. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
↑ David A. Warner: "Ritual and Memory in the Ottonian Reich: The Ceremony of Adventus", in Speculum, vol. 76 (2001), pp. 255–283, here: p. 255
↑ Geoffrey Koziol: "The Dangers of Polemic. Is Ritual Still an Interesting Topic of Historical Study?", in: Early Medieval Europe, vol., 11 (2002), pp. 367–388, here: pp. 377–383
↑ Julia Barrow: "Playing by the rules. Conflict management in tenth- and eleventh-century Germany", in: "Early medieval Europe" vol. 11 (2002), pp. 389–396.
↑ Patrick Geary (2005). Ein wenig Wissenschaft von gestern: Der Einfluß der deutschsprachigen Mediävistik in Amerik | an "Dr. Elizabeth Gregg gewidmet, die am 11. September 2001 dem Terroranschlagim World Trade Center zum Opfer fiel". Jan Thorbecke Verlag: "Die deutschsprachige Mediävistik im 20. Jahrhundert." Ostfildern 2005. pp.381–392. ISBN978-3799568623.
↑ Gerd Althoff: "Ira Regis'. Prologema to a History of Royal Anger", in: Barbara H. Rosenwein (compiler-editor): "Anger’s Past. The Social Uses of an Emotion in the Middle Ages". Ithaca 1998, pp. 59–74.
↑ Horst Wenzel: "Sichtbarkeit und Unsichtbarkeit. Zum theatralischen Charakter von Spielregeln", in: Claudia Garnier, Hermann Kamp (co-editor-compilers) "Spielregeln der Mächtigen". Darmstadt 2010, pp. 205–227, here: p. 205.
↑ Monika Unzeitig-Herzog: "Artus Mediator. Zur Konfliktlösung in Wolframs 'Parzival' Buch XIV", in: "Frühmittelalterliche Studien, vol. 32 (1998) pp. 196–217
↑ Jan-Dirk Müller: "Spielregeln für den Untergang. Die Welt des Nibelungenliedes". Tübingen 1998
↑ Corinna Dörrich: "Poetik des Rituals. Konstruktion und Funktion politischen Handelns in mittelalterlicher Literatur". Darmstadt 2002.
↑ Hermann Kamp: "Die Macht der Spielregeln im Mittelalter. Eine Einführung", in: Hermann Kamp, Claudia Garnier (co-editor-compilers): "Die Spielregeln der Mächtigen. Mittelalterliche Politik zwischen Gewohnheiten und Konventionen". Darmstadt 2010, pp. 1–18, here: p. 8
↑ Jürgen Weitzel: Review: "Gerd Althoff, Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter". Darmstadt 1997
↑ Gerd Althoff, Hans-Werner Goetz & Ernst Schubert, "Menschen im Schatten der Kathedrale. Neuigkeiten aus dem Mittelalter", Darmstadt 1998, in: "Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, Germanistische Abteilung", vol. 117 (2000), pp. 689–702
↑ Monika Suchan: "Königsherrschaft im Streit. Konfliktaustragung in der Regierungszeit Heinrichs IV. zwischen Gewalt, Gespräch und Schriftlichkeit". Stuttgart 1997.
↑ Hermann Kamp: "Friedensstifter und Vermittler im Mittelalter", Darmstadt 2001; Hermann Kamp: "Vermittler in den Konflikten des hohen Mittelalters", in: "La giustizia nell' alto medioevo II. Secoli IX-XI", 2 vols. ("Settimane di studio del Centro italiano di studi sull’alto medioevo XLIV"), Spoleto 1997, vol. 2, pp. 675–714.
↑ Steffen Krieb: "Vermitteln und Versöhnen. Konfliktregelung im deutschen Thronstreit 1198–1208". Köln 2000.
↑ Claudia Garnier: "Amicus amicis - inimicus inimicis. Politische Freundschaft und fürstliche Netzwerke im 13. Jahrhundert", Stuttgart 2000: Claudia Garnier: "Zeichen und Schrift. Symbolische Handlungen und literale Fixierung am Beispiel von Friedensschlüssen des 13. Jahrhunderts". in: "Frühmittelalterliche Studien", vol. 32 (1998), pp. 263–287
↑ "Forschungsschwerpunkte". Fach Geschichtswissenschaft .... Professor*innen .... Prof. Dr. Claudia Garnier, Professorin für Geschichte der Vormoderne. Universität Vechta. 18 May 2020. Archived from the original on 15 April 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
↑ Claudia Garnier: Die Kultur der Bitte. Herrschaft und Kommunikation im mittelalterlichen Reich. Darmstadt 2008.
↑ Christiane Witthöft: Ritual und Text. Formen symbolischer Kommunikation in der Historiographie und Literatur des Spätmittelalters. Darmstadt 2004.
↑ Theo Broekmann: Rigor iustitiae. Herrschaft, Recht und Terror im normannisch-staufischen Süden (1050–1250). Darmstadt 2005.
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