Synopses & Reviews
Mute in life as in death, peasants of remote history rarely speak to us in their own voices. But Thomas Bisson's engagement with the records of several hundred twelfth-century people of rural Catalonia enables us to hear these voices. The peasants' allegations of abuse while in the service of their common lord the Count of Barcelona and his son the King reveal a unique perspective on the meaning of power both by those who felt and feared it, and by those who wielded it. These records--original parchments, dating much earlier than other comparable records of European peasant life--name peasants in profusion and relate some of their stories.
Bisson describes these peasants socially and culturally, showing how their experience figured in a wider crisis of power from the twelfth century. His compassionate history considers demography, naming patterns, gender, occupational identities, and habitats, as well as power, coercion, and complaint, and the moralities of faith, honor, and shame. He concludes with reflections on the historical meanings of violence and suffering.
This rich contribution to medieval social and cultural history and peasant studies suggests important resources and ideas for historians and anthropologists.
Review
In this extraordinary, engaging and thoughtful book, Thomas N. Bisson, one of the foremost medievalist in the world, has crafted a most original and insightful 'thick description' and 'thick' analysis of the uses and misuses of power in mid-twelfth century Catalonia...Impeccable use of the sources, art in mining information from the memorials and placing his findings within a wider context...mastery of the secondary literature...A wise book, a work in which the author's empathy for his subjects--those faceless but now no longer nameless peasants--shine through like a dazzling bolt of lightening. His lyrical descriptions of the Catalonian peasantry, of their plight, his reflections on the nature of power, his attempts at and success in bringing the tormented peasants to life are deeds of remembering, of inscribing or, better yet, of reinscribing the peasants' lives and words into the historical present and, far more importantly, into our consciousness and heart...This is a great and very special book. James M. Boyden - Journal of Church and State
Review
In this extraordinary, engaging and thoughtful book, Thomas N. Bisson, one of the foremost medievalist in the world, has crafted a most original and insightful 'thick description' and 'thick' analysis of the usesand misuses of power in mid-twelfth century Catalonia...Impeccable use of the sources, art in mining information from the memorials and placing his findings within a wider context...mastery of the secondary literature...A wise book, awork in which the author's empathy for his subjects--those faceless but now no longer nameless peasants--shine through like a dazzling bolt of lightening. His lyrical descriptions of the Catalonian peasantry, of their plight, hisreflections on the nature of power, his attempts at and success in bringing the tormented peasants to life are deeds of remembering, of inscribing or, better yet, of reinscribing the peasants' lives and words into the historical presentand, far more importantly, into our consciousness and heart...This is a great and very special book.
Review
Bisson has distinguished himself with a number of careful scholarly monographs on the politics and finance of southern France and Spain in the Middle Ages. But in this book, although he necessarily draws on this research, Mr. Bisson breaks new ground. A historian of the elite--of kings, parliaments and treasuries--turns his considerable analytic powers to the question of village society and culture. Catalonia, the author's chosen area of research, has one of the richest documentary traditions in Europe, and in the last half-century scholars have begun to exploit with care and missionary zeal the cache of records that have survived. Focusing on a group of complaints from several Catalonion villages in the middle and late 12th century, Mr. Bisson tries to dispel layer after layer of distortion in these records in order to recover the 'tormented voices' of named and unnamed peasants who were at their wits' end in resisting lordly power...This is a remarkable book, not only because it sets the record straight on rural violence in the Middle Ages, but because it is written with passion...Bisson succeeds in recovering the tormented voices of these Catalonian peasants, 'what they spoke of in words that we have, or almost have; what some ones once, momentarily, thought memorable, and what I,' the author writes, 'have tried to read, to hear, to hold in the names and voices; in what we have of these people--and all that we have.' William Chester Jordan
Review
Tormented Voices is a microhistory meant to illuminate the condition of the peasantry and to bolster a broader thesis about sociopolitical crisis in the twelfth-century Catalan countryside. The book is built on a tenuous documentary base of sixteen parchments comprising villagers' complaints of maltreatment addressed to the count of Barcelona, Raimund Berenguer IV (1131-62), and his son, Alfons I of Aragon )(1162-96). It is a testimony to Thomas Bisson's erudition and imagination that he has fashioned a stimulating study from these unpromising sources. Washington Times
Synopsis
Mute in life as in death, peasants of remote history rarely speak to us in their own voices. But Thomas Bisson's engagement with the records of several hundred twelfth-century people of rural Catalonia enables us to hear these voices. The peasants' allegations of abuse while in the service of their common lord the Count of Barcelona and his son the King reveal a unique perspective on the meaning of power both by those who felt and feared it, and by those who wielded it. These records--original parchments, dating much earlier than other comparable records of European peasant life--name peasants in profusion and relate some of their stories.
Bisson describes these peasants socially and culturally, showing how their experience figured in a wider crisis of power from the twelfth century. His compassionate history considers demography, naming patterns, gender, occupational identities, and habitats, as well as power, coercion, and complaint, and the moralities of faith, honor, and shame. He concludes with reflections on the historical meanings of violence and suffering.
This rich contribution to medieval social and cultural history and peasant studies suggests important resources and ideas for historians and anthropologists.
About the Author
Thomas N. Bissonis Henry Charles Lea Professor of Medieval History, <>Harvard University. Among his publications are Fiscal Accounts of Catalonia under the Early Count-Kings (1151-1213)and The Medieval Crown of Aragon: A Short History.
Table of Contents
People
- Old Domains: Caldes de Malavella, Llagostera, and Vicinity
- Old Domains II: the Ribes Valley
- Barcelona's Second Hinterland
- The Old Frontier: Font-rubí
- A Further Frontier: Cabra, Argençola
Power
- An Order of Territorial Lordship
- On the Threshold of Accountability
- Profiles of Exploitative Power
- The Nostalgia of Associative Lament
- The Legitimation of Arbitrary Lordship
Culture
- Customary Solidarities
- Customary Moralities: Faith
- Customary Moralities: Honor and Shame
Epilogue
- Appendix: Usage, Citations, and Abbreviations
- Appendix: Glossary
- Appendix: Aftermath: What Became of the Villages?
- Appendix: The Memorials: A Register
- Further Reading
- Index