In medieval Europe hostages were given, not taken. They were a means of guarantee used to secure transactions ranging from treaties to wartime commitments to financial transactions. In principle, the force of the guarantee lay in the threat to the life of the hostage if the agreement were broken but, while violation of agreements was common, execution of hostages was a rarity. Medieval hostages are thus best understood not as simple pledges, but as a political institution characteristic of the medieval millennium, embedded in its changing historical contexts. In the Early Middle Ages, hostageship was principally seen in warfare and diplomacy, operating within structures of kinship and practices of alliance characteristic of elite political society. From the eleventh century, hostageship diversified, despite the spread of a legal and financial culture that would seem to have made it superfluous. Hostages in the Middle Ages traces the development of this institution from Late Antiquity through the period of the Hundred Years War, across Europe and the Mediterranean World. It explores the logic of agreements, the identity of hostages, and the conditions of their confinement, while shedding light on a wide range of subjects, from sieges and treaties, to captivity and ransom, to the Peace of God and the Crusades, to the rise of towns and representation, to political communication and shifting gender dynamics. The book closes by examining the reasons for the decline of hostageship in the Early Modern era, and the rise the modern variety of hostageship that was addressed by the Nuremberg tribunals and the United Nations in the twentieth century.
Author(s): Adam J. Kosto
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2012
Language: English
Pages: 300
City: Oxford
Cover
Contents
List of Maps
List of Tables
Abbreviations
Note on Citations
1. Hostages in the Middle Ages: Problems and Perspectives
A Very Short History of Hostages
Hostages and Historians
Finding Hostages in the Medieval Sources
Outline
2. Varieties and Logics of Medieval Hostageship
Varieties of Hostageship
The Logics of Hostageship
Hostages and the Theory of Contracts
Appendix: Execution of Hostages
3. Hostages in the Early Middle Ages: Communication, Conversion, and Structures of Alliance
Hostages and Political Communication
The Wider Impact of Hostage Agreements
The Fate of Hostages: Three Episodes
Early Medieval Hostageship in Context
4. Hostages in the Later Middle Ages: Representation, Finance, and the Laws of War
Female Hostages
Hostages as Representatives
Hostages and the Laws of War
Conditional Respite
Conditional Release and Ransom
Financial Transactions and the Development of Rules
5. Conditional Hostages
Peace Texts
The Earliest Conditional Hostages
International Treaties
Hostages for Monetary Debts
6. The King’s Ransom
Captive Crusader Kings: Baldwin II of Jerusalem (1123) and Louis IX of France (1250)
Richard I of England (Treaty of Worms, 1193)
Charles II of Naples (Treaty of Canfranc, 1288)
David II of Scotland (Treaty of Berwick, 1357)
James I of Scotland (Treaty of London, 1424)
7. Hostageship Interpreted, from the Middle Ages to the Age of Terrorism
Medieval Views of Hostageship
From Vitoria to Nuremberg and Beyond
Works Cited
Index
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D
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F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
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T
U
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W
Y
Z