First published 2015 by Ashgate Publishing.
Thoroughly interdisciplinary in approach, this volume examines how concepts such as the exercising of power, the distribution of justice, and transgression against the law were treated in both textual and pictorial terms in works produced and circulated in medieval French manuscripts and early printed books. Analysing texts ranging from romances, political allegories, chivalric biographies, and catalogues of famous men and women, through saints lives, mystery plays and Books of Hours, to works of Roman, canon and customary law, these studies offer new insights into the diverse ways in which the language and imagery of politics and justice permeated French culture, particularly in the later Middle Ages.
Organized around three closely related themes - the prince as a just ruler, the figure of the judge, and the role of the queen in relation to matters of justice - the issues addressed in these studies, such as what constitutes a just war, what treatment should be meted out to prisoners, what personal qualities are needed for the role of lawgiver, and what limits are placed on women's participation in judicial processes, are ones that are still the subject of debate today. What the contributors show above all is the degree of political engagement on the part of writers and artists responsible for cultural production in this period. With their textual strategies of exemplification, allegorization, and satirical deprecation, and their visual strategies of hierarchical ordering, spatial organization and symbolic allusion, these figures aimed to show that the pen and paintbrush could aspire to being as mighty as the sword wielded by Lady Justice herself.
Author(s): Rosalind Brown-Grant, Anne D. Hedeman, Bernard Ribémont (eds.)
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: XXII+322
List of Figures vii
Notes on Contributors xv
Acknowledgements xix
Editorial Principles xxi
Introduction / Rosalind Brown-Grant 1
1. Translating Power for the Princes of the Blood:
Laurent de Premierfait’s "Des cas des nobles hommes et femmes" / Anne D. Hedeman 15
2. How to Wield Power with Justice: The Fifteenth-Century Roman de Florimont as a Burgundian "Mirror for Princes" / Rosalind Brown-Grant 43
3. The Just Captain in the "Jouvencel" by Jean de Bueil / Michelle Szkilnik 65
4. Reconfiguring Queen Truth in Paris, BnF, Ms. fr. 22542 ("Songe du vieil pelerin") / Kristin Bourassa 89
5. Allegorical Design and Political Image-Making in Late Medieval France / Cynthia J. Brown 109
6. The Wolf, the Shepherd, and the Whale: Critiquing the King Through Metaphor in the Reign of Louis XI / Lydwine Scordia 133
7. Passing Sentence: Variations on the Figure of the Judge in French Political, Legal, and Historical Texts from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century / Barbara Denis-Morel 151
8. The Judge and the Martyr: Images of Power and Justice in Religious Manuscripts from the Twelfth to the Fifteenth Century / Maïté Billoré and Esther Dehoux 171
9. Beastly Power, Holy Justice in Late Medieval France: From Robert Gobin’s "Loups ravissans" to Books of Hours / Mary Beth Winn 191
10. The Queen on Trial: Spectacle of Innocence, Performance of Beauty / Yasmina Foehr-Janssens 217
11. Claude of France: Justice, Power, and the Queen as Advocate for Her People / Kathleen Wilson-Chevalier 241
List of Manuscripts and Early Printed Editions Cited 273
Bibliography 279
Index 309