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Medieval Historiography as Modern Political and Social Thought

Medieval Historiography as Modern Political and Social Thought Medieval Historiography as Modern Political and Social Thought Norman F. Cantor It is necessary to begin with a disclaimer: a completely relativist appraisal of medieval historiography is out of order. Historical scholarship has advanced to its present state of knowledge and sophistication in large part because of the critical examination of primary sources. Twentieth-century scholarship has benefited from the exhaustive labours of scholars sincerely convinced that the particular questions which they were moved to pose of the past were the most meaningful and instructive to mankind. Serious historians - the men who have helped us to illuminate the past in all its richness and perplexity - have seldom been vulgar apologists for the contemporary establishment, either intellectual or political. Neither have they, on the whole, been conscious propagandists for some existing or hoped-for social order. Nevertheless the study of medieval history has always been strikingly conditioned by con­ temporary social needs and intellectual fashions, in the twentieth century as in previous eras. It is well known that the image of the Middle Ages which ob­ tained at any given period in early modem Europe tells us more about the difficulties and dilemmas, the intellectual commitments of the men of http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Contemporary History SAGE

Medieval Historiography as Modern Political and Social Thought

Journal of Contemporary History , Volume 3 (2): 19 – Apr 1, 1968

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Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
© 1968 SAGE Publications
ISSN
0022-0094
eISSN
1461-7250
DOI
10.1177/002200946800300204
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Medieval Historiography as Modern Political and Social Thought Norman F. Cantor It is necessary to begin with a disclaimer: a completely relativist appraisal of medieval historiography is out of order. Historical scholarship has advanced to its present state of knowledge and sophistication in large part because of the critical examination of primary sources. Twentieth-century scholarship has benefited from the exhaustive labours of scholars sincerely convinced that the particular questions which they were moved to pose of the past were the most meaningful and instructive to mankind. Serious historians - the men who have helped us to illuminate the past in all its richness and perplexity - have seldom been vulgar apologists for the contemporary establishment, either intellectual or political. Neither have they, on the whole, been conscious propagandists for some existing or hoped-for social order. Nevertheless the study of medieval history has always been strikingly conditioned by con­ temporary social needs and intellectual fashions, in the twentieth century as in previous eras. It is well known that the image of the Middle Ages which ob­ tained at any given period in early modem Europe tells us more about the difficulties and dilemmas, the intellectual commitments of the men of

Journal

Journal of Contemporary HistorySAGE

Published: Apr 1, 1968

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