We use cookies to provide essential features and services. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies .

×

Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


The Measure of Multitude
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

1: Introduction to medieval demographic thought
Part 1: The Church and generation
2: Marriage and the Church's texts
3: William of Auvergne
4: An equal or unequal number of men and women
5: The precept of marriage and sufficient multiplication
6: Avoidance of offspring (i): the general picture
7: Avoidance of offspring (ii): Canon law and Sentences commentaries
8: Avoidance of offspring (iii): the pastoral picture
Part 2: The Map of the World
9: Inhabitation of the world
Part 3: Aristotle and Multitude
10: Animals and the life-span
11: The Politics (i): reception
12: The Politics (ii): age at marriage
13: The Politics (iii): multitude
The Light of the Common Day
14: The Bulging circuit of Florence
Epigraph: The Climate of Thought
Bibliography
Index of Manuscripts
General Index

Promotional Information

Joint winner of the 2002 Longman/History Today Prize

Reviews

... this tour de force of intellectual archaeology ... a fascinating exposition of a whole series of 'demographic' subjects to which medieval writers gave their attention. English Historical Review ... a work of intellectual integrity and humility. Biller is acutely sensitive to what the surviving evidence can or cannot sustain ... a model of how intellectual history should be written, a work which is impressive as much for its formal approach as for its final conclusions. English Historical Review This is a book which entertains as much as it instructs ... a lucid, scholarly, imaginative and persuasive book. Not the least of Biller's achievements is to have made so compelling a model for 'intellectual history' such an exciting read as well. English Historical Review There are many strengths to this book, not least the imaginative lateral thinking required to conceive the topic in the first place ... an outstanding and original study, which approaches the high middle ages (in its reality as well as its thought worlds) from an unexpected but remarkably productive direction. Its heterogeneous interests should inspire a wide readership, including scholars of medieval medicine, population, theological thought, religious practice and canon law. History This excellent book is not a study of medieval population (although it does contain, amongst many other riches, a helpful summary of work on medieval demography) but concerns how medieval people thought about population ... astounding range of material. History Peter Biller has produced a trail-blazing book, packed with intellectual fireworks. It fuses diverse sources and scraps of information to detonate an explosion of insights ... anyone interested in pre-modern medicine must read it. It will stimulate and satisfy the curiosity of students and researchers alike. Medical History Biller takes the reader on a grand tour of sources and themes ... There is no jargon in his book. He sensitively lets these texts speak, contextualizes them, and occasionally offers informed conjectures whenever the text does not provide a clear-cut proof. Medical History This is not only a solid scholarly enterprise on the highest level, it is also a pedagogic manifesto of how one can and perhaps should handle historical sources. Medical History This is an impressive piece of scholarship. Through careful explication of the sources, Biller provides an account of medieval demography that places medicine in a new and exciting context, one which gave medical theory added relevance for its contemporaries . This is a story to which every historian of medieval medicine will want to pay close attention. Social History of Medicine Biller adopts a sophisticated approach to his material ... This work is primarily an exercise in the history of ideas, but it is also an extremely rich source of information for social historians of medicine. Social History of Medicine Peter Biller ends his book with a question: is medieval demographic thought recognisably there? He has left his readers with only one possible answer - and in doing so changed the way we must think not just about the medieval past but about what has come after in terms of understanding the world. History Today

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
People also searched for
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top