A Nobel-laureate economist speaks.
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More Posts you might have missed on the other site
Here, in order from oldest to most recent are the not-exactly-numerous posts that have appeared on the other site in the past two and a half...
Sunday, 24 June 2012
Archbishop hits out at failing leader
Following in the footsteps of a commendable tradition going back to the likes of Nicetius of Trier and beyond, the out-going Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams lashes out at Cameron's Big Society nonsense in a forthcoming book, as reported here.
I wonder if he got AHRC funding for it...
I wonder if he got AHRC funding for it...
Thursday, 21 June 2012
More trouble...
... at the institution to which we at Historian on the Edge like, for legal reasons, to refer as Bourneville Tech. We've had reason before to comment adversely on goings on there. The VC, to whom we at Historian on the Edge like, for legal reasons, to refer as Harry Callaghan, stamped down on students' right to peaceful protest (I must check how that turned out). This, you may recall, seemed a tad shocking in view of Harry's past as a historian of nineteenth-century British social history and - indeed - a teacher of Marxist approaches. But then Harry's own web-page makes it clear that he likes to cover up this embarrassing past. To be fair, he's not the only member of that generation to conceal some pretty vicious, elitist social politics behind a smoke-screen of posturing about subscribing to The Old Left and/or mid-'70s-vintage feminism.
To further erase any suspicion that he might once have earned his crust from the humanities, he's now decided to hack away at Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology, as you can read here (though, no mention is made of archaeology. Ahem.). In this Harry is being aided and abetted by his trusty sidekick, the pro-VC and Dean of the College of Arts and Law to whom we at Historian on the Edge like, for legal reasons, to refer as Maurikios Kopronymos. Now, I have no particular axe to grind about the departmental independence of classics or ancient history; quite the opposite, in fact. What I do have a beef with is the possibility of people losing their jobs. Whatever. The thing about Maurikios is that ancient history is his own discipline. He's issued a statement about this which beggars belief.
Thanks to 'JPG', it is here.
Thanks to 'JPG', it is here.
Enrollment begins for Bourneville Tech's new MA in Evolving Recruitment Landscape Archaeology (Picture and joke stolen from a Facebook friend who had best remain anonymous) |
Drink it in.
Harry Callaghan earns (well, pays himself) in excess of £300,000 a year.
Thursday, 14 June 2012
In Lieu of a Post
Some gems from bloggers more knowledgeable and more creative than I.
http://stevesarson.blogspot.fr/2012/06/bullingon-kubla-cam.html
http://plashingvole.blogspot.fr/2012/06/top-gun.html
http://stevesarson.blogspot.fr/2012/06/bullingon-kubla-cam.html
http://plashingvole.blogspot.fr/2012/06/top-gun.html
Tuesday, 12 June 2012
Thought for the Day
Even the sincere black man (le Noir) is a slave of the past. However, I am a man, and in that sense the Peloponnesian War is as much mine as is the discovery of the compass. ...
The problem I envisage here is located in temporality. Black and white people will be disalienated when they have refused to let themselves be locked up in a Tower of the Past that they've built for themselves ...
I am a man and it's the whole past of the world that I have to recover. I'm not just responsible for the rebellion of Saint-Domingue.
Each time a man allowed the dignity of spirit to triumph, each time a man said no to reducing his equal to servitude, I feel solidarity with his act.
In no way do I have to take my calling from the past of the peoples of colour.
In no way do I have to set myself to reviving an unjustly forgotten black civilisation. I don't make myself the man of any past. I don't want to sing the past at the expense of my present or my future.
Frantz Fanon, Peau Noire Masques Blancs (Paris 1952), pp.182-3 (my [clunky and loose] translation)
Sunday, 3 June 2012
Feud, Vengeance, Politics and History in Early Medieval Europe
[This is the text of a paper I gave at a very good conference in Aarhus in October 2003, which I haven't (yet) written up (the rest of the conference is published here). At some point I might yet work it up into a piece, although I am thinking of using some of it as an illustration in Escaping the Past. A counter to the various counters to my original article on feud (1998) is probably overdue. For now, I hope the points of contact with my previous post are clear - especially in the stitching up of time and the non-ending of narrative.]
Feuds make good stories and it is stories, you might say,
that make feuds. I will therefore – as I
imagine many of us will – start with a story.
It is set in 1073 or 1074 in the Wolds of East Yorkshire, in the
aftermath of a feast. Feasts were fine
times for violence. The most famous
alleged feud of the early Middle Ages – that of Sichar and Chramnesind –
apparently originated at a Christmas party.
So much for the season of peace on earth and goodwill towards men! The case that concerns me was on the other
hand – according to some interpretations – the last recorded episode in a feud.
One might expect feasts, with the gathering together of lots of people
and the consumption of large amounts of alcohol, to have been the occasion for
acts of hot-blooded violence such as begin periods of hostility or feud. ‘From one, an irascible ale-swiller, a man
full of wine, a sword’s edge will thrust out the life on the mead bench;
previous to that his words will have been too hasty’, as an anonymous
Anglo-Saxon poet predicted (note, incidentally the reference to three types of
alcohol in a single sentence). Be that
as it may, in this case, the
gathering together of a family for a feast presented its enemies with a golden
opportunity to wipe them all out at once.
The sons and grandsons of a man called Carl had assembled
for a feast at their manor of Settrington.
One, however, stayed away. He,
Sumerled, shared his principal estate with the man who organised the bloodshed
in Yorkshire, Earl Waltheof of Bernicia.
As the story’s most recent and most eloquent interpreter, Richard
Fletcher, says, this is unlikely to be coincidence. Waltheof’s men, possibly coming by sea to the
Yorkshire coast and thence riding west to Settrington, fell upon Sumerled’s
brothers and nephews and butchered the lot of them. Or almost.
One, Cnut, was spared ‘because of his innate goodness’. He was lucky.
Few people in early medieval episodes like this were spared just for
being nice.
Our primary source for this episode is an anonymous and very
brief narrative written not long afterwards, called De Obsessione Dunelmi, ‘On the Siege of Durham’, a hugely
misleading title although a siege of Durham does appear in the course of the
story. Its author digresses from his
tale, actually about the descent of six manors on the borders of Yorkshire and
Northumberland, to tell us of the violent story that cumulated in this
massacre. The story is well enough known
to late Anglo-Saxonists but, for those of you who specialise in other eras, the
tale, not very much abbreviated, goes like this:
Once upon a time there was a powerful and energetic earl
called Uhtred who saved Durham from the Scots.
Uhtred was married three times.
His second marriage, to the daughter of one Styr Ulfsson, was contracted
on condition that Uhtred kill Styr’s enemy, Thurbrand. Alas, when Uhtred came to swear allegiance to
his new king (and old enemy), Cnut, Thurbrand Hold (or Thurbrand the Hold) and the king’s soldiers
ambushed him and forty other chief men and killed the lot of them. Uhtred’s brother Eadwulf succeeded him in the
earldom but when he died, Uhtred’s son (by his first wife) Ealdred became earl
and killed Thurbrand Hold. Thurbrand’s
son, Carl, and Ealdred then campaigned against each other until they were
prevailed upon to become sworn brothers and go on pilgrimage together to
Rome. Unfortunately, the ship was
delayed by bad weather so whilst they waited, Carl entertained Ealdred at his
home in the East Riding of Yorkshire, in Holderness. One day, whilst showing Ealdred around his
estate – you can guess what’s coming – Carl killed Ealdred in (and from now on
I quote the source)
a wood called Risewood and still today
the place of his murder is marked by a small stone cross. Some time later, the grandson of Earl
Ealdred, Earl Waltheof, who was the son of his daughter, sent a large band of
young men and avenged the killing of his grandfather with the utmost slaughter. For when the sons of Carl were feasting
together at their elder brother’s house at Settrington, not far from York, the
men who had been sent caught them unawares and savagely killed them together,
except for Cnut whose life they spared because of his innate goodness. Sumerled, who was not there, survives to this
day. Having massacred the sons and
grandsons of Carl, they returned home bringing with them much booty of various
kinds.
Seen from Durham c.1100,
this was a series of tit-for-tat killings, such as we might unproblematically
call a feud. In the last episode, at
Settrington, according to the writer, Waltheof ‘avenged the killing of his
grandfather’. This all looks fairly
straightforward but, unlike the story of Sichar and Chramnesind, which, although
far from straightforward, everyone (except me) sees as a feud, there has been
significant debate about whether the conflict (to use a neutral term) between
Uhtred’s and Thurbrand’s families can in fact be called a feud at all. I want to contribute to that debate and use
recent analyses of the story to highlight some of the problems involved in
studying feud in the early Middle Ages.
In my past writings about feud I have expressed profound
scepticism about the existence of feud, as we would understand it, in the early
medieval west – or most of it anyway.
This of course raises the definition of feud, something I expect we will
spend much time doing during this conference!
I feel strongly that we need a fairly precise – but not over-restrictive
– analytical definition of feud, a definition which distinguishes feud from
simple violent dispute or potentially violent hostility. It seems to me that much recent discussion of
feud runs the risk of dissolving feud into any relationship of hostility, even
into any potentially violent dispute.
Thus far I suspect I am on solid ground.
Where I suspect I may not be, and where I expect to be rigorously
questioned by people specialising in periods with better evidence, is in that I
think we also need to distinguish feud from vengeance. This point raises what is an absolutely
fundamental problem in defining and studying the early medieval ‘feud’ (and I
hope you can hear the inverted commas around feud there). The words that meant, or are translated as,
‘feud’ in the early Middle Ages did not mean ‘feud’ as we would understand
it. Faida,
faehþe and their cognates were
generally rendered into Latin as inimicitia,
perhaps hostilitas. I hope we can agree that enmity and hostility
are not, necessarily, feud.
More to the point, the relationship rendered by these words
was a one-way relationship. ‘Feud’, as
rendered by these early medieval vernaculars, was not a two-way, reciprocal
relationship. It meant the right, by one
party, either to avenge, or rather
to punish, an affront (actually, as
far as I can see, it invariably meant a killing) through a reciprocal act,
usually vengeance-killing, without (and this is the key) any fear of a
subsequent revenge attack by the initial aggressors; or, probably more commonly, it meant the right to exact a
compensation payment in lieu of such an attack, through the threat of such an
attack. ‘Bearing the feud’ can mean the
obligation to seek redress for a wrong, by one party. At the same time, to ‘bear the feud’ means to
bear the threat of vengeance against you, or to bear the cost of the
compensation payment. I have seen no use
of the word to mean a lasting and reciprocal relationship of violence, and I
have found very little evidence indeed of feud in the modern sense of lasting
vendetta. Now, we may be happy to call
this relationship feud, because early medieval people called it feud. The problem is that in English at least, what
people today understand by feud is something rather different. And, more to the point, the phenomenon
analysed as feud in other historical periods, or in anthropological fieldwork,
is something rather different. In a
sense that is the root of the problem and why we need tight conceptual
frameworks. Most work on early medieval
feud acknowledges the point about contemporary, medieval understandings but then understanding is badly hindered by
the fact that modern notions of feud
keep bleeding into the analysis.
I should make it clear that I am not sceptical about the
historical or anthropological existence of the phenomenon of feud. I don’t adopt an unnecessarily stringent or
exacting definition of feud but I have to say that I can find very little
evidence that would satisfy even a minimal (if rigorous) definition of feud in
the early medieval West.
The principal area of contention in response to my work
appears to lie in a discussion of motivation: feud versus ‘politics’. Now, of course, this distinction is crude,
neither hard and fast nor very clear – perhaps not even very useful. Nevertheless, it is an important issue, and what is at stake should become clear in
the course of my discussion. Some
writers, William Kapelle and Matthew Bennett for example, have argued that some
violent early medieval encounters were not feuds but simply part of politics. The counter, needless to say, is to argue
(as, for example, John Gillingham, Isobel Alfonso, Richard Fletcher,
Christopher Morris) that you cannot separate feud from politics. In a sense they are quite right. But in a sense, too, this is not a very
satisfying argument if you really want to analyse and understand feud in the
early Middle Ages. I would argue that we
do need some way of distinguishing feud from violent competition for resources
between powerful groups or families that happen to have found themselves upon
opposing sides in the past. At least we
need to think about it, and conceptualise such differences. Many of my points run straight up against the
frustrating lack of evidence in the early Middle Ages. Here I would like guidance from those who
work on better documented eras. One
lesson I have to underline, however, is that we must work from the
(however vaguely) known to the unknown.
So much writing about early medieval violence is beset by assumptions,
cherished, long-held notions about the nature of the period. But feud as a central facet of early medieval
life (as many think it was) has to be demonstrated,
not assumed. It won’t do to argue that the fact that we
cannot find dramas of repeated tit-for-tat violence running beyond two acts –
one initial wrong, and one act of revenge – just because the data is
patchy. And it won’t do, either, to
argue that the reason some of our famous ‘feuds’ don’t, on close scrutiny, seem
to be feuds is because the authors of the accounts of them were churchmen who
did not understand the concept of feud.
There are a number of issues, most of which can be
illustrated with reference to the story of Uhtred and Thurbrand’s
families. The first, possibly the most
important, is that of history and narrative.
The point that historians shape the traces of the past into a story is
often associated with the ‘post-modern’ turn in historiography but it has
actually been made since the very earliest days of modern history. Thomas Carlyle said as much in the earlier
nineteenth century. To be crude, we
choose items from the information that has come down to us and connect them
together to make a story. This is, of
course, especially relevant to the study of feud, doubly relevant because the
point also applies to many of our witnesses.
Contemporaries, or near contemporaries like the Durham Anonymous,
selected episodes from the past and linked them together to make a single
strand of narrative – the story of a feud.
But was it a feud? Or was it
simply written up as such? The episodes
in the Northumbrian feud sound unproblematic, as related by the Durham
Anonymous. However in fact there were
long gaps between them. If, as is
usually assumed, the Thurbrand, enemy of Styr Ulfsson, and Thurbrand Hold are
one and the same (no one appears to have wondered why, if they are the same
man, the author only explains who Thurbrand Hold was on his second appearance – and one lesson of
the story is that name-giving was confusingly unimaginative in eleventh-century
Northumbria) then it took ten years for any violence to erupt as a result of
Styr’s injunction to Uhtred to kill Thurbrand.
Uhtred had remarried in the interim in any case and, furthermore, it was
Thurbrand who did the only recorded attacking.
Styr and Thurbrand might have been rivals but rivalry is not necessarily
feud.
Then there must have elapsed another seven years or more
before Ealdred exacted his revenge on Thurbrand. As William Kapelle noted the next episode is
interesting in that it is described not as Carl trying to ambush Ealdred,
trying to find an occasion to carry out his
vengeance killing, but as a period when the two tried to do away with each other. And the period up to Carl’s killing of
Ealdred was another long one. Ealdred’s
murder dates to 1038, that is twenty-three years after his father’s murder of
Ealdred’s father, and at least ten years after Thurbrand’s killing. As noted, the Anonymous proceeds from the
death of Ealdred to say simply that ‘Some time later, the grandson of Earl
Ealdred, Earl Waltheof, ... avenged the killing of his grandfather with the
utmost slaughter.’ What might not be
clear from this is that the Settrington massacre, the fourth and final episode
of the Northumbrian ‘feud’, took place no less than thirty-six years after
Ealdred’s murder. Indeed Carl killed
Ealdred four years before Waltheof was even born. Thirty-six years is a long time – most of my
lifetime. It took as long to happen in
the eleventh century.
So: four acts of murderous violence spread over fifty-eight
or fifty-nine years, with probably at least a decade between each of them. It might be argued that this is to limit
discussion to the recorded acts of hostility but that is one area where I
object that we cannot assume the existence of types of violence. For one thing, we do know about other acts of
violence involving these people. The war
(let’s call it that) between Ealdred and Carl has been mentioned. Another war is mentioned over the estates in
Teesdale. Waltheof, ‘avenger’ of
Ealdred, was the son of Siward, who married Ealdred’s daughter, as the Durham
Anonymous notes. Now Siward, father of
Waltheof, also happens to have killed Eadwulf, half-brother of Ealdred, in
1041. No feud appears to have ensued
between Eadwulf’s family and Siward’s. This poses huge problems for the
reconstruction of the De Obsessione’s
story as a feud. It makes Waltheof
switch sides – at best. The Durham
Anonymous could say that when Waltheof had the sons of Carl killed at
Settrington, he avenged his grandfather.
From his point of view, as he told his story, it looked like that. It’s a nice narrative turn. But, firstly, it only looked like Waltheof
had avenged his grandfather because the writer chose to forget that Waltheof’s
own father had killed Waltheof’s great uncle, the brother of the man he was
supposed to be avenging. And secondly,
however the Anonymous saw it, it does not have any implications for what
motivated Waltheof in 1073/74.
There was other murderous violence. The third son of Uhtred, Gospatric, was, like
his father and elder brother, killed at court on the orders of Tostig, Siward’s
successor as earl of Northumbria, in 1063.
Gospatric’s son Oswulf killed Tostig’s crony Copsig in 1067 but no
‘feud’ between Uhtred’s family and the Godwinesons is mentioned. Oswulf was himself murdered by a robber,
later in 1067. More to the point, when
Uhtred was killed in 1015 by Thurbrand Hold, he was killed alongside forty
other leading men. Why was it only his
family that ‘feuded’ with Thurbrand’s?
And, finally, note that neither Uhtred’s brother Eadwulf Cudel, nor
either of Ealdred’s brothers appear to have done anything at all to avenge
their murders. The Anonymous said that
Eadwulf Cudel was a lazy cowardly man but not
because he didn’t avenge his brother, but because he was afraid of the
Scots. There seems to be a lot of
selection from the evidence, selection from a sea of violence and killing,
going on here in order to make this into a long, unilinear saga of murder and
revenge. Like all historians, the Durham
Anonymous chose how to emplot his story, and he did so in the tragic mode.
An alternative explanation has been proposed. The admittedly patchy sources for
Northumbrian politics at this time allow the suggestion that the families of
Thurbrand and Uhtred were on different sides during the turbulent early decades
of the eleventh century. Uhtred’s family
had control of the earldom of Bamburgh, or Bernicia, and appears to have been
loyal to the old English royal dynasty.
Thurbrand’s family, on the other hand, seems to be counted amongst the
supporters of Cnut, and perhaps at the head of a Danish faction in
Yorkshire. The first recorded action in
the hostility between the two groups was Thurbrand’s slaughter of Uhtred and
other English leaders. However, as has
been pointed out, even by proponents of the feud interpretation, to have slain
forty-one men must have required a substantial armed force. Indeed the sources say the first massacre was
on King Cnut’s orders and that the milites
who did the killing were his troops. In
the broader English context of the events of 1016, and Charles Insley has
correctly pointed out that we cannot see episodes like this in purely local
light, Cnut was following a policy of the eradication of the principal supporters
of his erstwhile enemy and rival for the kingship, Æthelræd II ‘Unræd’. Siward’s murder of Ealdred’s brother Eadwulf
– unavenged, remember – was carried out in similar fashion, and so were other
killings at the royal court (like that of the third brother, Gospatric), none
of which appears to have provoked feud.
Kapelle has suggested that the family of the Bernician earls was in
revolt against the crown for a while.
Carl on the other hand appears to have been an important royal official
in Yorkshire, supporting the Danish royal house. The reconstruction is plausible and gives us
a reason to see how the two could have spent some time campaigning against each other even without the blood that
lay between them.
Carl’s eventual murder of Ealdred might have been part of
politics on the wider stage. Another
royal official in York, Siward, after all did away with Ealdred’s brother,
apparently on royal orders. But it is
equally possible that – at the same time – his actions might have been
motivated, and justified, by Ealdred’s killing of Carl’s father. Finally, Waltheof sent his lads to slaughter
Carl’s sons and grandsons. It is very
unlikely indeed, for reasons touched upon above, that this should be seen as an
act of feud. Again, national politics
play a part. Waltheof and the sons of
Carl had both found themselves in revolt against William I in 1069-70. Waltheof, however, had charmed William into
forgiving him and even giving him his father’s earldom. This might not have gone down well with other
former rebels. Possibly trouble was
brewing again. Either way, it seems
unlikely that we have to go back further than 1069 to understand the reasons
for the Settrington massacre of 1073/4.
Whether, like the Durham Anonymous, Waltheof justified his action as
revenge for his grandfather, whether he added it as an afterthought, as icing
on the justificatory cake, we shall never know.
The two motives – political expediency (or orders) and
personal revenge – are not necessarily clearly separable. That is the essence of the argument against
the ‘politics, not feud’ position. It is
here, however, that we run into the really intractable issues. Even if we knew how Carl justified his killing
of Ealdred, and the cross erected on the site suggests atonement, the past is
always made in the present. Individuals
select aspects from their knowledge of the past to justify their deeds in the
present. Carl and Ealdred had been
engaged in some sort of a struggle; Carl’s father had killed Ealdred’s father
twenty years before, and ten years ago (let’s say) Ealdred had killed Carl’s
father. These were all aspects that
would make close friendship between the two unlikely in any society, feuding or
otherwise. Yet they had chosen at one
point to forget these past events and become sworn brothers. There was a choice. This choice lies at the heart of what
Wallace-Hadrill called the ‘dormant feud’.
Yet I think that the concept of a dormant feud is, analytically, deeply
problematic.
In 1998 I wrote:
‘if, rather than having a continuous
state of violence and enmity, we have a series of independent incidents taking
place to solve immediate problems and the contingent selection from the past of
particular episodes to justify or explain them, it does not seem analytically
useful to link them into a spuriously continuous ‘chain’ of events and call
that feud.’
But that, essentially, was what the Durham Anonymous
did. It is what many another individual
has done in the aftermath of some event.
It is true of many another feud but, unless there is some conscious
relationship, some conscious awareness of a feuding relationship, in the
periods between the violence, then do we have a feud? It seems to me that if the answer is yes,
then there can be feuds that were entirely made with hindsight, and never
existed in the present. That does not
seem to me to be useful. Of course this
is a question that it is usually impossible to answer in the early Middle Ages. In his recent book on the hostility between
Uhtred and Thurbrand’s families, emotively called Bloodfeud, Richard Fletcher tries out two possibilities.
In the first, Fletcher draws attention to the cross erected
on the site of Ealdred’s murder. Ealdred
left only daughters, three of whom, imaginatively, he called Aelfflaed. It was one of these that married Siward. Now, says Fletcher, anthropological and
ethnographic as well as historical parallels show that women often play a part
in keeping a feuding relationship going, goading their men-folk, producing
artefacts associated with the murdered victims, singing songs about the wrongs
done, and so on. The daughters, suggests
Fletcher, erected the cross to remind their kin of the wrong done, which
required vengeance. He uses that as a
springboard for a nice discussion of female status and power in
eleventh-century England. This is an
interesting idea but it is not convincing.
Firstly, if it was the
daughters of Ealdred that erected the cross (no source says as much) and if it was their intention to keep the
feud alive in their menfolk’s mind, it was both spectacularly ill-advised and
astonishingly unsuccessful. As
mentioned, neither of Ealdred’s brothers is recorded as lifting a finger to
avenge him, and nor did either of his nephews, or his brother-in-law, or his
son-in-law. If their memory of the feud
was dependent on the Risewood cross then this is hardly surprising. It was erected in the middle of their enemy’s
estates. One might suggest that it is unlikely
that the relatives of Ealdred were permitted to make regular pilgrimages to a
cross on the estate of their relative’s killer in order to whip the men of the
party up into a vengeful frenzy. It
seems to me far more likely that,
unless Carl erected the cross in an act of penance, the cross was part of the
settlement. Not only would it have cost
money – a sort of compensation payment – if it was the sort of elaborate stone
monument well enough known from that part of the world. It would also have been a permanent reminder
to Carl and his family of his perfidy and wrong-doing. This might have been punishment enough. In any case, if feud there had been up to
that point, this seems to have ended it.
Fletcher’s is a good try but unfortunately it doesn’t
work. And alas there are precious few
better examples of the maintenance of a feuding relationship. The Merovingian Queen Chlothild’s urging her
sons to avenge her father by attacking the Burgundians is sometimes cited as an
instance but, as Ian Wood has pointed out, there are huge problems with the
story, not the least being the thirty years it apparently took Chlothild to
realise that her parents needed avenging.
Now there are references to
similar mechanisms at work in the early Middle Ages, but they all concern
hostility between larger groups – warfare between peoples. Frankish washerwomen are said to have sung
songs commemorating past wars against the Saxons, for example. Now, you could assume that if these
mechanisms were known at that level then they might have been known at other
levels of violence in early medieval society.
But that would be precisely that: an assumption. There’s no evidence. This is what lies behind the rest of
Fletcher’s analysis (like that of many another commentator), an assumption that
feud, as we understand it, was
central to early medieval life and thought.
Briefly, we need to remember that the old idea that the
extended family, or clan, was an essential feature of early medieval social
organisation has been under attack for some time. Practical kin-groups were small. Furthermore, in spite of decades of detailed
research into the reconstruction of early medieval aristocratic Sippe, there is
little or no evidence that they acted as unified groups in politics. They fought each other and changed sides in
entirely understandable ways, but ways which render the assumptions about early
medieval people’s supposed subjection to the demands of feud entirely
questionable.
Fletcher’s other approach, in arguing that the selected and
scattered episodes of violence were a bloodfeud, is to argue that medieval
texts, laws, show that feuding was a common feature of Anglo-Saxon life. If it shows nothing else, the story of
Thurbrand, Uhtred and their descendants shows that these people had a concept
of vengeance. But many, probably all,
societies have a concept of revenge. To
early medieval people God took revenge – ultio
– vengeance was, after all, his – but the Lord did not, I suggest, feud. That would suggest an altogether heretical
view of the Almighty. And the texts
cited as showing the centrality of feuding are, as I have argued before and as
I have suggested above, about vengeance, not about feud as in modern
understanding.
There is only time for brief points. Essentially, early medieval law permitted
vengeance. Even law codes like that of King
Edmund of England, permitted vengeance, but, and here they drew upon a
tradition that went back to the very last Roman laws in the west. They made precise grants, in specified
circumstances, of the state’s right to vengeance. Only exceptionally energetic and powerful
rulers believed they could prevent all acts of vindicatory violence and say
that all punishment would be done by their officers. The early medieval Latin and vernacular words
for feud meant the threat to take revenge.
This threat was strategic. It
brought in external parties to mediate.
Specifically, for much of the period, it brought in the king’s
officers. Thus, as I have argued before,
‘feud’ (in early medieval terms) was not a sign of absent state power and nor
was its appearance in law a sort of abject admission of this fact, a weary
acceptance of the fact that the only way to keep the peace was through a system
of deterrence, of mutually assured destruction.
Because the system brought in royal officers to adjudicate, it was a means
of enhancing royal presence in the localities.
This vengeance was structurally and analytically different from
feuding. For one thing, it seems to have
been the threat of violence that was
used strategically to draw attention to the dispute and bring in third parties
in an attempt to resolve it. If
compensation was not paid and an agreement or consensus was reached that
vengeance was justified, then a revenge killing was seen as punishment, and to
have ended the dispute. It seems to me
that this is importantly different from feud, where killing rarely ends the
dispute, except perhaps where the whole of the opposing party is wiped
out. Thus to suggest that ideas of feud
permeated society, or that feud, as a threat of mutually assured destruction
was used to keep the peace in a stateless society, badly misrepresent the early
medieval evidence.
The conflict between Uhtred’s family and Thurbrand’s was, to
use Paul Hyams’ phrase, feud-like
behaviour. There were certainly elements
about it that look like feud. They were,
however, only parts of a complex mix and probably not the most important
ones. Feuds make good stories and the
Durham Anonymous wrote this one up into a gripping tale. But a hugely misleading one. He made a selection to emplot his narrative
as a tale of feud. The actors in his
story might themselves have selected events from the past to justify their
deeds. The point is however that they
had a choice. When other considerations
made violence necessary and actions from the past helped to justify this, they
chose these justifications. Most of the
time, however, it seems that they chose not to make past violent acts the basis
for present or future actions. These
people were not imprisoned within a feuding culture, or bound by the demands of
feud. To emplot the Northumbrian story
as a feud masks the complexity of the situation. More importantly it denies the actors in the
story the historical choices that they clearly had and the freedom to act that
they evidently enjoyed.
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