Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award

I enrolled in Professor Giles Constable’s seminar in twelfth-century European history in 1962, my frst year of graduate study at Harvard. He told us to select a cartulary, which he told us was a term for a collection of medieval documents. We were to write a paper based on what we found there. I se...

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Main Author: Richard W. Bulliet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2016-11-01
Series:Al-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/alusur/article/view/7015
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spelling doaj-3bcca36f82d34082aa0a29ffb39bd5292021-02-05T17:54:39ZengColumbia University LibrariesAl-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā1068-10512016-11-0124110.7916/alusur.v24i1.7015Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award Richard W. Bulliet I enrolled in Professor Giles Constable’s seminar in twelfth-century European history in 1962, my frst year of graduate study at Harvard. He told us to select a cartulary, which he told us was a term for a collection of medieval documents. We were to write a paper based on what we found there. I selected the cartulary of the Guillem family, the lords of Montpellier in southern France. I realized, given my haphazard memory of the Latin I had taken in high school, that I could not expect to read most of the documents. But I noticed that each document ended with a series of names of witnesses, and, the more important the document, the longer the list. Moreover, the names often included the witness’ occupation and the name of his father. So I made the study of major witness families over a sequence of generations the core element of my paper. https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/alusur/article/view/7015
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard W. Bulliet
spellingShingle Richard W. Bulliet
Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award
Al-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā
author_facet Richard W. Bulliet
author_sort Richard W. Bulliet
title Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award
title_short Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award
title_full Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award
title_fullStr Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award
title_full_unstemmed Remarks by the Recipient of the 2015 MEM Lifetime Achievement Award
title_sort remarks by the recipient of the 2015 mem lifetime achievement award
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Al-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā
issn 1068-1051
publishDate 2016-11-01
description I enrolled in Professor Giles Constable’s seminar in twelfth-century European history in 1962, my frst year of graduate study at Harvard. He told us to select a cartulary, which he told us was a term for a collection of medieval documents. We were to write a paper based on what we found there. I selected the cartulary of the Guillem family, the lords of Montpellier in southern France. I realized, given my haphazard memory of the Latin I had taken in high school, that I could not expect to read most of the documents. But I noticed that each document ended with a series of names of witnesses, and, the more important the document, the longer the list. Moreover, the names often included the witness’ occupation and the name of his father. So I made the study of major witness families over a sequence of generations the core element of my paper.
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/alusur/article/view/7015
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