Rodulfus Glaber 的后卡洛林地理学中的北方与西方

Traditio Pub Date : 2023-12-14 DOI:10.1017/tdo.2023.1
E. Wolever
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文评估了 11 世纪勃艮第修道士鲁道夫-格拉贝尔(Rodulfus Glaber)在《历史五卷》中对北方和西方的地理意识。与之前的评论者所采用的中世纪地理学的主流方法(这些方法侧重于欧洲的观念或东西方的对立)不同,本文认为我们必须将格拉博的空间意识首先置于加洛林王朝和后加洛林王朝的北方观念的脉络中。本书特别关注第一部的高潮情节,即预言基督教在世界北部和西部地区兴起的耶稣受难的景象。首先,格拉博在描述高卢和日耳曼尼亚时,将里法亚山脉(Riphaean mountains)和塞孔达山脉(Raetia Secunda)的不寻常位置与中世纪早期的文本地理学和十一至十二世纪的地图学进行了比较,以显示北方作为基督教世界广阔而直接的前沿地带的位置在不断变化且模棱两可。然后,在这一背景下,格拉博对西方的构想通过与一系列征兆和预言的并用进行了考量,其中最值得注意的是第二卷开头的鲸鱼目击事件。这些考量揭示了法兰克人对西部的一种更混乱、更本土化的概念,这种概念与作为暴力和混乱之地的北部相互关联。这不仅凸显了格拉贝尔文本本身的重要矛盾,而且也凸显了一种在十二世纪仍有影响力的地理观念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
POST-CAROLINGIAN GEOGRAPHIES OF NORTH AND WEST IN RODULFUS GLABER
This article evaluates the geographical consciousness of north and west found in the Five Books of the Histories by the eleventh-century Burgundian monk Rodulfus Glaber. In contrast with dominant approaches to medieval geography that have informed prior commentators, who have focused on ideas of Europe or the opposition of east and west, it argues that we must situate Glaber's spatial consciousness first and foremost in the lineage of Carolingian and post-Carolingian conceptions of the north. Focusing especially on the climactic episode of the first book, a vision of the crucifixion that prophesies the rise of Christianity in the northern and western regions of the world, it seeks to contextualize this around the wider geography within Glaber's text. First, the unusual place of the Riphaean mountains and Raetia Secunda in Glaber's descriptions of Gaul and Germania are compared with early medieval textual geographies and eleventh- to twelfth-century cartography to show the shifting and ambiguous place of the north as an expansive and immediate frontier of the Christian world. Then, with this background in place, Glaber's conception of the west is considered through its use alongside a range of signs and portents, most notably the whale sighting at the beginning of the second book. These considerations reveal a messier and more local, Frankish conception of west that is interconnected with the north as a site of violence and disorder. This not only highlights important tensions in Glaber's text itself, but also a geographical vision that remained influential well into the twelfth century.
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