Marc Bloch said that his goal in writing Feudal Society was to go
beyond the technical study a medievalist would typically write and
'dismantle a social structure.' In this outstanding and monumental work,
which has introduced generations of students and historians to the
feudal period, Bloch treats feudalism as living, breathing force in
Western Europe from the ninth to the thirteenth century. At its heart
lies a magisterial account of relations of lord and vassal, and the
origins of the nature of the fief, brought to life through compelling
accounts of the nobility, knighthood and chivalry, family relations,
political and legal institutions, and the church. For Bloch history was
a process of constant movement and evolution and he describes throughout
the slow process by which feudal societies turned into what would become
nation states. A tour de force of historical writing, Feudal Society
is essential reading for anyone interested in both Western Europe's past
and present.
With a new foreword by Geoffrey Koziol