This book is first and foremost an extended examination and discussion
of the enslavement of men and women by others of their society and in
particular of the means and causes of the gradual end of slavery in
early medieval Europe between 500 and 1200. Drawing upon a very wide
range of primary and archival sources, Professor Bonnassie places fresh
findings about subjection, servitude and lordship in relation to the
prevailing understanding of social history which has developed since the
work of Marc Bloch. The author explains how slavery long persisted in
southern France and Spain, as part of a public order that also sheltered
free peasants, giving way in the tenth and eleventh centuries to a new
regime of harsh lordships that mark the beginnings of feudalism. He
shows that feudalism in south-western Europe was no less significant
than in northern European lands.