Neighbours and strangers investigates social cohesion in rural
settlements in western Europe from 700 to 1050, asking to what extent
settlements, or districts, constituted units of social organisation. It
focuses on the interactions, interconnections and networks of people who
lived side by side - neighbours.
The book offers a new approach to well-known problems of the early
Middle Ages by bringing together expertise in different regions from
different national traditions in a comparative framework. It discusses
the basic constituents of early medieval rural societies: material
dimensions, such as settlement, topography and the appropriation of
resources, as well as fundamental factors that define the position of
individuals within local societies and groups, such as legal status and
socio-economic stratification. It examines how people in the early
medieval west worked together in pursuit of shared goals beyond the
level of the household, and how (and whether) they formed their own
groups through that collective action.
The book also explores the position of early medieval priests and their
capacity to stimulate social cohesion in local communities. Finally, it
treats the ways in which outside authorities, office holders from both
the public and the private sphere and political elites, intervened in
local society.