In their introduction to this anthology, James Bruce Ross and Mary
Martin McLaughlin remind us that "no area of the past is dead if we are
alive to it. The variety, the complexity, the sheer humanity of the
middle ages live most meaningfully in their own authentic voices." "The
Portable Medieval Reader" assembles an entire chorus of those voices -
of kings, warriors, prelates, merchants, artisans, chroniclers, and
scholars - that together convey a lively, intimate impression of a world
that might otherwise seem immeasurably alien.
All the aspects and strata of medieval society are represented here: the
life of monasteries and colleges, the codes of knigthood, the labor of
peasants and the privileges of kings. There are contemporary accounts of
the persecution of Jews and heretics, of the Crusades in the Holy Land,
of courtly pageants, popular uprisings, and the first trade missions to
Cathay. We find Chaucer, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Saint Francis of Assisi,
Thomas Aquinas and Abelard alongside a host of lesser-known writers,
discoursing on all the arts, knowledge and speculation of their time.
The result, according to the "Columbia Record," is a broad and eminetly
readable "cross section of source history and literature...as rich and
varied as a stained glass window."