The eleven essays offered in Women, Marriage, and Family in Medieval
Christendom reflect the spirit and originality of Father Michael M.
Sheehan, for whom the volume was collected. The essays consider three
thematic categories that were dominant in most of Sheehan's own
scholarly work: the role, position, and contributions of medieval women;
the development of Christian marriage, especially in the High Middle
Ages; and the secular family with its legal and emotional relationships.
A close reading of the papers, particularly those concerned with the
themes of marriage and the family, reveal what we can designate as the
Sheehan school of social history. The collection expands on several of
Sheehan's research areas, and while it shows a considerable interest in
medieval England, it does not disregard the Continent. The volume is a
worthy tribute to Sheehan and will be of great interest to students of
social and legal history, women's history, the development of marriage,
and the idea of the family.