Ethnicity and Legal Pluralism in the Early Middle Ages - IN PERS

Ethnicity and Legal Pluralism in the Early Middle Ages - IN PERS

Join us in person for a lecture by Stefan Esders (FU Berlin) on 'Ethnicity and Legal Pluralism in the Early Middle Ages'.

By German Historical Institute London

Date and time

Starts on Tuesday, June 17 · 5:30pm GMT+1

Location

Deutsches Historisches Institut London

17 Bloomsbury Square London WC1A 2NJ United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours

In the early medieval period, we can observe the rise of ethically defined legal pluralism. This meant that in the courts of the Frankish kingdom, Franks, Romans, Alamans, Bavarians, Burgundians, Lombards, and members of further ethnic groups had to be treated according to their respective laws. In contrast to recent scholarship, which has emphasized the fluidity of ethnic and other categories of distinction, the lecture proceeds from the observation that law in this period tended to simplify ethnic categories and make them as unambiguous as possible, because otherwise it was not possible to clarify the legal identity and status of an individual. On this basis, it will describe the rise of ethically defined legal pluralism, discuss some of the more theoretical and practical problems inherent in it, and analyse attempts to solve potential norm conflicts arising from ethically defined legal pluralism.

Stefan Esders studied history and Latin at Heidelberg University, the University of Freiburg, and the University of Oxford, and has been Professor of Late Antique and Early Medieval History at the Freie Universität Berlin since 2006. His current research concentrates on the ‘barbarian’ kingdoms of the post-Roman West, with a special focus on their legal and social history.

Organized by

The German Historical Institute London is dedicated to the promotion of historical research in the United Kingdom and Germany. It focuses on the comparative history of Britain and Germany, the global and colonial history of the British Empire and Commonwealth, and the history of British-German relations and transfers.