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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ian ForrestPublisher: Princeton University Press Imprint: Princeton University Press ISBN: 9780691180601ISBN 10: 0691180601 Pages: 520 Publication Date: 10 July 2018 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , General , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Language: English Table of ContentsReviewsOne of The Tablet's Best Books of 2018 [A] riveting social history full of vivid characters in everyday wrangles and powerful reflections on trust and faith. ---Teresa Morgan, The Tablet Trustworthy Men presents a captivating portrait. . . . [It] opens a window onto a fascinating aspect of medieval life, and the study is a model for scholarship across specializations. ---G.E. Myers, Choice Forrest's book is an impressive work which will probably exert a strong influence on medieval English Church history. ---Justin Kirkland, European Legacy Straddling social and ecclesiastical history, and the history of ideas, this elegant book investigates Episcopal bishops' use of lay 'trustworthy men' as witnesses and informants for various actions within the diocese. The themes explored are of profound importance, with very wide implications not only for those who work on the medieval church, but also for anyone interested in medieval society and governance. --John H. Arnold, University of Cambridge Ian Forrest's richly detailed history provides not just a magisterial narrative of an institution, but also shows how that institution reinforced social trust between individuals in the wider society. Even more originally, Forrest demonstrates how its ability to play that role depended on relations of trust between the institution and the individuals who functioned within it. This book is an important contribution to our understanding of the way in which institutional trust laid the foundations of the modern world. --Paul Seabright, author of The Company of Strangers A new history of the late medieval church in England, this brilliant book is a rare beast, grounded in extensive theoretical and empirical research. A masterpiece of historical thinking, it will be widely influential. --Frances Andrews, University of St Andrews In Trustworthy Men, we have a new, radical, and utterly compelling understanding of the Middle Ages. Ian Forrest explores the church as a 'social church' whose institutional workings made medieval communities enduringly unequal. As bishops reached ever more deeply into the fields and households of English parishioners after ca.1200, they came to depend on local enforcers of their interests--the eponymous trustworthy men--whose power, knowledge, and wealth coerced lesser men and women to the will and interest of prelates who were at once shepherds and landlords. --Miri Rubin, author of The Middle Ages: A Very Short Introduction Ian Forrest's richly detailed history provides not just a magisterial narrative of an institution, but also shows how that institution reinforced social trust between individuals in the wider society. Even more originally, Forrest demonstrates how its ability to play that role depended on relations of trust between the institution and the individuals who functioned within it. This book is an important contribution to our understanding of the way in which institutional trust laid the foundations of the modern world. -Paul Seabright, author of The Company of Strangers A new history of the late medieval church in England, this brilliant book is a rare beast, grounded in extensive theoretical and empirical research. A masterpiece of historical thinking, it will be widely influential. -Frances Andrews, University of St Andrews Straddling social and ecclesiastical history, and the history of ideas, this elegant book investigates Episcopal bishops' use of lay `trustworthy men' as witnesses and informants for various actions within the diocese. The themes explored are of profound importance, with very wide implications not only for those who work on the medieval church, but also for anyone interested in medieval society and governance. -John H. Arnold, University of Cambridge In Trustworthy Men, we have a new, radical, and utterly compelling understanding of the Middle Ages. Ian Forrest explores the church as a `social church' whose institutional workings made medieval communities enduringly unequal. As bishops reached ever more deeply into the fields and households of English parishioners after ca.1200, they came to depend on local enforcers of their interests-the eponymous trustworthy men-whose power, knowledge, and wealth coerced lesser men and women to the will and interest of prelates who were at once shepherds and landlords. -Miri Rubin, author of The Middle Ages: A Very Short Introduction [A] riveting social history full of vivid characters in everyday wrangles and powerful reflections on trust and faith. ---Teresa Morgan, The Tablet Ian Forrest's richly detailed history provides not just a magisterial narrative of an institution, but also shows how that institution reinforced social trust between individuals in the wider society. Even more originally, Forrest demonstrates how its ability to play that role depended on relations of trust between the institution and the individuals who functioned within it. This book is an important contribution to our understanding of the way in which institutional trust laid the foundations of the modern world. --Paul Seabright, author of The Company of Strangers A new history of the late medieval church in England, this brilliant book is a rare beast, grounded in extensive theoretical and empirical research. A masterpiece of historical thinking, it will be widely influential. --Frances Andrews, University of St Andrews In Trustworthy Men, we have a new, radical, and utterly compelling understanding of the Middle Ages. Ian Forrest explores the church as a 'social church' whose institutional workings made medieval communities enduringly unequal. As bishops reached ever more deeply into the fields and households of English parishioners after ca.1200, they came to depend on local enforcers of their interests--the eponymous trustworthy men--whose power, knowledge, and wealth coerced lesser men and women to the will and interest of prelates who were at once shepherds and landlords. --Miri Rubin, author of The Middle Ages: A Very Short Introduction Straddling social and ecclesiastical history, and the history of ideas, this elegant book investigates Episcopal bishops' use of lay 'trustworthy men' as witnesses and informants for various actions within the diocese. The themes explored are of profound importance, with very wide implications not only for those who work on the medieval church, but also for anyone interested in medieval society and governance. --John H. Arnold, University of Cambridge Author InformationIan Forrest is fellow and tutor in history at Oriel College, University of Oxford. He is the author of The Detection of Heresy in Late Medieval England. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |