Publication – « Pas d’armes and Late Medieval Chivalry. A Casebook », éd. Rosalind Brown-Grant Mario Damen

This Casebook features the work of an international, interdisciplinary research group entitled ‘The Joust as Performance: Pas d’armes and Late Medieval Chivalry’ and funded by the UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council. Its focus is on the pas d’armes (English: ‘passage of arms’), a highly ritualised form of tournament and elite entertainment that was popular principally in Anjou, the Burgundian lands, France and Iberia in the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Part I of the volume provides a representative selection of sixteen translated and contextualised sources on the pas d’armes that includes narrative texts, administrative accounts and illuminated images. Part II, which comprises seven new scholarly essays on the pas d’armes, addresses the issue of how this type of tournament evolved through cultural transfer from court to court, offers in-depth analyses of a chronological and geographical range of pas d’armes from the perspective of text-image relations, heraldry, urban-court relations and manuscript commissioning, and focuses on broader themes such as the construction of masculinity and the representation of chivalric and non-chivalric bodies at these events. The Casebook also provides a map and table of all such tournaments known to have taken place between c. 1420 and c. 1520, some of which have been identified for the first time as pas d’armes, as well as a glossary of arms and armour, clothing and textiles typically featured at this type of event. It will be of interest to both specialist scholars and students of late medieval chivalric and tournament culture.

In addition to the sixteen translated sources provided in the Casebook itself, two further sources based on important manuscripts that have only recently come to light are also available to download via the Liverpool University Press Digital Collaboration Hub. Supplementary Source 1 concerns four pas d’armes that took place in 1446-47 in the courtly milieu of Anjou under the aegis of Duke René, whilst Supplementary Source 2 features two pas d’armes that were held in 1484 in Paris at the court of the newly crowned King Charles VIII.

Rosalind Brown-Grant is Professor Emerita of Late Medieval French Literature, University of Leeds. She has published on Christine de Pizan, late medieval romance and historiographical works, and text-image relations in medieval manuscripts; she has also edited and translated several Middle French texts.

Mario Damen is Associate Professor in Medieval History, University of Amsterdam. He has published widely on the cultural and socio-political history of the late medieval Low Countries in general, and on the nobility and tournaments in particular.

Table des matières : ici

Informations pratiques :

Pas d’armes and Late Medieval Chivalry. A Casebook, éd. Rosalind Brown-Grant Mario Damen, Liverpool, Liverpool University Press, 2025 ; 1 vol., 624 p. ISBN : 978-1-83553-766-4. Prix : GBP : 35,00.

Source : Liverpool University Press

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