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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">21.11.05</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>21.11.05, Dell' Elicine/Martin, Framing Power in Visigothic Society</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Erica Buchberger</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley</aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>erica.buchberger@utrgv.edu</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2021">
                <year>2021</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Dell' Elicine, Eleonora, and Céline Martin, eds</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>Framing Power in Visigothic Society: Discourses, Devices, and Artifacts</source>
                <year iso-8601-date="2020">2020</year>
                <publisher-loc>Amsterdam, Netherlands</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Amsterdam University Press</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. 224</page-range>
                <price>€99.00 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-9-46372-590-3 (hardback)</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2021 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p><italic>Framing Power in Visigothic Society</italic> aims to offer a new understanding of
            early medieval Iberia by rethinking “frameworks of power” (9). It includes chapters from
            varied discipline, sources, and foci to highlight the variety of option for framing
            power that existed simultaneously and to “facilitat[e] dialogues between particular
            fields” that have expanded greatly in recent years to encourage future interdisciplinary
            endeavors. The editors set out these aims in chapter 1 as well as highlight
            commonalities essential for exercise of power: writing, institutionalization, and varied
            mechanisms of power at one’s disposal. They argue that those with power did not have it
                <italic>because</italic> of their central position of leadership, rather they gained
            such a position by exerting control over the listed necessary elements. In addition to
            summarizing the chapters, Dell’ Elicine and Martin reflect further on approaches to
            power, but the impenetrable prose makes these approaches hard to discern. What do they
            mean by reading “through a lens of simultaneity” or by “forces that opened social
            distances” (16-17)? Such phrases and awkward passive voice constructions like “[t]he
            idea of complexity maintains its ability to dismantle certain prejudices” (14) impede
            rather than facilitate understanding and dialogue.</p>
        <p>Chapter 2 by Jacques Elfassi seems to fit awkwardly into a volume on power. It presents a
            list of all works by Augustine of Hippo that Isidore of Seville knew, in order to help
            further study of their influences. Why such knowledge is beneficial is not explained to
            the non-specialist reader. Elfassi particularly examines the ways Isidore used these
            sources beyond simple citation. He demonstrates that Isidore cites Augustine to define
            technical terms, not just on theological and exegetical points. He further suggests that
            we should reconsider the idea taken from modern literary studies that any time an author
            borrows from predecessors there must be an ideological explanation. Sometimes Isidore
            may have just liked a particular turn of phrase and felt he could not improve on it, and
            his borrowing is not significant. In other words, we could read Elfassi as saying power
            can come not just from citing authority figures or altering their words for new purpose,
            but also through pleasing phrases that convey meaning well.</p>
        <p>In chapter 3, Dolores Castro examines another aspect of Isidore’s writings. She explores
            what Isidore said on methods of reading, interpreting, and teaching biblical texts to
            determine what he thought bishops’ roles should be and how he used that role to increase
            episcopal authority. Isidore linked behavior with correct interpretation; one could be
            highly educated but still fall into error if one’s interpretation was not centered in
            deep faith in Christ. He exhorted clergy to read extensively of Scripture, canons of
            church councils, and exegesis, but not at the expense of meditation and prayer on their
            meanings. Pagan works should be avoided by all except those best trained and who live
            the most morally upright lives due to the risk that poetic pagan rhetoric would trick
            the reader into believing that style equals truth. Bishops, being the most expert at
            correct practices of reading and moral living, should therefore be trusted to convey the
            truth of Scriptures. Castro draws fascinating links between spiritual and more worldly
            matters in this chapter, and more discussion of why Isidore might be concerned to
            bolster episcopal authority would make these links even more impactful.</p>
        <p>Chapter 4 by Carlos Tejerizo explains why early medieval archaeology in Spain developed
            the way it has by situating the field in its 19th- and 20th-century political and social
            contexts. It then considers significant recent contributions of archaeology to
            understanding Visigothic peasant or rural societies and proposes future directions.
            Among the changes that have led to an archaeological revolution are the end of the
            Franco regime in 1975, which allowed for research questions beyond nationalist agendas;
            Spain’s joining the EU in the 1980s, which exposed its academics to new research in the
            Western European intellectual community; and the rise of commercial archaeology, which
            has led to the enormous growth of available data. Tejerizo demonstrates that these
            developments have allowed for new perspectives that have radically changed our
            understanding of early medieval rural societies. Scholars now recognize that post-Roman
            peasants actively reorganized their regional landscapes by adapting late Roman
            techniques, rather than having a new landscape imposed on them by Germanic migrants.
            Archaeologists have further discovered that peasant life was more stable than once
            thought, with articulated networks of farmsteads and villages and diverse economic
            strategies for resilience. They also are coming to acknowledge that ethnicity is not the
            only, or even the most important, element of rural social identities. Finally, a shift
            from studying an object (the village) to a subject (the peasantry) has opened new
            avenues for understanding the nature and complexity of social inequalities in rural
            societies. This chapter provides an excellent introduction to the contours of early
            medieval archaeology in Spain and a convincing argument for the essential contribution
            of archaeological data to any study of the period.</p>
        <p>In chapter 5, Eleonora Dell’ Elicine aims to explain the purposes of pagan “regimes of
            sacralization” (109) as local alternatives to centralizing power dynamics by examining
            decrees against idolatry at the 16th Council of Toledo in 693. She argues that cult
            practices activated other ways of promoting authority that the top-down power of kings
            and bishops, and allowed locals to preserve memories and alternate centers of power in
            the landscape. Worship of idols, stones, and trees was situated in local space and not
            dependent on external validation. It also provided a different way to organize space
            than externally imposed provinces and dioceses. Dell’ Elicine concludes that existing
            evidence does not show a post-Roman reversion to Celtic or Roman paganism but instead
            drawing on old landscapes of power in response to local situations. However, while the
            chapter acknowledges the bias of Christian sources, it does not address the very real
            possibility that they were performative and such idolatry did not actually take place.
            Also, as in chapter 1, the reader is forced to dig for meaning through abstract,
            unexplained phrases like “regimes of sacralization,” passive voice that obfuscates
            rather than clarifies, and crucial specialist knowledge left implied or unsaid. Dell’
            Elicine states that anti-idolatry laws aimed to punish lords for non-cooperation but
            does not explain what they were expected to do. Nor is the text of the law fully
            provided, only the list of what counts as idol worship.</p>
        <p>Chapter 6 by Céline Martin examines changes to capital punishments (death or penalties
            substituting for it), focusing on exile in the 680s under King Ervig. She suggests his
            eliminating the death penalty in favor of exile is not as radical a change as it seems.
            Ervig probably did so both to update law to match the common practice of royal clemency
            and to make punishments reversible. The latter was important in a kingdom where
            political loyalties changed frequently and today’s enemy might be tomorrow’s ally. It
            also allowed for the hope that heretics left alive would repent and thus save their
            souls. Martin also shows some hints that exile and enslavement were beginning to
            converge at the end of the period, though detailed examination of this is reserved for a
            future study. The chapter ends with a table of relevant civil laws that makes its
            argument easy to follow. Martin’s interesting new approaches to the less-studied later
            period of Visigothic rule, as well as the Visigothic attitude toward Jews, are most
            welcome.</p>
        <p>In chapter 7, Margarita Vallejo explores diplomatic exchanges between King Sisebut and
            the Byzantines in the 610s in the context of the longer history of Visigothic-Byzantine
            diplomacy. Doing so requires creative deduction from meager sources, but Vallejo does so
            convincingly. She first provides examples of probable earlier agreements about each
            party’s territory in the Iberian peninsula and the Byzantines’ breach of them to show
            why Sisebut would be suspicious of any Byzantine suit for peace, especially since he had
            the tactical advantage at this time. The chapter turns next to how the Byzantines sought
            to convince him of their sincerity: the governor of Byzantium’s Iberian territory
            appealed to Sisebut’s distress at the pain and violence of their war, released captives
            as a gesture of goodwill, and appealed to Christian loyalty. Additionally, the emperor
            Heraclius annotated the agreement in his own hand rather than leaving it all to a scribe
            and sent his own legate back to Spain along with Sisebut’s envoy to serve as a further
            witness to the truth of its contents. Vallejo argues that it seems Sisebut agreed to
            peace and thus acknowledged Byzantium’s legal presence in Iberia. It was his successor
            Suinthila who broke the new agreement, as Byzantium had once done to the Visigoths,
            finally removing them from the peninsula. While a bit more information at the beginning
            of the chapter on the content of the relevant letters and the situation that led to
            their writing would help non-specialist readers, all this information does appear later
            in the chapter and the argument is well signposted.</p>
        <p>In the final chapter, Ruth Pliego summarizes the major developments in Visigothic
            numismatics in the past decade, including changing ideas prompted by a wealth of
            newfound or newly accessible coins. She cautions that despite the significant increase
            in the number of known coins, they are still very scanty compared with other places and
            the overall picture is thus easily skewed by a handful of hoards. Pliego provides
            examples of broad conclusions that are not borne out by the evidence in urging scholars
            to observe general trends in coinage but not leap to unsupportable conclusions about
            detailed monetary circulation. This chapter is a direct response to both rapid field
            development and the author’s personal reflection on what non-numismatists need to
            understand it. The historiographical background and extensive tables and statistics
            provided are geared toward helping researchers integrate numismatic information into
            their arguments responsibly. Because Pliego does not assume familiarity with numismatics
            and crafts her chapter accordingly, she manages to make a sometimes intimidating topic
            very accessible.</p>
        <p>Overall, this volume provides useful snapshots of new approaches and developments across
            Visigothic studies. Particularly helpful are Tejerizo’s, Martin’s, and Pliego’s chapters
            that provide tables and background information to aid readers unfamiliar with their
            particular source sets. These chapters are accessible and beneficial to specialists in
            Visigothic studies and scholars of other regions and periods alike. Other chapters seem
            more directed toward specialists, either assuming background knowledge that those less
            familiar with Visigothic Iberia may not possess or presenting material in overly
            complicated ways. The difficult writing style of the introductory chapter in particular
            limits rather than broadens the potential audience. As scholars, if we wish to control
            access to knowledge and limit it to specialists, like Isidore with biblical
            interpretation, then writing this way serves our goals. But if we want to encourage
            fruitful interdisciplinary dialogue, we must dispense with rhetorical “ornaments of
            speech” (69, from Isidore, <italic>Sententiae</italic> III, 13, 8) and prioritize
            simplicity and clarity, as many of the contributors to this volume admirably do.</p>
    </body>
</article>