Liber instrumentorum vicecomitalium

The Liber instrumentorum vicecomitalium (Latin for "Book of the Instruments of the Viscounts"), sometimes called the Trencavel Cartulary (CT) or Cartulaire de Foix, is a high medieval cartulary commissioned by the Trencavel family. It preserves either 585[1][2] or 6167[3] charters, the earliest of which dates to 1028 and the latest to 1214. The charters preserve a record of important feudal customs relating to the lands of the Trencavel, namely Albi, Agde, Béziers, Carcassonne, Nîmes, and Razès, all of whichsave Carcassonne, which was a countywere viscounties, hence the cartulary's name. It is preserved in a twelfth-century manuscript, now kept with the Société Archéologique de Montpellier, where it is MS 10.[4]

The compilation of the Liber began probably between 1186 and 1188, under the direction of Roger II Trencavel.[5] It was completed in two stages and occupies 248 folios. The initial work was done by two scribes in a clear but highly abbreviate "proto-gothic documentary script", with a few decorated initials.[6] In 1206 a few charters from the 1190s and the first years of the new century as well as some older documents from 117685 that were omitted in the initial compilation were added by a different scribe, using a smaller, rounder script. The final addition to the charter was a record of the surrender of Bernard Ato VI Trencavel to Simon de Montfort in 1214.[6] The earliest eleventh-century charters generally concern Albi, the first Trencavel viscounty, but the majority of charters date to the midlate twelfth century.

Of the charters 321 (55%) are oaths of fealty, 79 are "grants, recognitions, sales, mortgages" of fiefs,[1][2] and 57 are convenientiae (accords). A small proportion of the oaths reference other convenientiae, but it is clear from the proportions of documents in the cartulary that "the power of the Trencavels rested on the oath."[1]

Its organisation implies its use as an argument for Trencavel power.[7] For example, it contains the supposed will of Roger the Old, the founder of the house.[8] Its contents are geographically organised, arranged so as to present Trencavel lordship as regional and territorial. This form of organisation is mirrored in the contemporary Liber feudorum maior (and its companion piece, the Liber feudorum Ceritaniae) of Catalonia and the Liber instrumentorum memorialium of the Guilhems of Montpellier, with which it is often compared. The Trencavel Cartulary contains no documents concerning the church, secular or monastic, and does not appear to have been used on a regular basis by its commissioners. It was only periodically augmented, and seems more to have been a monument to Trencavel power.[6]

Editions

References

Sources
  • Cheyette, Frederic L. 1976. "The Castles of the Trencavels: A Preliminary Aerial Survey." Order and Innovation in the Middle Ages: Essays in Honor of Joseph R. Strayer, William Chester Jordan, Bruce McNab, and Teofilo F. Ruiz, edd. (Princeton), 25572.
  • Cheyette, Fredric L. 1988. "The 'Sale' of Carcassonne to the Counts of Barcelona (10671070) and the Rise of the Trencavels." Speculum, 63(4), 826864.
  • Cheyette, Fredric L. 2001. Ermengard of Narbonne and the World of the Troubadours. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-3952-3.
  • Graham-Leigh, Elaine. 2005. The Southern French Nobility and the Albigensian Crusade. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press. ISBN 1-84383-129-5.
  • Evergates, Theodore. 2003. Littere Baronum: The Earliest Cartulary of the Counts of Champagne. Medieval Academy of America. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8020-8762-0
  • Kosto, Adam J. 2001. Making Agreements in Medieval Catalonia: Power, Order, and the Written Word, 10001200. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-79239-8.
  • Kosto, Adam J. 2001. "The Liber feudorum maior of the Counts of Barcelona: The Cartulary as an Expression of Power." Journal of Medieval History, 27(1), 122.
Notes
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Kosto, Making Agreements, 149.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Evergates, 20.
  3. Kosto, "The Liber feudorum maior," 2.
  4. Cheyette, 826. There "are now microfilms of this cartulary in Montpellier and Carcassonne", according to Cheyette, Ermengard of Narbonne, 365 n8.
  5. Graham-Leigh, 14.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Graham-Leigh, 15.
  7. Graham-Leigh, 16.
  8. Graham-Leigh, 159.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, May 02, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.