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Croisade, tyrannie et conspirations antichrétiennes : l’ambiguïté des zones frontières chez quelques auteurs français de la fin du Moyen Âge
Auteur(s)
Date de parution
2021-4-11
In
Le Moyen Âge
No
127
De la page
313
A la page
334
Revu par les pairs
1
Résumé
This article focuses on the representation of the margins of Christianity across certain narrative sources of the late medieval period. The contact areas between Latin Christianity and other religions are perceived in very ambiguous terms, at once bastions of Christianity and potential sources of subversion. Taking the assassinations of Peter of Castile and Louis I of Orléans as a starting point, the focus is on the manner in which Castile, Cyprus, and Hungary, as well as Lombardy, are represented: assimilated into a “peripheral” nation out of necessity. Mixed in with the heroic and exotic imagery of the crusade are a number of negative stereotypes that are used to attack an illegitimate government, such as tyranny, heresy, apostasy, sorcery, and treason.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article
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