Shaping the Nation in Medieval Europe
Éloïse Adde(Editor)
Arc Humanities Press
Published on 31. March 2026
Book
Hardback
978-1-80270-424-2 (ISBN)
Description
This volume in The Medieval Globe book series explores a fundamental problem of European historiography within a global context: the history of medieval nations and the question of their relationship to modern nation-states. Focusing on the emerging or established societies of Christian Europe and their immediate neighbours, contributors ask: To what extent did medieval peoples, polities, and territorial principalities represent or constitute nations? When and where can we discern this occurring? And crucially, what constitutes sound evidence for the existence of medieval nations, given that all of our sources (textual and material) have been filtered through centuries of post-medieval identity- and state-formation processes? Such questions are engaged from fresh perspectives that will illuminate both medieval ideas of the nation and their later distortion by political, academic, and popular uses of the medieval past.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Leeds
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-80270-424-2 (9781802704242)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Éloïse Adde
Shaping the Nation in Medieval Europe
E-Book
04/2026
1st Edition
Arc Humanities Press
€124.00
Available for download
Persons
Editor
Central European University
Éloïse Adde is Associate Professor in the Department of Historical Studies at the Central European University in Vienna. Her research focuses on state-building and nations, political thought and discourse, and the rise of "individuals" and individualism in late medieval Brabant and Bohemia.
Éloïse Adde is Associate Professor in the Department of Historical Studies at the Central European University in Vienna. Her research focuses on state-building and nations, political thought and discourse, and the rise of "individuals" and individualism in late medieval Brabant and Bohemia.
General editor
Lynn M. Martin Professorial ScholarUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Carol Symes is Professor of History and Director of the Program in Medieval Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her research focuses on the history of documentary practices and communication media in medieval Europe.
Carol Symes is Professor of History and Director of the Program in Medieval Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her research focuses on the history of documentary practices and communication media in medieval Europe.
Content
Carol Symes, "Why Europe? Why the Nation?"
Éloïse Adde, "Community, Identity, Individuals: Shaping the (Political) Nation in Premodern Europe"
Benoît Grévin, "Natio or lingua? Revisiting a Semantic Couplet (1200-1600)"
Julia Verkholantsev, "Ex linguis gentes: The Etymological Method and the Roman Theory of Lithuania's Origins"
Daniel Ziemann, "Ethnicity and Statehood in the First Bulgarian Empire (681-1018): From Bulgars to Bulgarians"
Andrzej Pleszczynski, "Nature, Gender, and the Medieval Origins of the Polish Self-Stereotype"
Przemyslaw Wiszewski, "Between Region and Nation: Shifting Communities and Identities in Medieval Catalonia, Silesia, and Transylvania"
Cathleen Sarti, "Brothers, Cousins, and Strangers: Scandinavian Political Identities, ca. 1400-1600"
Index
Éloïse Adde, "Community, Identity, Individuals: Shaping the (Political) Nation in Premodern Europe"
Benoît Grévin, "Natio or lingua? Revisiting a Semantic Couplet (1200-1600)"
Julia Verkholantsev, "Ex linguis gentes: The Etymological Method and the Roman Theory of Lithuania's Origins"
Daniel Ziemann, "Ethnicity and Statehood in the First Bulgarian Empire (681-1018): From Bulgars to Bulgarians"
Andrzej Pleszczynski, "Nature, Gender, and the Medieval Origins of the Polish Self-Stereotype"
Przemyslaw Wiszewski, "Between Region and Nation: Shifting Communities and Identities in Medieval Catalonia, Silesia, and Transylvania"
Cathleen Sarti, "Brothers, Cousins, and Strangers: Scandinavian Political Identities, ca. 1400-1600"
Index