Lords' Rights and Peasant Stories. Simon Teuscher
Lords’ Rights and Peasant Stories
THE MIDDLE AGES SERIES
Ruth Mazo Karras, Series Editor
Edward Peters, Founding Editor
A complete list of books in the series is available from the publisher.
LORDS’ RIGHTS AND PEASANT STORIES
Writing and the Formation of Tradition in the Later Middle Ages
Simon Teuscher
Translated by Philip Grace
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
PHILADELPHIA
An earlier version of this work was published as Erzähltes Recht: Lokale Herrschaft, Verschriftlichung und Traditionsbildung im Spätmittelalter. Copyright © 2007 Campus Verlag Gmbh.
Copyright © 2012 University of Pennsylvania Press
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.
Published by
University of Pennsylvania Press
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Teuscher, Simon.
Lords’ rights and peasant stories : writing and the formation of tradition in the later Middle Ages / Simon Teuscher ; translated by Philip Grace. — 1st ed.
p. cm. — (The Middle Ages series)
An earlier version of this work was published as: Erzähltes Recht : Lokale Herrschaft, Verschriftlichung und Traditionsbildung im Spätmittelalter.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8122-4368-0 (hardcover : alk. paper)
1. Customary law—Switzerland—History—To 1500. 2. Feudal law—Switzerland—History—To 1500. 3. Law, Germanic—History—To 1500. I. Teuscher, Simon. Erzähltes Recht. II. Title. III. Series: Middle Ages series.
KKW125.T485 2012
340.5′509494—dc23
2011025504
CONTENTS
Chapter 1. Two Inquiry Procedures
Chapter 2. Dealing with Lordship Rights
Chapter 3. Deposition Records: Techniques of Transcription and Narration
Chapter 4. Weistümer: Microcosms of Law
Chapter 5. Styles of Document Usage
Introduction
Law is, in the modern conception, inextricably linked with writing. Whether we consult legislation, fill out forms, or deal with stacks of files, we cannot imagine contemporary legal life without written documents. By contrast, late medieval law, which was conveyed through speech instead of through writing, has an exotic allure that has long fascinated researchers. In the midnineteenth century, Jacob Grimm published a collection of late medieval records of local law—called Weistümer—that was scarcely less comprehensive than his famous collection of fairytales.1 As with the fairytales, Grimm assumed that, before their transcription, people had handed these down orally from time immemorial. He felt his understanding was supported by the poetic introductory passages of the Weistümer that depicted ritualized assemblies in which the lord of a village summoned his peasants and required them to report the law from memory.
Many of Grimm’s assumptions have long since been refuted, as unwritten legal culture has begun to attract new attention. A number of historical and social theories that have emerged since the 1960s ascribe to the transition from orality to literacy a key function in the process of modernization. Writing is now highlighted as a prerequisite for the forms of organization and the dissemination of knowledge, including the communication of regulations, without which modern society would be inconceivable. As a rule, this school of thought adopts orality and literacy as a dialectical pair by which one can differentiate traditional from modern society, and it elevates the latter to the telos of history. Traditional societies are no longer characterized as merely static, religious, and collective, but also as oral, and modern societies are no longer seen only as dynamic, secular, and individualistic, but also as literate. It became widely accepted to claim that in the societies of the so-called Third World, this impulse toward modernization is only beginning, while it has been operating in Western societies since the Middle Ages through the proliferation of writing, printed books, and alphabetization. Ultimately, the process by which writing spread at the close of the Middle Ages has come to serve as a model of political development, and the oral society of the Middle Ages has functioned as a counterpoint to the modern. Critics of modernization see this as a golden age in which a culture of consensus reigned in place of modern contentiousness, in which order was preserved by direct encounters between lords and peasants instead of by an anonymous administrative apparatus, and in which the expert knowledge of jurists was considered less important than the moral feeling of a wider population. Yet what do we really know about how less literate societies in the Middle Ages functioned, and about what influences writing actually had on law and the organization of society?
This book examines the processes through which law and rights, especially rights of lordship, were put into writing between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries in what is today the Swiss midlands. It asks how medieval actors agreed on unwritten rules and how the political order was altered in the context of proliferating written records of law. For the study of such questions, not much more is available today than the original records of unwritten law. On the other hand, neither Grimm nor his critics took advantage of the possibilities for insight that the physicality of the documents provides. These are not only texts that contain descriptions of this or that practice; they are also artifacts, and as such they are themselves reflections of the process of their creation and their uses. The history of these practices has yet to be told.
As the earliest accessible written expressions of an unwritten legal culture, records of customary law derive their binding force from