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From: [email protected] (Stephan Schulz)
Newsgroups: soc.history.medieval,soc.answers,news.answers
Subject: [FAQ] Welcome to soc.history.medieval (Mini-FAQ)
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Summary: FAQ on technical aspects of the group.
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[Last changed: Tue Apr 10 18:56:35 MEST 2007
              Updated contact address.           ]



         Welcome to soc.history.medieval (Mini-FAQ)
         ==========================================


This document is intended as a primer to the newsgroup
soc.history.medieval. It describes the purpose of this group and
contains pointers to interesting resources and general netiquette
documents. It is not intended as a resource on the middle ages in
itself. Only time will tell us what frequently asked questions we will
have to answer in the future.

Please feel free to suggest changes, additional topics and
corrections. Comments and requests are enclosed in [square brackets].

The last posted version of this FAQ will be available on the WWW under
http://www4.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/~schulz/medieval_faq.posted,
and an HTML version (sometimes slightly out of sync) can be found at
http://www.medieval.org/history/faq/medieval.html.



Table of Contents
=================

1 What is the charter of this group?
2 YOU D00DES ARE STOOPID!!! B1FF is c00l!!!
2.1 Suggested Score/KILL file entries
3 Resources about the middle ages on the net
3.1 Related Usenet Newsgroups
3.2 Mailing lists
3.3 Web sites     (incomplete)
4 Literature Suggestions
4.1 Individual Suggestions
4.2 Suggested Reading List from the MEDIEV-L mailing list
5 Assorted Topics
5.1 What is the SCA?
5.2 What is a "Crakow Vote"?
5.3 Can you help me answer a genealogical question?
6 Credits


1 What is the charter of this group?
------------------------------------

soc.history.medieval    The historic period of the middle ages

soc.history.medieval is an unmoderated newsgroup for the discussion of
the historic period known as the Middle Ages. For the purposes of this
group, the term "Middle Ages" is interpreted broadly as the period of
European History ranging from the fall of the Western Roman Empire up
to the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the beginnings of European
overseas expansion. This corresponds roughly to the thousand years
from  about 500 AD to 1500 AD. This broad interpretation is open for
revision if other newsgroups groups dealing e.g. with the Dark Ages or
the Renaissance are added.

It is expected that the geographical range of discussion will focus on
Europe and the Mediterranean. Discussion about European interaction
with other cultures is appropriate as well. Questions on the Crusades,
the Viking voyages to North America, the influence of Arabic
philosophy and science on Europe, the Mongol conquest of Russia,
etc. are welcome on the group, as well as for example the post-Roman
developments in Britain and France, the Byzantine Empire, the empire
of Charlemagne, the development of the Italian city states, the War of
the Roses, the 100 Years War, the Reconquista and so on.

Commercial posts and advertisements, except for short, non-hype
announcements of books and other media on the topic of Medieval
history, are not appropriate. Also, current politics as rooted in past
events are not an appropriate topic. For such topics use either
soc.history (which deals with all of history) or an appropriate
politics newsgroup. However, all factual posts on historic events in
the Middle Ages are welcome.

[Joe Bernstein asked to to clarify on the second paragraph of the
charter. The following is not part of the charter, but rather
explains what I tried to say with it:]

Some people seem to read the first sentence of the second paragraph
above as restricting discussion to European topics. This was not my
intention at all. I am a computer scientist, and a my native language
is not English, but German. Hence I try to use language rather
precisely, and usually take it at its face value. I did not mean to
say "...and you should better conform to this expectation here". Of
course I do not own the group, and the charter has to stand on
itself. However, as far as "original intend" is concerned,
soc.history.medieval should be open to topics from all over the world.



2 YOU D00DES ARE STOOPID!!! B1FF is c00l!!!
-------------------------------------------

Usenet is an entirely open medium. Everybody can read this group and
everybody can post to it. This means that the groups will occasionally
see trolls (strong worded postings intended only to provoke a lot of
replies), flames, and off-topic posts. The best way to deal with this
kind of postings is usually to ignore it. In case of repeated and
significant violation of the charter you can send a polite email to
the offender, perhaps with a copy to the postmaster at his site.

If you personally object to some people or some subjects, most news
readers allow the use of a KILL-file that can be used to filter out
undesirable postings. Check the documentation of your news reader or
look at the FAQ sheets in news.software.readers.

In order to improve the communication on this group you might want to
keep the following in mind:

- Extensive cross-posting (posting to more than one group) often leads
 to different threads on the same topic. Consider to use a
 Follow-Up header to confine discussion to the most appropriate group.

- People hate to read things again and again. Thus, try to avoid large
 quotes. Quote only what you respond to. Mark deletions with three
 dots or a short summary of what you deleted, if you think the
 context is important. In particular, don't quote large amounts of
 text and add "me too" at the bottom. More particularly, don't quote
 large amounts of text and add "me too" at the TOP!

- Use descriptive Subject lines. "History", "Test" or "Hi there" are
 not particularly useful.

- If you change the topic of a thread, or if it has drifted until it
 has nothing to do with the Subject header line, you should consider
 a new subject line as well. Add "(was: _old_subject_)" to the new
 subject.

- Try to format your lines to 72 characters. Most terminals and
 windows are 80 characters wide, and quoting will often indent your
 text a couple of times. Lines wrapping around on the screen are very
 hard to read.

- Don't try to pass on your homework assignments. Requests like
 "Please tell everything about the Crusades, my paper is due
 tomorrow!" are usually met with well deserved sarcasm. Try to be
 specific and to give enough information to allow the reader to
 anticipate your problems.

- Do not post binaries in the group. While the charter does not
 explicitly forbid it (it apparently slipped past both me and the
 news.groups crowd), binaries belong only in the hierarchies
 explicitly intended for them. The reason for this is to allow news
 servers with limited resources to avoid these (very expensive)
 postings. Post pointers to the Web instead. Web space is now
 included with most internet access products, or can be found online
 for free.

For more information on the appropriate behaviour on and the structure
of Usenet check out the introductory postings in
news.announce.newusers. This might pay off even if you think you are
an experienced user or if you read them a couple of years ago. You
might also want to check out the excellent alt.atheism FAQ on logical
arguments. It is regularly posted to alt.atheism and
alt.atheism.moderated (and, of course, to news.answers), and a
sligthly reworked copy ("The Atheism Web: Logic and Fallacies") can be
found on the WWW at http://www.infidels.org/news/atheism/logic.html


2.1 Suggested Score/KILL file entries
-------------------------------------

In recent months, off-topic traffic in soc.history.medieval has been
rather bad. Most of the off-topic threads start as a massive
cross-post, initiated by one of a very small group of
people. Depending on your newsreader, you might be able to filter out
most of the off-topic articles.

In early 2006, the group becomes very readable if you exclude all
articles cross-posted to any off the groups alt.books.tom-clancy,
us.military.*, alt.atheism, and soc.culture.scotish. Especially with
the last group, you may lose some legitimate traffic. But it seems to
be miniscule compared to the amount of off-topic traffic you avoid

If you use slrn, the following entry in your Score file will filter
out most unwanted traffic.


[soc.history.medieval]
Score:: -9999
%Expires:
         Newsgroups: alt\.books\.tom-clancy
         Newsgroups: us\.military
         Newsgroups: alt\.atheism
         Newsgroups: soc\.culture\.scottish


I'll gladly include improved versions and instructions for other
newsreaders in future versions of the FAQ.


3 Resources about the middle ages on the net
--------------------------------------------
[Note: This section has been seriously updated and improved by Al
Magary, <[email protected]>. He is working on further
improvements at the moment.]

3.1 Related Usenet Newsgroups

Some newsreader software allows a search for keywords in your Internet
service provider's database; GNN's news-server at last count had some
23,000 newsgroups.  Amazingly, the Internet standard-maker, Netscape
Navigator 2.01 (the latest), does not have a find feature, so users
have to spend some time browsing in the database.  The list is
alphabetical and hierarchical, so like a Windows 95 directory, you can
click on + and - to expand and contract headings.  The maingroup "soc"
has society, social sciences, etc.

Here is a selection of newsgroups which deal with medieval material.
Some of these, like soc.history, can be very noisy and unruly, but
sometimes deal with medieval topics of current interest
(e.g. the _Braveheart_ movie).

[Perhaps some regular readers could write a short (one or two
paragraphs) introduction to each group?]


alt.legend.king-arthur

  This newsgroup deals with all aspects of the Arthurian legend,
  from quite complex historical issues relating to both the 5th
  century itself and the later transmission of the legend, to
  discussions of the latest Arthurian fantasy epic from Stephen
  Lawhead. It is moderately quiet, with perhaps 60-65 posts a
  week; flame wars are very infrequent. There are enough
  knowledgeable people subscribed for questions to be accurately
  answered and discussions to be interesting


rec.arts.books.hist-fiction     Historical fictions (novels) in
                               general.

  rec.arts.books.hist-fiction deals with all sorts of historical
  fiction from Greece and Rome up to the present day.  It
  specifically does NOT deal with the 'what-if' novels such as
  Deighton's SS-GB, Gingrich's 1945 and the ilk or historically
  based fantasy novels such as Katherine Kurtz's Deryni series.
  With this broad scope it covers quite a bit of medieval
  material from the Jean Plaidy historical romances to all kinds
  of slush about the Crusades.


rec.heraldry            Discussion of coats of arms.

rec.martial-arts        Discussion of the various martial art forms.

rec.org.sca             Society for Creative Anachronism.

  This newsgroup, also called "The Rialto" among its readers, is
  intended for use by members of the Society for Creative
  Anachronism, a group engaging in re-enacting (medieval) history.
  See section 5 for more details.

  Note that several Scadians also read soc.history.medieval.
  SCA-specific topics should not be discussed on
  soc.history.medieval but should be taken to rec.org.sca.

rec.sport.fencing       All aspects of swordplay.

sci.archaeology         Studying antiquities of the world.
sci.archeoology.moderated All aspects of archaeology. (Moderated)
sci.archaeology.mesoamerican The field of mesoamerican archaeology

sci.classics            Studying classical history, languages, art and
                       more.
humanities.classics     Discussion of ancient Greece and Rome

soc.genealogy.medieval  Genealogy in the period from roughly
                       AD500 to AD1600

soc.history             Discussions of things historical.

soc.history.ancient     Ancient history (up to AD 700).

soc.history.early-modern

 soc.history.early-modern is a newsgroup for the discussion of
 early-modern history from about 1500 to about 1800. Topical
 relevance to early-modern history is more important than the
 dates with quite a bit of medieval material being on-topic so
 long as it is closely linked to events occurring during the
 early-modern period. For example, discussions on the beginnings
 of the European Voyages of Discovery, the Italian Renaissance,
 or the influence of late Medieval heresy on the Reformation are
 encouraged.

soc.history.living      Living history and reenactment, issues and
                       info.

soc.history.moderated   All aspects of history. (Moderated)

soc.history.science     History of science and related areas.

soc.history.war.misc    History & events of wars in general.

soc.history.what-if     Alternate history.
alt.history.what-if

 soc.history.what-if and alt.history.what-if are newsgroups to
 discuss history divergent from that of our own. A very common
 example thread would be "What if the South won the U.S. Civil
 War?"

 In general the what-if newsgroups discuss what might have been
 the outcome of history had key events turned out differently;
 a favorite topic being how dramatically different the results
 might have been had an event we now consider minor have been
 different. Alternatively what would have been the effect on
 history had key individuals died younger/lived longer. (For
 instance how would Victorian England have been different had
 Prince Albert survived to the 1880s or "What if Frederick had
 been Kaiser longer than 91 days?")

 Additionally, the what-if newsgroups discuss literature in the
 alternate history genre such as victorious Third Reichs (Dick,
 "The Man in the High Castle, Deighton "SS-GB"), failed
 Pizarros & Cortes, victorious Spanish Armadas and victorious
 Napoleon Bonapartes (usually either against Britain or
 Russia).  All these are discussed in greater detail in the FAQ
 for soc.history.what-if.

 The newsgroups do NOT discuss historical revisionism (see
 alt.revisionism), future history or alternate history in
 fictional 'worlds'.

 The original alt.history.what-if group has theoretically been
 superseded by the new group in the soc-hierarchy (which, as a
 rule, receives wider propagation and has a formal procedure
 for the reation and deletion of groups). However, the old
 group still receives a lot of traffic. Using the new group
 exclusively is strongly encouraged.


Some topical discussion can sometime be found in the following groups:

soc.culture.british
soc.culture.celtic
soc.culture.scottish
soc.culture.welsh


3.2 Mailing lists

[This seems to be quite complete now - thanks to Edwin Duncan for
letting us borrow his pre-compiled list. If you know of any additional
mailing lists, or can contribute more information to one of these,
please let me know. Please note that some entries have been updated
or corrected compared to previous postings.]

The most efficient way to find one of the some 32,000 mailing lists
(email discussion groups) is to use your Web browser and go to

       http://www.liszt.com

Those who have access only to email have a workaround to search for
lists; for info, send a blank message to

       [email protected]

Liszt is a search engine that will search for keywords in a database
of list names and *one*-line descriptions, electronically compiled by
a bot or spider.  My last search for "medieval" found 23 lists, some
very local (Student Medieval Recreation Club, U of Manitoba), some
very specialized (Medieval Feminist List), some transient (class
forums).  You may want to search for related words to pick up pre- or
post-medieval (eg, Anglo-Saxon, Renaissance) or more general but
certainly inclusive of medieval (eg, philosophy, language).

A similar list searcher is organized by hierarchical, browsable
directories:

       http://tile.net/lists/

Listserver software looks after the routine administrative stuff on
mailing lists, so you have to be accurate in your typing and precise
in command language.  In the list below, the addressee--e.g.,
Listserv--is the listserver robot's address.  Later, after you
subscribe and want to post, the addressee is the _name of the list_--
e.g., ansax-l; and you will have to be careful not to embarrass
yourself by sending listserver commands to the entire mailing list.

As a starter, it's helpful to get basic info on using mailing list,
subscription commands etc. from at least one computer run by each of
the software bots.  Listserv answers to the command

       info <listname>

Mailserv, Listproc, Majordomo, and Mailbase answer to the command

       help

In email to the listservers, leave the "Subject" line blank, and put
in the message only the commands the listserver understands.

Here is a list of medieval discussion lists (partially taken from the
Texas Medieval Association page on "Medieval Academic Discussion
Groups". You can find the original Web page at
http://www.towson.edu/~duncan/acalists.html). Please note that the
original list and parts of this compilation are the property of Edwin
Duncan and are used with permission. Edwin also maintains an
additional list of groups more loesly related to the topic of this
group and offers a lot of advice on using academic discussion
lists. Portions of the original list are copyrighted by the Medieval
English Newsletter. Al Magary deserves to be mentioned as well - he
checked most addresses and added quite a lot of lists.

Some mailing lists have two distinct addresses - a Bitnet address
(ending in ".bitnet") and an Internet address. If you are not on
Bitnet (and probably if you do not know what Bitnet is) you should use
the Internet address.

Mailing list information does change occosaionally. If you note any
incorrect or incomplete information in the FAQ, please drop me a
note.



List Name       List-server                      Topic
------------------------------------------------------------------------

AARHMS-L        [email protected]   Academy of Historians
                                               of Medieval Spain

ANSAX-L         [email protected]           Anglo-Saxon Studies
               [email protected]

  ANSAX-L is the discussion group for ANSAXNET, the Anglo- Saxon
  Network. It has over 600 members from fifteen or twenty
  different countries and, as one would expect from such a large
  membership, has a fairly high volume of mail. Discussions
  cover not only Old English language and literature, but also
  Anglo- Saxon archaeology, history, philosophy, and the arts. As
  with other networks, one also runs across calls for papers,
  job listings, announcements of new journals, new computer
  services, and the like.

ARTHURNET       [email protected]      Arthurian Studies

  ARTHURNET, a network devoted to all subjects relating to King
  Arthur and the knights of the round table, has apparently
  replaced an older and less successful one called CAMELOT, an
  English network. ARTHURNET is based in Canada, and the
  commands for setting options with the list-server are slightly
  different from most of those based in the U.S. The command for
  subscribing is the same, though.

BMMR-L          [email protected]       Medieval Book Reviews

  BMMR-L, the Bryn Mawr Medieval Review, is, as its name
  implies, devoted to the review of books on medieval
  topics. Members are not only automatically sent reviews of new
  books as they become available but may also retrieve older
  reviews from the archives. They may also contribute their own
  reviews to the network.


BYZANS-L        [email protected]   Byzantine Studies


CADUCEUS-L      [Address unknown]               History of Medicine

CARMED          [email protected]               North Carolina
                                               medieval scholars
                                               discussion list
 This is an open, unmoderated discussion list.

CHAUCER         [email protected]           Chaucer and Medieval
               [email protected]          Literature

  CHAUCER, the discussion group for Chaucernet, is, like
  Ansaxnet, consistently active in terms of mail. It generally
  confines itself to Chaucer studies, although related
  fourteenth-century works such as Piers Plowman and Sir Gawain
  and the Green Knight also get discussed here. Last fall when I
  was teaching a Chaucer course, I found some of the pedagogical
  discussions on this network to be especially helpful.

  [Normal "subscribe" is insufficient to get on the list. The
   listowner at [email protected] needs to approve
   your subscription.]

DEREMI-L        [email protected]   Medieval Military
                                               History


EARLYM-L        [email protected]           Early Music
               [email protected]

  EARLYM-L, a discussion group for those interested in early
  music, is a relatively high-volume network with postings from
  musicians both inside and outside academia.


EARLYMEDNET-L   [email protected]         Early Medieval Studies
                                               (300-700 AD )

  A network and discussion for information and queries on Early
  Medieval historical and archaeological studies in
  Europe. (Chronological range late 4th to late 11th centuries
  AD). At least in the initial stages of its existence, it
  has seemed to have more of an archaeological bent to its
  discussions.

EARLYSCIENCE-L  [email protected]        Early Science History


EMEDCH-L        [email protected]                Early Medieval China
                                               Studies

GEN-MEDIEVAL    [email protected]        Medieval Genealogy

  [NB--Apple is giving up eworld so, address may change soon.]


GERLINGL        [email protected]         Older Germanic Languages
               [email protected]       (to 1500)

  GERLINGL, a discussion group for older Germanic language
  studies, is a low-volume group, but some good information is
  presented on it from time to time. If one has interests in
  this area, then one may wish to subscribe to it in addition to
  a related higher volume group like Ansax-l.

GERMANIC-L      http://pages.ancientsites.com/~Thiudareiks_Flavius/germanic-l.html

  GERMANIC-L is an E-group for the discussion of the early
  Germanic peoples from Prehistory to circa 800 AD. To
  subscribe, and for more information, go to the above web
  page.

H-ALBION        [email protected]          HNET British & Irish
                                               History

  [NB -- To subscribe, you have to fill in a brief survey, and
   the listowner must approve subscription.]

HEL-L           [email protected]    History of the English
                                               Language

  HEL-L, a discussion group devoted to studies in the history of
  the English language, is primarily but not exclusively
  pedagogical. Postings are infrequent with bursts of activity
  (i.e., 3-6 messages per day) followed by periods of relative
  silence. There is a WWW page for the list at
  http://ebbs.english.vt.edu/hel/hel.html.

INTERSCRIPTA    [email protected]      Directed Medieval
                                               Discussions

  [According to Al Magary, this list is hard to reach. Try mailing to
   [email protected] to communicate with the
   list owner.]

LT-ANTIQ        [email protected]              Late Antiquity

  LT_ANTIQ is an unmoderated list that provides a discussion
  forum for topics relating to Late Antiquity (c. AD
  260-640). For the purposes of this discussion list, "Late
  Antiquity" will cover the Late Roman, Early Byzantine, Early
  Medieval, and Early Islamic periods. Geograph-ical coverage
  will range from western Europe to the Middle East, and from
  the Sahara to Russia.


MDVLPHIL        [email protected]           Medieval Philosophy
               [email protected]     & Political Thought

  MDVLPHIL, devoted to medieval philosophy, does not have many
  postings. [Note: The new internet address has been confirmed.]

MED-AND-REN-MUSIC [email protected]       Music of the Medieval
                                               and Renaissance
                                               periods

MEDART-L        [email protected]  Medieval Art
               [email protected]

  [According to Al Magary, the bitnet address is reachable by
   internet mail, and the internet address only forwards to it. Also
   note that the internet address changed recently]

MEDEVLIT        [email protected]        Medieval Literature
                                              list
 [No internet address given]

MEDFEM-L        [email protected]           Medieval Feminist
               [email protected]       Studies

  MEDFEM-L is a fairly high-volume discussion group which covers
  a wide range of issues related to medieval feminist studies.

MEDGER-L        [email protected]            Medieval German Studies

  [This list seems to be unaccessible at the moment. Any
   more information?]
  MEDGER-L is a very low volume discussion group for medieval
  German studies on all topics besides linguistics. Messages
  here are typically few and far between.

MEDGAY-L        [email protected]          Medieval Gay Studies

MEDIBER         [email protected]     Medieval Iberian Studies

  [The listserver at the given address responds with an erro
   message. What became of the list?]
  MEDIBER is a discussion group devoted to medieval Iberian
  literatures, languages, histories, and cultures.  It is fairly
  active. Many of its postings are in Spanish


MEDIEV-L        [email protected]  Medieval History

  [The address for this list has changed recently!]
  MEDIEV-L is a discussion list for medieval history and
  topics relating to the teaching of the middle ages,
  ca. 500AD-1500AD.  Circulation is approximately 2,000,
  unmoderated. Anyone with an interest in the middle ages is
  welcome to join; most subscribers are faculty or graduate
  students.


MEDIEVAL-RELIGION   [email protected]     Medieval Religion

  MEDIEVAL-RELIGION is a forum for discussions related to
  religious life and thought in Europe from late antiquity to
  the early modern period.  Its mail archives are located at
  http://mailbase.ac.uk


MEDIEVALE       [email protected]                Medieval History (in
                                               French)

  MEDIEVALE is a new medieval history network from Canada whose
  postings are all in French.

MEDLIT-L        [email protected]                 Medieval Literature
                                                group

MEDLITERACY-L   [email protected]     Medieval Literacy

MEDSCI-L        [email protected]       Medieval Science

  [This list seems to have been closed down.]

MEDTEXTL        [email protected]          Medieval Languages &
               [email protected] Literature

  MEDTEXTL, the discussion group for medieval languages and
  literature, also has a large number of messages. In contrast
  to ANSAX-L and CHAUCER, it has more postings for continental
  languages, literature, and the arts, and perhaps for that
  reason has a rule that any postings or quotations in any
  language other than English include translations along with
  the originals. This can be a real help for, say, a Germanic
  scholar trying to follow a conversation quoting medieval
  Italian or for a Romanticist trying to decipher something from
  Old Norse.

NUMISM-L        [email protected]
                                               Medieval (& Ancient)
                                               Numismatics

OLDNORSENET     [email protected]        Old Norse Studies

  The aim of OLDNORSENET is to provide a forum for discussion of
  problems that concern the medieval Scandinavian and North
  Atlantic societies. The network will be open for contributions
  from researchers in all branches of medieval studies
  concerning the Nordic area. Our hope is to start a lively and
  open discussion of new and old problems within the subject,
  and that ideas and suggestions will be presented and discussed
  by the members of the network.

PERFORM         [email protected]  Medieval Performing
                                               Arts

RENAIS-L        [email protected]  Renaissance & Early
                                               Modern History

SIEGE           [email protected]      Medieval Siege
                                               Weaponry

  [Please note that this list has moved!]


3.3 Web sites

[To be completed - suggestions welcome. If possible please
include a short text with each suggestion - the transatlantic
links are awful, and checking even a single site can be quite a
trial for me. Please note that Patrick Tingler <[email protected]>
posts a more complete list of sites (organized by topic)
semi-regularly. It is available on the WWW at
http://members.tripod.com/~Tingler/medieval.]



As a complement to the mini-FAQ, you can find "soc.history.medieval's
Question and Answer Pages" at the following link:

  http://www.rahul.net/starwolf/shm/

Two places to get going quickly in finding medieval resources on the
Web are Catholic University's NetSERF and Georgetown's Labyrinth:

  http://www.cua.edu/www/hist/netserf/
  http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/labyrinth-home.html

A directory/search homepage that's always on top of what's new in
medieval resources is:

  http://www.yahoo.com/Arts/Humanities/History/Medieval_Studies/

Labyrinth has hotlinks to some Internet search engines (nowadays many
can search the Web, Usenet newsgroups, and gopher/ftp resources).  Good
collections of the 250 or so general and specialized search engines are:

  http://www.search.com
  http://www.searchallinone.com

Many people consider Google to currently be the best general purpose
search engine. In any case, try one of the following:

  http://www.google.com
  http://www.altavista.com
  http://www.lycos.com
  http://www.northernlight.com

Here is a list of some WWW pages with medieval material on it. Some
descriptions have been provided by the page providers or associated
persons, and many have been slightly edited.


Welcome to the Call to Arms Website
  http://www.calltoarms.com/

  Introductory page for the Call To Arms project. Call to Arms is
  an international directory of historical re-enactment. It is
  essentially an address book, a telephone directory, a resource
  guide, a suppliers list, a recruiting arm, a major events guide and
  much more besides.

Classical Resources (J. Ruebel)
  http://studentweb.tulane.edu/~rwoods/classics.html

  This page tries to give an overview over classical resources
  on the net. At the moment it only covers Greek and Roman
  material that could be of borderline interest to medieval
  historians.

The "Confessio" of Saint Patrick
  http://www.robotwisdom.com/jaj/patrick.html

  A English translation of the autobiographical confession
  written by Patrick himself, in Latin, around the year 450. It
  offers a unique record of life in the British Isles during
  those times. The page also has some links to Irish and
  Celtic culture.

The Decameron Web
  http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Italian_Studies/dweb/dweb.shtml

  A new Hypertext project at Brown University, dedicated to
  Boccaccio's Decameron and to Medieval Studies in general.  It
  is of general interest to anyone interested in Italian
  literature at large and in Medieval society.  Further
  information about the creation of the project and about the
  goals of those in charge of its growth is available at the
  site.

Historical Reeneactment in the United Kingdom
  http://www.compulink.co.uk/~novar/renact.htm

  A page which links to various resources for hitorical reenactment
  and reenactment societies, with particular emphasis on the scene in
  the United Kingdom.

Historical Reeneactment - Welcome from the Mining Co.
  http://reenactment.miningco.com/

  A general reenactment site with, among other things, sections on
  medieval and ancient history, clothing, crafts, etc.

The Knights Templar Preceptory Portcullis
  http://www.trantex.fi/staff/heikkih/knights/portcull.htm

  A Finish site with a good introduction to the Templar
  military order. Contains a couple of book reviews and a
  bibliography.

Labyrinth Home Page at Georgetown University
  http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/labyrinth-home.html

  The Labyrinth is a global information network providing
  free, organized access to electronic resources in medieval
  studies through a World Wide Web server at Georgetown
  University. Highlights include a couple of online
  bibliographies and text, image, and archival databases.

Medieval History Resources
  http://www.calpoly.edu/~jheinen/medieval.html

  This page is a quite complete entry point for medieval
  items on the WWW. It contains a lot of link to other sites
  with indices.

Medieval Sourcebook
  http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/sbook.html

  The Medieval Sourcebook is a collection of links to public
  domain and copy allowed texts of interest to medievalists. It
  includes excerpts suitable for use in survey courses as well
  as full texts of many works. The site also provides links to
  other medieval studies pages as well as sites devoted to
  Byzantine and Classical Studies.

Medieval Studies Home Page at Harvard
  http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~medieval

  The site is small but growing. We now have information about
  the committee, its professors, and its classes, as well as
  about Harvard in general, plus a whole bunch of links to other
  medieval Internet resources. Coming soon: Calendars of
  upcoming events.

The Medieval Technology Pages
  http://scholar.chem.nyu.edu/technology.html

  The Medieval Technology Pages are an attempt to provide
  accurate, referenced information on technological innovation
  and related subjects in western Europe during the Middle
  Ages.

Medieval Technology -- Reading List
  http://scholar.chem.nyu.edu/~medtech/medbooks97.html

  A quite extensive and commented bibliography on many aspects
  of medieval live. Most books are seconday works and
  overviews, and most are accessible for a casual reader with
  some basic knowledge of the era.

Military history: Medieval
  http://www.cfcsc.dnd.ca/links/milhist/med.html

  This is a bilingual (English/French), regularly updated guide
  to Internet resources on military matters during medieval
  times.  This page also contains links to separate pages on
  wars of the period, currently comprising:
          100 Year's War (1339-1453)
          Norman Conquest (1066)

ORB--Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
  http://orb.rhodes.edu/

  ORB is an academic site, written and maintained by medieval
  scholars for the benefit of their fellow instructors and serious
  students. It offers a large collection of peer-reviewed essays on a
  wide variety of medieval topics.

Ramon Llull (Raymond Lull/Lully) resources
  http://www.robotwisdom.com/ai/llull.html

  A timeline (with links to various sources on the life of a 13th
  century philosopher).

Ravensgard Medieaval Homepage
  http://www.ravensgard.org/gerekr/medieval.html

  The page is a large collection of links and resources
  organized by general subject.  The major categories include
  research resources, arts and crafts including a page on
  costume, cultures including a separate page on Old Norse
  culture, and cultural background material.

The Realm of Chivalry
  http://www.realmofchivalry.org/

  The Realm of Chivalry is a social and educational organization
  located primarily in the Pacific Northwest which is based on
  the precepts of Chivalry and Honour as evidenced in the
  History and Legends of the Dark and Middle Ages. We strive to
  re-create the times of the Heroes, i.e. Richard the Lion
  Heart, King Arthur, Beowulf, and in doing so we take on the
  personae of one who might have lived in that era

The Richard III Society Homepage
  http://www.r3.org/

  This site offers an introduction and aids to Ricardian
  studies, links to medieval resources, and information about
  the Society, whose members hold diverse opinions on King
  Richard III, the Yorkist era and the Wars of the Roses.

Society for Creative Anachronism, Inc.
  http://www.sca.org/

  A home-page for the Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA),
  offering a very complete introduction to the society. Please note
  that this site has moved again.

Timber-Framed Houses
  http://www.netcomuk.co.uk/~lachlan/timber.html

  A web site for "The History and Construction of Medieval
  Timber-Framed Houses."  This site describes, for the lay
  reader, the development from about 1200 AD in England and
  Wales of the cruck and box-frame house from the earlier hut
  made from earth-fast posts, and the invention of the chimney,
  tiles and window glass.  A Bibliography is included.

WebPages von potentiellem Interesse auf dem Gebiet "Geistesgeschichte"
  http://www.gwdg.de/~hkuhn1/pagehist.html
Geistesgeschichte
  http://www.gwdg.de/~hkuhn1/webpages.html#Historia

  These two German page try to collect links to resources of
  potential interest to people interested in intellectual
  history. Their main focus is the renaissance, but there are
  links to "truly medieval" material as well. Part of the links
  are commented upon. The second page is more up to date.



4 Literature Suggestions
------------------------

4.1 Individual Suggestions

In this section I try to collect a list of interesting books. If
possible, I try to include a short (or even longer) review, however,
individual titles are usually printed as they had been submitted to
me.

I particularly try to compile a list of books that can be read
without formal training in history. If you want to submit
information on a book please try to follow the standard format
and try to provide a text that can be copied to the FAQ
without much editing.



Brown, R. Allen, _The Normans_

  Brown gives a good overview on the impact on the Normans from
  the time of the establishment of the Normandy as a Duchy under
  Rollo and Charles the Simple to the end of the
  Crusades. Apart from the well-known invasion in England the
  participation of multiple generations of the family Hauteville
  in the conquest of southern Italy and the Crusades is
  stressed. The book is well researched but does not offer much
  detail on the era.

Contamine, Philippe, _War in the Middle Ages_, trans. Michael Jones
  (London, Basil Blackwell, 1984) ISBN 0-631-13142-6; xvi+387 pages,
  24 b+w illustrations, 10 tables, 7 maps, 4 line-drawn figures.

     A welcome translation of the author's "La Guerre au moyen
  age" (originally published 1980) this book is the essential
  starting place for any serious study of medieval military
  institutions and affairs.  It is divided into three parts.
  "The State of Knowledge," reviews what scholars know about
  warfare in the Middle Ages in four chronological chapters: the
  "Barbarian" period (500-900), the "Feudal Age" (900-1150), the
  High Middle Ages (1150-1325) and the transition to gunpowder
  warfare (1325-1500).  Chapter 1 is the weakest part of the
  book because Contamine does not properly evaluate the survival
  of Roman practices in the early Middle Ages.  Chapter 4 is the
  best, because it covers the era in which Contamine does his
  own research.  The second part, "Themes and Perspectives",
  examines six specific issues like strategic theory and the
  'laws of war.'  Chapter 9, "Towards a History of Courage" is
  the most interesting.  The third part is a 51 page
  bibliography of work on medieval warfare.

     Readers who are looking for narrative accounts of battles
  and campaigns will be disappointed -- Contamine emphasizes
  institutions, practices, and the nature of the evidence that
  medieval military historians have to work with.  As a result,
  this book works best when it is used as a reference or as a
  place from which to start reading on a particular topic.  As
  such it excells.

DeVries, Kelly, _Medieval Military Technology_, (Lewiston NY,
  Broadview, 1992), ISBN: 0-921149-74-3; xi+340 pp., numerous b+w
  pictures and line drawings.

     This book reviews of technology of warfare in the western
  european middle ages.  It is divided into four sections: one
  on arms and armor, the second on artillery (both
  stone-throwing and gunpowder varieties), the third on
  fortifications, and the last on warships.  In each case,
  DeVries describes the chronological development of specific
  technologies, with special emphasis on the military and
  economic reasons that medieval people chose to develop them.
  Since he often uses examples drawn from specific battles and
  campaigns to support his points, this book is easy to read and
  gives a clear picture of what was going on in each technology
  at specific times.

     At appropriate points, DeVries interrupts his narrative to
  describe what modern historians think about controversial
  issues.  A good example is his chapter on the great "Did
  Stirrups cause Feudalism" debate.  DeVries says "No" and his
  explanation of why is clearer and easier to read than the
  original research he is summarizing. De Vries bibliography is
  up-to date and should be preferred over the corresponding
  section in Contamine.  DeVries also gets credit for properly
  emphasizing the continued use of Roman military technology in
  the early medieval era.

France, John, _Victory in the East: A Military History of the
  First Crusade_, New York, Cambridge University Press,
  1994, 425 pages, maps

  [No review available yet - *you* are invited to write one ;-)]

Maalouf, Amin, _The Crusades through Arab Eyes_, translated from the
  French _Les Cusades vues par les Arabes_ by Jon Rothschild,
  Schocken Books, New York, 293 pages, 2 Maps, US$ 16

  Maalouf gives us yet another account of the Crusades. While the
  book follows the general outline of most overview works on the
  era, it adds a new perspective. His book concentrates on the
  Crusades as experienced by the Arab inhabitants of the Near
  East. The struggles between the different Muslim factions and
  rulers are described in unusual detail, as are the social and
  religious movements that eventually resulted in a revigouration
  of the "Jyhad" concept and thus the destruction of the Frankish
  states in Outremer. There is little new material on the
  main Frankish/Muslim conflict, but a lot of information about
  the dealings behind the scenes. Although Maalouf often cites
  long passages by Arab chroniclers verbatim, this book should not
  be confused with a collection of original sources. However, the
  appendix contains a short and helpful discussion of these
  sources. With a price tag of $20 for the paperback edition, this
  book should be well worth the price for everybody interested in
  the Crusades.


Norwich, J.J., _The Normans in the South_, _Kingdom in the Sun_

  In these two volumes the author gives a very readable
  introduction to the Norman achievements in southern Italy and
  Sicily. The first book describes the deeds of Robert Guiscard
  and Roger, Count of Sicily, in some details, including the
  conflicts with the German imperator and the Pope. The second
  volume describes the Norman history of the Kingdom of
  Sicily. While the historic account is less detailed, Norwich
  takes some time to describe the remains of Norman buildings on
  Sicily.

Strayer, Joseph R., _The Albigensian Crusades_, Ann Arbor Paperbacks,
1992.
  A classic.  If you think that western Europe was
  monolithically Catholic and that crusades were waged only in
  the Holy Land, think again.  This is the story of the 13th
  century destruction of Occitania, an event that has had
  repercussions down to our own day.



4.2 Suggested Reading List from the MEDIEV-L mailing list

The following list of influential works on medieval history was
collected on the MEDIEV-L mailing list. Readers were asked for
suggestions, entries which recieved multiple suggestions have the
number of votes recorded right after the title. I have slightly
reformatted the list to make it more readable and to give it a more
uniform look.

Aries, Philippe:
  _Centuries of Childhood_
Barraclough, Geoffrey:
  _The Medieval Papacy_
Barraclough, Geoffrey:
  _The Origins of Modern Germany_
Bloch, Marc:
  _Feudal Society_ (5)
Bloch, Marc:
  _Royal Touch_
Boswell, John:
  _Christianity, Social Tolerance, and Homosexuality_
Braudel, Ferdinand:
  _Structures of Everyday Life_
Brentano, Robert:
  _Rome Before Avignon_
Brown, Peter:
  _World of Late Antiquity_ (2)
Brown, Peter:
  _The Cult of the Saints_
Brown, Peter:
  _Augustine of Hippo_ (2)
Brunner, Otto:
  _Land and Lordship_ (2)
Burckhardt, Jacob:
  _The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy_
Bynum, Caroline Walker:
  _Holy Feast and Holy Fast_ (3)
Campbell, James:
  _The Anglo-Saxons_
Carruthers, Mary:
  _The Book of Memory_
Cheney, C.R.:
  _ Hubert Walter_
Cohn, Norman:
  _The Pursuit of the Millenium_
de Beauvoir, Simone:
  _The Second Sex._
Douglas, David:
  _William the Conqueror (2)_
Duby, Georges:
  _La societe aux XIe et XIIe siecles dans la region maconnaise_
Duby, Georges:
  _Warrior and Peasants_ (2)
Fawtier, Robert:
  _The Capetian Kings of France._
Ganshof, Francois:
  _Feudalism._
Geary, Patrick:
  _Before France and Germany_
Gilson, Etienne:
  _Reason and Revelation in the Middle Ages_
Grundmann, Herbert:
  _Religiose Bewegungen im Mittelalter_ (2)
Hanawalt, Barbara:
  _The Ties That Bound: Peasant Families in Medieval England _
Haskins, Charles Homer:
  _The Renaissance of the Twelfth Century_ (3)
Herlihy, David and Christiane Klapisch-Zuber:
  _Tuscans and Their Families_
Hilton, R.H. and T.H. Fagan:
  _The English Rising of 1381_
Hodges, Richard and David Whitehouse:
  _Mohammed, Charlemagne, and the Origin of Europe._
Huizinga, Johan:
  _The Waning of the Middle Ages_ (3)
Kantorowicz, Ernst:
  _Frederick II_ (3)
Kantorowitz, Ernst:
  _The Kings Two Bodies_ (3)
Keen, Maurice:
  _Chivalry_
Kelly, Amy:
  _Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Four Kings_
Kern, Fritz:
  _Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages_
Knowles, David:
  _The Monastic Order in England_
Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel:
  _Montaillou: The Promised Land of Error_ (2)
Leclercq, Jean:
  _Love of Learning and the Desire for God_ (2)
LeGoff, Jacques:
  _Time , Work and Culture in the Middle Ages_
Lewis, C.S.:
  _The Allegory of Love_
Leyser, Karl:
  _Medieval Germany and its Neighbours_
Lopez, Robert:
  _The Commercial Revolution of the Middle Ages_
Lord, Albert:
  _The Singer of Tales_
Lovejoy, A. O.:
  _The Great Chain of Being_
McFarlane, K. B.:
  _The Nobility of Later Medieval England_
Mollat, Guillaume:
  _The Popes of Avignon_
Moore, R. I.:
  _The Formation of a Persecuting Society_
Nelson, Janet:
  _Charles the Bald_
Ostrogorsky, George:
  _History of the Byzantine State_
Painter, Sidney:
  _William Marshall_
Perroy, Eduoard:
  _The Hundred Years War_
Pirenne, Henri:
  _Medieval Cities_ (2)
Pirenne, Henri:
  _Mohammad and Charlemagne_ (2)
Raby, F. J. E.:
  _Secular Latin Poetry_
Raby, F. J. E.:
  _Christian Latin Poetry_
Riche, Pierre:
  _Education and Culture in the Barbarian West_
Riche, Pierre:
  _Daily Life in the Word of Charlemagne_
Runciman, Steven:
  _History of the Crusades_
Skinner, Quentin:
  _The Foundations of Modern Political Thought_
Southern, R. W.:
  _Making of the Middle Ages_ (6)
Southern, R. W.:
  _Medieval Humanism_
Southern, R. W.:
  _Saint Anselm:  Portrait in a Landscape (2)_
Stenton, Frank:
  _Anglo-Saxon England_
Straw, Carol:
  _Gregory the Great:  Perfection in Imperfection_
Strayer, Joseph:
  _On the Medieval Origins of the Modern State_
Tellenbach, Gerd:
  _Church, State and Christian Society_ (2)
Tierney, Brian:
  _Foundations of the Conciliar Theory_
Ullman, Walter:
  _A History of Political Thought: The Middle Ages_
Ullman, Walter:
  _A Shorter History of the Papacy_
Van Dam, Raymond:
  _Leadership & Community in Late Antique Gaul_
Wallace-Hadrill, J. M.:
  _The Long-Haired Kings_ (2)
Warren, W.L.:
  _Henry II_
White, Lynn:
  _Medieval Technology and Social Change_



5 Assorted Topics
-----------------

5.1 What is the SCA?

  The Society for Creative Anachronism is an international
  organization interested in the research and recreation of the
  Middle Ages and Renaissance.  Most (but not all) of the people
  involved in the SCA are amateurs who are interested in one or
  more areas or topics of the Middle Ages.  At a SCA event you
  can see many people wearing clothing from different periods of
  time (most between 600 and 1600 A.D.) doing different
  activities.  Activities can include armoured fighting,
  fencing, heraldry, spinning, dancing, cooking, etc.  (that
  list could go on forever).  However, because of the long time
  period, and wide geographic range, most SCA events are not
  accurate recreations of any one time or place.

  The SCA does _not_ insist that people dress or act exactly as
  someone from the Middle Ages would, they just encourage it.
  Thus many Scadians prefer to focus on the "current middle ages"
  or the fun they have on the weekends without doing any serious
  research.  Other Scadians take the recreation aspect very
  seriously and can become quite knowledgeable on certain
  subjects. Some Scadians have difficulties separating historic
  research and experience from the reenactment. This sometimes leads
  to frictions in discussions with more serious-minded historians.

  If you would like to learn more about the group you should
  read the newsgroup rec.org.sca (also called "The Rialto" among
  Scadians). People there can tell you how to get in contact
  with the Scadians nearest you. There also is a WWW page for
  the SCA listed in section 3.3.

5.2 What is a "Crakow Vote"?

   The concept of the Crakow (occasionally "Krakow" or "Cracow" --
   we are an international group with a flexible approach to
   orthography) Vote came up in the second half of 1999 in a thread
   on medieval Russia. The Crakow Vote is basically an appeal to
   authority ("Argumentum ad verecundiam"), only without the
   authority. The classical examples seem to be

      "According to a poll taken among Krakow's cab drivers, Europe
       ends on Poland's Eastern border".

      and

     "According to Cracow Vote, The Battle Which Can Not Be Named had
      been won by the Fried Templars and/or McWasherwomen".

   Crakow Votes can be used both seriously (but risking that people
   will stop taking the speaker serious) or humorously (which,
   unfortunately, does not automatically confer any special weight to
   the speakers opinion).

   New research has indicated that the preferred spelling is indeed
   "Crakow". It is found in the oldest surviving documents, and has
   the added benefit of being equally wrong in all known languages.


5.3 Can you help me answer a genealogical question?

   No.

   (That's me, Stephan Schulz answering. I have little knowledge
   about genealogy, Schulz is about the third most frequent name in
   Germany, and, due to the extensive resettlement of my ancestors
   after WW2 I have lost nearly all contact to ancestors on the
   Schulz side of the family. Someone else in the group probably
   can help you, but please check the soc.genealogy.* groups first).


6 Credits
---------

The first version of this FAQ was written and posted by me (Stephan
Schulz). Since then I have received much support. Thanks are due to the
following people for contributing to the FAQ:

Jorn Barger, Laura Blanchard, Edgar De Blieck, Aaron Bradley, Donny
Chan, Lyle Craver, Edwin Duncan, Robert Eikel, Robert Elliot, Curt
Emanuel, Paul J. Gans, Antonio Gonzalez, Kathleen Gorman, Frank
A. Hanincik, Jeff Heinen (and the MEDIEV-L mailing list), Robert
Helmerichs, Bill Kent, Steve Kirkby, Ian Klinck, Heinrich C. Kuhn,
Greg Lindahl, Don MacLachlan, Al Magary, John Massey, Juho Mattila,
Todd M. McComb, Denis McKeon, Alex Milman, Michael Moore, Drew
Nicholson, Bob Peckham, Ninni M.  Pettersson, Edward J. Schoenfeld,
Lisa Scovel, Brian M. Scott, Kim Sheraton, Gary Walker, Doug Weller

Section 3 (Net resources) is now partially maintained by Al Magary,
<[email protected]>. Patrick Tingler maintains a supplemental
FAQ on WWW sites.

-------------------------- It can be done! ---------------------------------
  Please email me as [email protected] (Stephan Schulz)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------