Alain Boureau
Author of The Myth of Pope Joan
About the Author
Alain Boureau is director of studies at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, and a director at the Centre de Recherches Historiques, Paris.
Image credit: Alain Boureau en 2009
Works by Alain Boureau
Kantorowicz: Stories of a Historian (Parallax: Re-visions of Culture and Society) (1990) — Author — 15 copies
Correspondence: Models of Letter-Writing from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century (1991) — Author — 14 copies
De vagues individus : La condition humaine dans la pensée scolastique (La Raison scolastique III) (2008) 3 copies
Le simple corps du roi: L'impossible sacralité des souverains français - XVe-XVIIIe siècle (1988) 2 copies
Associated Works
Les tendances actuelles de l'histoire du moyen age en France et en Allemagne (actes sevres, 1997) (2002) — Contributor — 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Boureau, Alain
- Birthdate
- 1946
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales (Doctorat de 3e cycle, Hstoire, Thèse ' Les formes narratives de la légende dorée de Jacques de Voragine', 19 81)
- Occupations
- Professeur (Histoire)
Historien (Moyen âge, Histoire de la scolastique médiévale)
Médiéviste - Organizations
- Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales (Directeur d'études)
Université d'Orléans (Maître de conférences, Histoire, 19 89 | ) - Relationships
- Le Goff, Jacques (Directeur de thèse)
Piron, Sylvain (Doctorant) - Nationality
- France
- Map Location
- France
- Associated Place (for map)
- France
Members
Reviews
In The Lord’s First Night, Alain Boureau tackles one of the more persistent myths about the Middle Ages—that feudal lords enjoyed what is variously known as the droit de cuissage, the driot du seigenur, or the ius primae noctis, the right to sleep with his female vassals on their wedding night. (The focus here is on French versions of the myth.) Boureau looks at how nineteenth-century scholarly debates in France, in which cuissage became a proxy for the failings of the Ancien Regime, show more gave false credence to the myth through some shoddy scholarship. He then moves onto an examination of various forms of medieval serfdom/personal servitude to explain the development of the myth of cuissage with a particular focus on the early modern period.
The book is thus more a work of straight-up legal history than it is one which looks at the topic through a women’s or gender studies lens; the addition of such an angle may well have helped to strengthen the overall argument, although admittedly it would have been unlikely to find one in a work written by a French dude in the mid-90s. Boureau’s prose is often dense and the translation isn’t great, but potentially of interest to those working on legal history and/or medievalism. show less
The book is thus more a work of straight-up legal history than it is one which looks at the topic through a women’s or gender studies lens; the addition of such an angle may well have helped to strengthen the overall argument, although admittedly it would have been unlikely to find one in a work written by a French dude in the mid-90s. Boureau’s prose is often dense and the translation isn’t great, but potentially of interest to those working on legal history and/or medievalism. show less
5155. The Myth of Pope Joan, by Alain Boureau translated by Lydia C. Cochrane (read 25 Apr 2014) This book was published in French in 1988 and in English in 2001. It covers in very great detail the extensive writing on Pope Joan, who is usually said to have reigned for over two years around 854. But she was never mentioned in any written record till about 1260 when one Jean de Maily said he had heard of her. After that it was usually accepted that she existed, until about 1450 when her show more existence was questioned. Today it is generally agreed she never existed. This book expatiates at great length on the vast literature pertaining to her, much of which discussion was erudite and of little interest. In general I was convinced the author is right that the story is a myth, and most historians now agree. show less
Boreau seems to be making a career of puncturing great historical untruths. This is a splendid book and an excellent antidote to the crackpottery which usually attends the topic.
Según cuenta la leyenda, la usurpación del trono terrenal de Pedro por parte de una mujer obligó en sucesivas ocasiones, con el fin de impedir semejante ultraje impostor en lo venidero, a comprobar mediante un tacto testicular que el sexo del elegido se correspondía con tan alto honor. Para ello, y según la fábula, se utilizaba una silla perforada, como las antiguas sillas romanas de los baños que quizá utilizaran los papas en su descanso, que permitía la curiosa exploración. Las show more dos frases (no sé cuál será correcta, o si lo será alguna de las dos, lamentablemente tengo en desuso mis conocimientos de latín) que abren este artículo están relacionadas con esta famosa silla. Esta historia dentro de la historia a lo largo de la historia ha tenido tantos detractores como seguidores, y tantas "pruebas" que la acreditaban como que la desacreditaban. Hay varias versiones sobre la existencia de la Papisa, y aún más explicaciones de por qué pudo surgir el mito. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 22
- Also by
- 9
- Members
- 217
- Popularity
- #102,845
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 42
- Languages
- 5















