Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

西欧中世纪史

Rate this book
中世纪史研究在西方学术界有悠久传统,通史著作已有很多,蒂尔尼和佩因特合著的《西欧中世纪史》以其识见之高明、选材之博洽、叙述之生动而独树一帜,历经半个世纪的修订完善,常销不衰,是欧美大学用作中世纪史教科书的首选。

本书全面、深入地讲述了中世纪欧洲各方面的历史脉动,及其对近代西方文化与制度的深刻影响。

两位作者均为享誉已久的中世纪史权威学者。佩因特以细致生动的叙事见长,蒂尔尼的专长是教会制度和法律的研究。在佩因特初版基础上,蒂尔尼在文化和制度方面加以补充,文哲、艺术之外,增加了教会史、法制史和政治思想史等内容。

本书自1953年问世至今,不断修订再版,畅销半个世纪,是目前欧美各大学最广泛采用的一种大学教科书,详略程度适合国内一般读者的阅读需求。

高明史家于浩如烟海的史料中精当取材,信手拈来,叙述文笔轻松自如,是本书显著优点。

700 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1973

10 people are currently reading
346 people want to read

About the author

Brian Tierney

62 books14 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
55 (32%)
4 stars
72 (42%)
3 stars
35 (20%)
2 stars
6 (3%)
1 star
2 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Ben.
80 reviews25 followers
September 8, 2020
This is a very informative, well-written guide to over a millennium of European history, from the fall of the Roman Empire to the beginnings of the early modern era. Sidney Painter and Brian Tierney deftly explore this period in both its cohesiveness and particularity (a multiplicity of societies and competing institutions forming a distinct discernible civilization), taking politics, religion, theology, cultural expression, economics, and social beliefs into account, and incorporating how all of these differed across time and place.

Unsurprisingly, the prose of the book doesn't jump off the page, though it is very readable for a textbook. The authors avoid injecting biases into their account (and explicitly state that anachronistic readings of history are to be avoided), though they do offer parenthetical statements and points of judgment which help the reader determine the short- and long-term consequences of particular episodes.

Reading this book in the glow of the great cultural conflagration of 2020 offers some interesting opportunities for reflection. Recounting the great variety of adversities the Europeans of the 15th century faced, the authors write:

"In the last century of the medieval era, the peoples of Europe had to cope with an unprecedented combination of plague, war, schism, and economic decline, all occurring simultaneously and all interacting with another. In the face of these disasters, medieval men did not lose their nerve. They did not succumb to a 'death wish.' Instead, they kept working at their problems, solved them as best they could, and in doing so, brought into existence the institutions of the early modern world. Thus the 'time of troubles' of the late Middle Ages did not lead to a disintegration of Western civilization but to a new era of expansion and achievement. Unlike the population of ancient Rome, the peoples of medieval Europe conducted themselves with enough sense and courage to avert the threat of a new Dark Age. That was the greatest achievement of medieval civilization."

The knowledge that our ancestors faced circumstances not entirely dissimilar from our own, and preserved and created a great culture from them, is somewhat heartening - but only somewhat, because our modern problems emanate largely from our rejection of the principles and our squandering of the attainments they labored to discover and achieve. Whether we'll follow the path of Rome or Europe will be one of the prime questions answered in the next chapter of history.

At any rate, the story that Painter and Tierney weave is one not of linear progress towards a certain result, but of a civilization developing in fits and starts as its members responded to specific circumstances, imperfectly, at specific times. This, then, is no mere romantic reading of Western history, but one that illuminates the path towards the West's ultimate accomplishments, of which the authors are appropriately appreciative.
Author 1 book5 followers
May 23, 2017
(Fourth Edition, copywrite 1983)
by Brian Tierney and Sidney Painter

This is the most boring book I ever tried to read. I have plodded through it for almost a year because I wanted to learn the subject matter, but with a ho-hum presentation of the Magna Carta story at about the two-thirds point, I give up. It is a college textbook, and I feel deep sympathy for the students who are required to not only pay real money for this doorstop, but also be expected to learn from it. I would have liked very much to refer to the authors' sources for much of their writing, but, alas, to do that one must also buy "a two-volume paperback collection of medieval sources and modern readings . . . prepared to accompany this book." Stick it to the students.
Profile Image for Luke Neal.
35 reviews3 followers
November 6, 2020
Extremely well written and engaging, a lot of notes and entertaining asides that I will remember:

"Comfort is a modern innovation"

The fact that Easter is named after an Anglo-Saxon fertility Goddess
Profile Image for Katie.
517 reviews343 followers
May 7, 2011
This is a really wonderful textbook. Anytime someone attempts to cover 1100+ years in 600 pages there are bound to be some simplifications or omissions, but Brian Tierney handles them well and covers an impressive breadth of information without sacrificing clarity. He also writes with a good bit of life and dynamism that are often absent in textbooks like this. Anytime things are about to get bogged down in a confusion of names or dates or places, he pulls out a genuinely fun anecdote and saves the day.

Bottom line, it's informative and it's enjoyable. Just as importantly, it hits the right tone. There's a tendency to apply a moral judgement to the medieval era more so than other historical periods, a desire to either overly praise or overly condemn depending on your predilection. Brian Tierney acknowledges this, and he does a very nice job of celebrating the great parts of medieval history and acknowledging the parts that were not particularly flattering. Definitely worth a read.
Profile Image for Mike.
315 reviews50 followers
March 3, 2012
A heavy, expensive, yet comprehensive and very well-written textbook covering the years of 300-1475, CE. Like most history texts, it doesn't allow a cohesive voice of the author/authors to shine through and thus feels impersonal in places but unlike many such texts, it is very engaging and binds together topical matter spanning a wealth of time and entire canvas of geography. It is, if you desire a book covering its focus subject, probably the best choice in print.
207 reviews7 followers
September 2, 2011
Thanks, Angie, for the recommendation! I really enjoyed this one (and I'm *not* a history buff). I especially found the sections about the early Universities interesting... I learned a lot about the beginnings of the higher ed systems. Amazing how little I know about that, given that I've worked in higher ed for about 15 years now.
Profile Image for Jessica.
52 reviews2 followers
November 12, 2007
One of my favorite text books ever :) Only read this if you have a true love for history...because it's a text book, of course!
1,360 reviews
December 15, 2013
Easy read and very informational. I only read the first half for school.
Profile Image for Hqwxyz.
446 reviews4 followers
August 30, 2024
西欧中世纪的一切,或多或少决定了现代世界,值得多了解一些那段历史。北大出版社编辑校稿存在些小问题。

Merged review:

西欧中世纪的一切,或多或少决定了现代世界,值得多了解一些那段历史。北大出版社编辑校稿存在些小问题。
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews