The Salic Law, French Queenship, and the Defense of Women in the Late Middle Ages
2006; Duke University Press; Volume: 29; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1215/00161071-2006-012
ISSN1527-5493
Autores Tópico(s)Historical Studies and Socio-cultural Analysis
ResumoThe Lex Salica (Salic Law) was a legal code written around the time of Clovis (476–96) for the Salian Franks. After being revised and expanded under the Merovingian and Carolingian kings, it was slowly forgotten until the middle of the fourteenth century, when it was rediscovered by Richard Lescot and the monks of Saint-Denis. The Salic Law enjoyed a second lease on life from the beginning of the fifteenth century, when it was officially adopted by the French Crown as the postfactum justification for the exclusion of women from the royal succession. The pivotal moment probably occurred around 1413 when Jean de Montreuil added a marginal note to A toute la chevalerie, a polemical treatise supporting the Valois monarchy against the English. Defending the exclusion of women from the royal succession, the royal notaire et secretaire cited a clause from the chapter ‘‘De allodio,’’ which dictated that men should receive ancestors’ heritage (their landed property, the ‘‘terra salica’’) and women just personal property. To make this statement apply to the French kingdom, Montreuil inserted the words in regno into an inaccurate transcription of the clause. Thereafter a series of writers employed by the Valois monarchy, all connected with the French royal chancellery, used the Salic Law to defend the exclusion of women from the French royal succession. The boldest statement was provided in 1464 by Pour ce que plusieurs, a work key to the dissemination of the myth of the Salic Law thanks to its being printed eleven times in Paris, Rouen, and Caen between 1488 and 1558, most commonly under the title La Loy Salique, premiere loy des Francois.
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