New Books in Intellectual History

Christian Raffensperger, "Authorship, Worldview, and Identity in Medieval Europe" (Routledge, 2022)

Jan 24, 2026
Christian Raffensperger, Kenneth E. Ray Chair in Humanities and medievalist focused on Eastern Europe. He discusses how medieval authors perceived a wider world beyond their locality. Conversations cover reintegrating Eastern Europe into medieval narratives, methods for reading authorship and intent, and diverse examples from Gregory of Tours to Marco Polo and the Primary Chronicle.
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ANECDOTE

From Knights To Kievan Rus

  • Christian Raffensperger traced his medieval interest from childhood knight play to college courses on Vikings in Eastern Europe.
  • A seminar on Vikings in Eastern Europe tied his Russian studies and medieval passions into a cohesive research path.
INSIGHT

Eastern Europe Is Not Empty

  • Medieval scholarship often treats eastern Europe as a blank space, but primary sources show authors imagined much wider worlds.
  • Christian Raffensperger argues we must return to sources to reconstruct medieval Europeans' true worldview.
ADVICE

Use Collaborative Source-Focused Projects

  • Build collaborative projects that ask specialists to read authors' worldview across regions.
  • Raffensperger organized contributors to analyze how individual medieval authors conceptualized their world.
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