
New Books Network Christian Raffensperger, "Authorship, Worldview, and Identity in Medieval Europe" (Routledge, 2022)
Jan 24, 2026
Christian Raffensperger, historian and Kenneth E. Ray Chair in Humanities at Wittenberg University, discusses medieval authors and their wider awareness of Europe. He explores how writers used texts and informants to describe distant places. Short segments cover including Eastern Europe, imagined geographies, mercantile observers like Marco Polo, and identity markers such as Welsh nicknames.
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Medieval Authors Saw A Wider Europe
- Medieval sources reveal broader, interconnected European worlds rather than isolated localities.
- Christian Raffensperger argues returning to primary authors uncovers these wider medieval horizons.
Read Authors To Understand Their Worldview
- When studying medieval texts, prioritize understanding authorial intent over mining facts for dates.
- Use interdisciplinary tools and modern lenses to interpret sources productively, Raffensperger recommends.
Go Back To Sources With Modern Methods
- Using primary texts to study authorial intent updates older source-driven methods for modern historiography.
- Raffensperger emphasizes applying contemporary methodologies rather than replicating 19th-century positivism.




