1st Edition

The Emergence of the Nobility in East Central Europe between the Eighth and Thirteenth Centuries

Edited By Robert Antonín, Jiří Macháček Copyright 2026
344 Pages 19 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

344 Pages 19 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Emergence of the Nobility in East Central Europe between the Eighth and Thirteenth Centuries explores the formation and evolution of medieval elites in the frontier and peripheral regions of the Frankish/East Frankish Empire and East Central Europe between the eighth and thirteenth centuries. It addresses the dynamics of elite emergence during a transformative era marked by the interaction... Read more

Introduction

Robert Antonín and Jiří Macháček

1 From kinship to nobility: the emergence of the elite in early medieval Croatia

Ante Alajbeg

2 Governance and social structures in the early medieval eastern Alpine region

Stefan Eichert and Nina Richards

3 Transforming the might of the mighty in northeast Bavaria in the Early and High Middle Ages

Jan Hasil

4 The formation of a new type of medieval elite on the eastern frontier of the Frankish Empire: the Great Moravian case from an archaeological perspective

Jiří Macháček

5 Great Moravian nobility? From confusion of concepts to the search for continuity of early medieval elites

Robert Antonín

6 From clan leaders to medieval nobility: The elites of Bohemia in the eighth to twelfth centuries as an interpretative challenge

Ivo Štefan

7 The elites of tenth- to twelfth-century Bohemia: the perspective of a historian

David Kalhous

8 The development of elites in Polish lands between the eighth and eleventh centuries

Aleksandra Pankiewicz

9 Dynamics of diversification: medieval elites in the territory of the first Polish state (second half of the tenth to the fifteenth century)

Przemysław Wiszewski

10 The elites of the Northwestern Slavs in the Early Middle Ages

Felix Biermann

11 The development of medieval elites in the territory of Romania

Cosmin Popa-Gorjanu

12 Emerging elite in the early Lithuanian state: from debates about origin to the search for sources of power

Nerijus Babinskas

13 Continuity or significant shift? The evolution of ruling elites in the early Grand Duchy of Lithuania

Yanina Ryier

Conclusions: the emergence of the medieval nobility in East Central Europe and the sources of their power: cultural, symbolic, economic and social capital

Robert Antonín and Jiří Macháček

Biography

Robert Antonín is a professor of medieval history at the Department of History of the Faculty of Arts, the University of Ostrava (Czech Republic), where he has also been the dean since 2018. His long-term research interests focus on the issues of political, social, economic and cultural development of Central Europe during High Middle Ages and on the topics related to the limits of interpretation of (not only) medieval historiography. He is the author of several monographs, including The Ideal Ruler in Medieval Bohemia (2017); numerous research articles on medieval history and the main editor of the collective monograph The Fourth Lateran Council and the Czech Lands in 13th and 14th Centuries (2020).

Jiří Macháček is a professor at Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic. He specialises in medieval archaeology, archaeological methods and computer applications in archaeology. His work has been published in international journals such as the Journal of Archaeological Science, the Journal of World Prehistory, Medieval Archaeology, and the Praehistorische Zeitschrift, as well as by publishing houses including Brill, Leiden-Boston; Habelt, Bonn; and BAR Publishing, Oxford. He studied archaeology at universities in Brno, Bamberg and Vienna. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Bamberg and a fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in Frankfurt am Main and Göttingen.