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Book Review

Volume 102• Number 4

October 2003



 

Frillor och fruar: Politik och samlevnad pŒ Island 1120-1400. Av Audur Magnœsd—ttir. Avhandlingar frŒn historiska institutionen i Gšteborg, 29. Gšteborg: Historiska institutionen, 2001. Pp. 240.

In the last decade medieval scholars have paid considerable attention to Nordic women, in particular, to the issue of marriage. Arguing that marriage is but one of several forms of sexual cohabitation, Audur Magnœsd—ttir in this book focuses on concubines (frillor), a subject on which Icelandic sources are particularly rich; wives (fruar) are relegated to the last chapter. Her best evidence comes from narrative sources-the contemporary secular sagas and sagas treating the lives of bishops-laws, and diplomas. The sagas of Icelanders she considers to be useful evidence, but less of the time they describe than of the period in which they were written. Throughout her analysis she is keenly attuned to the repercussions that political and societal changes invariably have on patterns of cohabitation.

Jenny Jochens
Baltimore, Md.

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