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Philip Daileader

    Philip Daileader is a historian specializing in the late medieval period. His work delves into the social, cultural, and political aspects of this era, focusing on the daily lives and mentalities of its people. He strives to bring the past to life through meticulous research and accessible narrative.

    True citizens
    Saint Vincent Ferrer, His World and Life
    • 2016

      Saint Vincent Ferrer, His World and Life

      Religion and Society in Late Medieval Europe

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Focusing on the life of Saint Vincent Ferrer, the book explores his pivotal role during the transformative fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in medieval Europe. As a prominent preacher, Ferrer traveled extensively, preparing people for what he believed was the impending apocalypse. The narrative delves into his evolution from a logician to a significant apocalyptic figure, while also providing insights into the era's widespread fears and the socio-political factors that contributed to the expulsion of non-Christian populations in Spain.

      Saint Vincent Ferrer, His World and Life
    • 2000

      This first book-length, English-language study of medieval urban citizenship focuses on Perpignan, a town second in population only to Barcelona in fourteenth-century Catalonia, yet neglected by modern historians. True Citizens describes and analyzes the rules that governed membership in the community of citizens, the definition of citizenship, and how the development of divergent memories within the community resulted in a crisis of citizenship.This study uses urban citizenship to shed new light on many important historiographical issues, such as Jewish-Christian relations, the place of towns in feudal society, the place of Catalonia in the urban history of medieval Europe, and the transition from the High to the Late Middle Ages.

      True citizens