Europe in the High Middle Ages Audiobook By William Chester Jordan cover art

Europe in the High Middle Ages

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Europe in the High Middle Ages

By: William Chester Jordan
Narrated by: Leon Nixon
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About this listen

It was an age of hope and possibility, of accomplishment and expansion. Europe's High Middle Ages spanned the Crusades, the building of Chartres Cathedral, Dante's Inferno, and Thomas Aquinas. Buoyant, confident, creative, the era seemed to be flowering into a true renaissance - until the disastrous 14th century rained catastrophe in the form of plagues, famine, and war.

In Europe in the High Middle Ages, William Chester Jordan paints a vivid, teeming landscape that captures this lost age in all its glory and complexity. Here are the great popes who revived the power of the Church against the secular princes; the writers and thinkers who paved the way for the Renaissance; the warriors who stemmed the Islamic tide in Spain and surged into Palestine; and the humbler estates, those who found new hope and prosperity until the long night of the 1300s. From high to low, from dramatic events to social structures, Jordan's account brings to life this fascinating age.

©2001 William Chester Jordan (P)2019 Tantor
History Medieval Western Western Europe War Imperialism Renaissance Pope Royalty France Crusade King
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What listeners say about Europe in the High Middle Ages

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Awful choice of voice actor and mediocre history

The history is okay, but with none of the life of Peter Brown’s analogous history of the early dark ages (Rise of Western Christendom). The chronology is difficult to follow and some of the facts are wrong or highly misleading.

The choice of narrator is really mind boggling on the part of the production agency. This isn’t the narrator’s fault since not everyone needs to know about the Middle Ages but why on earth would they choose a narrator for this who knows so little about the Middle Ages that he can’t pronounce: "bishopric," "scholasticism" (scholatitism), "theological," and countless other simple words ubiquitous in a book about the high Middle Ages. It's not just distracting mispronunciations, but narrator's emphases on the sentences is frequently wrong, making it hard to tell what the sentence is supposed to mean.

This isn’t as botched as Brown’s “Through the Eye of a Needle,” but it is close.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

More than just kings and battles

This is an exccellent recap of a formative yet challenging period of European history. It adequately covers the usual "kings and battles" that have typically been the only topics reviewed in histories of anywhere and anytime, but also provides wonderful descriptions of the day-to-day life of peasants and other non-aristocrats and broader cultural trends.

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    3 out of 5 stars

A fascinating yet disconnected history

The Good: Broad scope and focuses on some interesting people, events and developments in High Medieval Europe

The Bad: Fails to sketch an overarching narrative of what makes the High Middle Ages a distinct historical period. Feels jumpy and disconnected at times. Narration was mediocre, lots of mispronounced words.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

A Weak Link in a Very Good Series

William Chester Jordan's "Europe in the High Middle Ages" is a decent enough review of developments in Europe from the 11th through the 14th centuries. However, unlike the first several volumes (chronologically) of the series, it suffers from the "once over lightly" problem common to many historical surveys. The one exception to this shortcoming is in the area of Jordan's specialty, religion. In that field, one gets a genuine sense of the role the Catholic Church played in the political, social, and yes, religious, lives of the various European peoples.

I would be remiss in my review if I failed to note the frankly terrible quality of the narration, by Leon Nixon. It's not that the timbre of his voice is so bad, though there is a slight reading-to-children aspect to it, somewhat akin to Mr Rogers. Rather, it's his unending mispronunciation of word after word after word, some of which might be expected to be unfamiliar (though I would expect that, between the narrator and the director, they would have figured out even the hard words), but many of which are frankly ordinary words. In a series of the quality of "The Penguin History of Europe," they should do better.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

I most appreciated the short essay on the Beguines.

The narrator mispronounced an astonishingly wide array of words in every language, including English. And at such a lumbering pace I had to set the playback speed to 1.10. Why such incompetence should be tolerated is beyond me.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Worth it but flawed

It was certainly worth the time as a survey. No strong thesis driving the book, but that is probably a reflection of the subject rather than any shortcoming of the author. The narrator has a great voice, it is a shame that his pronunciations weren't quite up to it. He got words wrong and frequently which was bit bit jarring. Still, he has a great voice.

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3 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars

Good book narrator detracts

Overall a worthwhile history, little to no information for those familiar with the period but an excellent overview for the newly interested. The narrators voice and pace; however, the frequent and frequently repeated mispronunciations was distracting.

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8 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Good content, subpar narration

This book is less detailed than other books in the series (a quick look at the hour count could tell that), which is unfortunate, but it does a fair job in the space it is alloted. I'm usually ambivalent towards the narration in my audiobooks, but this is the first book where the pronunciation was very off-putting to me.

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2 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

A Tricky Listen

This volume constitutes as important a portion of the overall series of European history as all the rest, brief as it may be. And, while it’s well written, it will really tax listeners as they try to overcome or ignore mispronunciations of various names or words throughout.

“GEO-fray” for Geoffrey, “VAI-car” for vicar, “bish-AWE-pric” for bishopric.

It might be a small point, and if you already knew the difference then perhaps you can be a better person and truly ignore it. If you’re just learning about this portion of history, you might require some additional references before discussing it.

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4 people found this helpful

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Narrator didn't do his homework

Narrator mispronounces Christendom, Rousillon, ecumenical, and Calabria--bad idea for a book of medieval European history.

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2 people found this helpful