Abstract
This article examines how far the use of the term 'medieval' restricts or distorts our understanding of the period conventionally termed so. The tripartite ancient—medieval—modern scheme entered historical writing in the seventeenth century, but the term soon took on its own life outside historiography. Within historiography, the tripartite division has remained the dominant periodisation, even though plausible alternatives have been offered. However, those working as European medievalists only rarely see themselves as forming a group studying a coherent and discrete socio- cultural formation: apart from anything else, Europe itself is as problematic a notion as the Middle Ages. The term, within academe, is now largely a conventional one. This appears also to be the case for the use of the term in extra-European contexts: it denotes either a post-classical age or a feudal society (here as in non-academic usage, medieval and feudal are often synonymous). The temporal limits vary, though there are broad similarities. The article argues that the term is too conventionalised to be of much use in any dialogue between medievalists of different parts of the globe: it does not clearly define either a social formation or a stage of development.
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