The Descriptio Wormatiensis civitatis ('description of the city of Worms'), also known as the Wormser Mauerbauordnung ('wall-building ordinance of Worms'), is an ordinance from about 900 concerning the maintenance of the city wall of Worms, Germany.
Manuscript and editions
editThe Descriptio, which is written in Latin, is preserved in the Wormser Chronik of Friedrich Zorn . Zorn's work, which dates to 1576, combines material from several sources, including the Annales Wormatienses and the Chronicon Wormatiense. The combined Descriptio, Annales and Chronicon were published under the title Annales Wormatienses by G. H. Pertz. The disentangling of the medieval texts combined in Zorn's was done by Heinrich Boos .[1] The Descriptio has been published three times: by Pertz,[2] by Boos[3] and by Van De Kieft and Niermeyer.[4]
Content
editThe ordinance appears in the manuscript under the rubric Descriptio Wormatiensis civitatis facta a Theodolacho episcopo Wormatiensi anno 873, qui obiit in Neuweiller anno 914 kal. sept., episcopatus anno quadrageismo primo, "a description of the city of Worms made in the year 873 [sic] by Thietlach, bishop of Worms, who died in Neuweiler in the year 914 on 1 September, in the forty-first year of his episcopate".[4]
Issued by Bishop Thietlach (r. 891–914), the Descriptio is more than a description. It is an ordinance assigning Mauerbaupflicht, i.e., the construction and upkeep of specific sections of wall, to both neighbourhoods within Worms and the villages or manors outside it.[1][5][6][7] The ordinance is a unique witness for its place and time. Lynette Olson calls it "a glimpse of transalpine urban life at its nadir, but still organised".[5]
Places mentioned
editThe following places are mentioned in the Descriptio:[4]
- Friesenquartier
- Rudelsheim
- Gimbsheim
- Eich
- Hamm
- Ibersheim
- Rheindürckheim
- Alsheim
- Mettenheim
- Rheinquartier
- Murbach Abbey
- Pfauenpforte
- Heimgereide
- Bobenheim
- Ligrisheim
- Roxheim
- Oggersheim
- Hemmingesheim
- Ruchheim
- Karlbach
- Kirchheim
- Andreaspforte
- Eisbach
- Mertesheim
- Martinspforte
- Pfrimm
- Mühlbach
- Monzernheim
- Dienheim
References
edit- ^ a b David S. Bachrach, ed. (2014), The Histories of a Medieval German City, Worms c. 1000–c. 1300: Translation and Commentary (Farnham: Ashgate), pp. 25–26 and 40 n44.
- ^ G. H. Pertz, ed. (1861), "Annales Wormatienses", in MGH, Scriptores, Vol. 17, at p. 37.
- ^ Heinrich Boos, ed. (1893), Quellen zur Geschichte der Stadt Worms III: Annalen und Chroniken (Berlin: Weidmann), p. 203.
- ^ a b c C. Van De Kieft and J. F. Niermeyer, eds. (1967), Elenchus fontium historiae urbanae (Leiden: E. J. Brill), pp. 43–44.
- ^ a b Lynette Olson (2001), "Review of Paolo Squatriti, Water and Society in Early Medieval Italy, AD 400–1000 (Cambridge University Press, 1998)", Parergon 18(2):219–221. doi:10.1353/pgn.2001.0057
- ^ David S. Bachrach (2012), Warfare in Tenth-Century Germany (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press), p. 19 n31, dates it to the early tenth century.
- ^ Paolo Squatriti (2002), "Digging Ditches in Early medieval Europe", Past & Present 176:11–65.