Race Isn’t a Modern Concept
For generations, race studies scholars—historians, literary critics, social scientists—believed that race and its pernicious spawn racism were modern-day phenomena only. This is because race was originally defined only in biological terms, and believed to be determined by skin color, physiognomy, and genetic inheritance. The more astute, however, came to realize race could also be a matter of cultural classification, as Ann Stoler’s 1977 study of the colonial Dutch East Indies makes plain: “Race could never be a matter of physiology alone. Cultural competency in Dutch customs, a sense of ‘belonging’ in a Dutch cultural milieu … disaffiliation with things Javanese … domestic arrangements, parenting styles, and moral environment … were crucial to defining … who was to be considered European.”
Yet even after we recognized that people could be racialized through cultural and social criteria—that race could be a social construction—the European Middle Ages was still seen as outside the history of race. (I speak only of the EuropeanMiddle Ages because I’m a EuroMedievalist—it’s up to others to discuss race in Islamic, Jewish, Asian, African, and American premodernities.)
This meant that the atrocities of the medieval period—roughly 500-1500 CE—such as the periodic exterminations of Jews in Europe, the demand that they mark their bodies and the bodies of their children with a large visible badge, the herding of Jews into specific towns in England to monitor their livelihoods, and the vilification of Jews for supposedly possessing a fetid stench, a male menses, subhuman and bestial qualities, and a congenital need to ingest the blood of Christian children whom they tortured and crucified to death: All these and more were considered to be just emblems of premodern “prejudice” and not acts of racism.
The exclusion of the medieval period from the history of race issues from an understanding of race that’s been overly influenced by the era of scientific racism (in the so-called “Age of Enlightenment”), when science was the magisterial discourse of racial classification, as I argue inThe Invention of Race in the European Middle Ages.
But today, in news media and public life, we see how religion also can function to classify people in absolute and fundamental ways—for instance, Muslims, who hail from a diversity of ethno-races and national origins, have been talked about as if their religion somehow identified them as one homogenous people. As I say in my book: “Race” is one of the primary names we have—a name we retain for the commitments it recognizes—that is attached to a repeating tendency, of the gravest import, to demarcate human beings through differences among humans that are selectively identified as absolute and fundamental, so as to distribute positions and powers differentially to human groups.
Instead of opposing premodern “prejudice” to modern racisms, we can then see the treatment of medieval Jews—including their legalized murder by the state on the basis of community rumors and lies—as racial acts, which today we might even call hate crimes, of a sanctioned and legalized kind. In this way, we would bear witness to the full meaning of events in the medieval past, and understand that racial thinking, racial practices, and racial phenomena can occur before there’s a vocabulary to name them for what they are.
To discuss medieval race, I’ve scrutinized a wide range of evidence: art and statuary, maps, saints’ lives, state legislature, church laws, social institutions, popular beliefs, economic relations, war, settlement and colonization, religious treatises, and many kinds of literature (travel accounts, ethnographies, romances, chronicles, letters, papal bulls, etc.).
I’ve suggested that medieval England is the first racial state in the history of the West. English church and state laws produced surveillance, tagging, herding, incarceration, legal murder, and finally, the expulsion of English Jews. A popular story of Jews killing Christian boys—which began in England and spread throughout the continent—shifts in marked ways across a century, told and retold to consolidate the communal identity of England as a nation united against Jews, who became an internal minority of perpetual outsiders.
In 1215, Canon 68 of the Fourth Lateran Council installed racial law in the Latin West by ordering Jews and Muslims to mark themselves off by a difference of dress. English laws and statutes quickly elaborated this into a “badge of shame” and increasingly constricted the freedom of Jewish subjects, till in 1275, the Statute of Jewry created residential enclaves—the beginnings of the ghetto—by forbidding Jews from living among Christians. By 1290, parliamentary law drove Jews from England altogether, in their first permanent expulsion from a European country.
Concomitantly, Muslims were turned into non-humans, with the renowned theologian Bernard of Clairvaux, who co-wrote the Rule for the Order of the Templars, announcing that the killing of a Muslim wasn’t actually homicide, but malicide—the extermination of incarnated evil, not the killing of a person. Ingeniously, authors and theologians in Europe repeatedly called Muslims Saracens—a made-up name that falsely claimed Muslims called themselves Saraceni to pretend they were descended from Sara, Abraham’s legitimate wife, and not Hagar, her bondwoman, because of their shame—a story which characterized Muslims as liars, in the very act of telling a lie about them.
The extraterritorial incursions we call the Crusades even created an indispensable template for Europe’s later colonial empires of the modern eras, by creolizing the old template of Roman colonization. When Europeans later came to subjugate the populations of the world and spread new maritime empires, they came with the Book and the Sword—not like ancient Rome, but like medieval Christendom.
Even fellow Christians could be racialized: Gerald of Wales justified England’s invasion of Ireland in the twelfth century by depicting the Irish as a subhuman, savage, and bestial race—a racializing strategy in England’s colonial rule of Ireland that echoed from the medieval through the early modern period: Four centuries later, Edmund Spenser would repeat the same derogatory lies about the bestial, savage, inhuman Irish.
Europeans, of course, knew of the existence of sub-Saharan Africans, whom they met on pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and in the trading ports of the Mediterranean. Thanks to Ethiopia’s Christianization in the fourth century, and Nubia’s in the sixth, pious Ethiopian priests served at the Holy Sepulcher, alongside devout pilgrims from Africa. Yet sub-Saharan Africans continued to be depicted as the torturers of Christ and killers of John the Baptist in European art. In literature, Africa invited fantasies of what the outside world could offer—treasure, sex, wealth, supremacy—if the West could only make the world more like Latin Christendom itself.
And so, the patron saint of Magdeburg Cathedral, St. Maurice—a martyr venerated for a thousand years—was suddenly depicted in 1220 as a black African: a way to make Africa mobile and transportable to the heartlands of the Holy Roman Empire, where Africa’s hallowed past of church fathers and holy ascetics could be recalled, displayed, and owned, in an era of disappointing crusading failure and Islamic dominance.
Europeans also encountered Native Americans early in the eleventh century, when Greenlanders and Icelanders founded settlements in North America. Icelandic sagas gleefully show the natives being bilked and cheated by the new settler-colonists in exploitative trade relations half a millennium before Columbus. The colonists even kidnap two native boys and abduct them back to Europe, forcibly Christianizing the children and teaching them Norse—an account of forced emigration that may explain why, among the races of the world, scientists tell us the C1e DNA gene element is shared only by Icelanders and Native Americans today.
The medieval period was a period of thriving international slavery. Caucasian slave women in Al-Andalus (Islamic Spain) birthed heirs for Muslim rulers, so that for generations, the Caliphs of Córdoba were blond-haired, blue-eyed men, except for one (who was red-haired, and reportedly dyed his hair black to look more Arab). European human traffickers—especially Italian slavers—over the centuries resupplied the Mamluk dynasties of Egypt with Turkic and Caucasian slaves who became formidable military elites and Sultans, thus facilitating the ultimate loss of all the crusader territories to the Mamluks, and ensuring Islamic domination of the Holy Lands.
Southeastern Europe too thrived on slavery: Dark-skinned migrants from India, later known to the world as the Romani (“Gypsies”), became enslaved by religious houses and landowning elites in Wallachia and Moldavia who subjugated the Romani for slave labor well into the modern era, making “Gypsy” the name of a slave race.
In the end, it is the Romani—who consider themselves an ethnoracial group, despite considerable internal heterogeneity among their peoples—who best personify the paradox of race and racial identification. Romani self-identification as a race, despite substantial differences in the composition of their populations across time and space, shows us why racialization—by those outside, as well as by those who self-racialize—remains tenacious, well into the twenty-first century.
Suggested Readings on Race and Racism in the European Middle Ages:
Akbari, Suzanne Conklin. Idols in the East: European Representations of Islam and the Orient, 1100-1450.Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2009.
Bale, Anthony. The Jew in the Medieval Book: English Anti-Semitisms 1350-1500.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.
Biller, Peter. “Black Women in Medieval Scientific Thought.” Micrologus13 (2005): 477-92.
———. “Proto-racial Thought in Medieval Science.” The Origins of Racism in the West.157-180.
———. “Views of Jews from Paris around 1300: Christian or ‘Scientific’?” Christianity and Judaism. Ed. Diana Wood. Oxford: Blackwell, 1992. 187-207.
Caviness, Madeline. “From the Self-Invention of the Whiteman in the Thirteenth Century to The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.”Different Visions: A Journal of New Perspectives on Medieval Art1 (2008): 1-33.http://differentvisions.org/issue1PDFs/Caviness.pdf
Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome. “Hybrids, Monsters, Borderlands: The Bodies of Gerald of Wales.”The Postcolonial Middle Ages.Ed. Jeffrey Jerome Cohen. New York: St. Martins, 2000. 85-104.
Devisse, Jean. The Image of the Black in Western Art: From the Early Christian Era to the “Age of Discovery.”Trans. William G. Ryan. Vol. 2 Pt. 1: From the Demonic Threat to the Incarnation of Sainthood. New York: William Morrow, 1979. Reissued with an introduction by Paul Kaplan and a preface by David Bindman and Henry Louis Gates, Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2010.
Eliav-Feldon, Miriam, Benjamin Isaac, and Joseph Ziegler, eds. The Origins of Racism in the West.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
Fraser, Angus. The Gypsies. Oxford: Blackwell, 1995.
Hancock, Ian. We are the Romani People.Hatfield, Hertfordshire: University of Hertfordshire Press, 2002.
Hahn, Thomas, ed. Special Issue on Race and Ethnicity in the Middle Ages. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies31.1 (2001).
Heng, Geraldine. Empire of Magic: Medieval Romance and the Politics of Cultural Fantasy.New York: Columbia University Press, 2003 (2004, 2012).
———. The Invention of Race in the European Middle Ages.New York: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Hsy, Jonathan and Julie Orlemanski, eds. “Race and Medieval Studies, a Partial Bibliography.” postmedieval8.4 (2017): 500-531.https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1057/s41280-017-0072-0.pdf
Kaplan, Paul H. D. The Rise of the Black Magus in Western Art.Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1985.
Kruger, Steven F. “Conversion and Medieval Sexual, Religious, and Racial Categories.” Constructing Medieval Sexuality.Ed. Karma Lochrie, Peggy McCracken, and James A. Schultz. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997. 158-179.
Lampert, Lisa. “Race, Periodicity, and the (Neo-) Middle Ages.” Modern Language Quarterly65 (2004): 392-421.
Mastnak, Tomaz.Crusading Peace: Christendom, the Muslim World, and Western Political Order.Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.
Mellinkoff, Ruth. Outcasts: Signs of Otherness in Northern European Art of the Late Middle Ages.2 vols. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
Patton, Pamela. Envisioning Others: Race, Color, and the Visual in Iberia and Latin America. Leiden: Brill, 2015.
People of Color in European Art History.https://twitter.com/medievalpoc
Ramey, Lynn T. Black Legacies: Race and the European Middle Ages.Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2014.
Stacey, Robert C. “Anti-Semitism and the Medieval English State.” The Medieval State: Essays Presented to James Campbell.Eds. J. R. Madicott and D. M. Palliser. London: Hambledon, 2000. 163-177.
Strickland, Debra Higgs.Saracens, Demons, and Jews: Making Monsters in Medieval Art.Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003.
Sturtevant, Paul, ed. Special Series on Race, Racism, and the Middle Ages, The Public Medievalist. https://www.publicmedievalist.com/race-racism-middle-ages-toc/
Tolan, John V. Saracens: Islam in the Medieval European Imagination. New York: Columbia University Press, 2002.
———. Sons of Ishmael: Muslims through European Eyes in the Middle Ages.Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2008.
Trachtenberg, Joshua. The Devil and the Jews: The Medieval Conception of the Jew and Its Relation to Modern Antisemitism.New Haven: Yale University Press, 1943.
Whitaker, Cord, ed. Special Issue on Making Race Matter in the Middle Ages, postmedieval6.1 (2015).
Ziegler, Joseph. “Physiognomy, Science, and Proto-racism 1200-1500.” The Origins of Racism in the West.181-99.