Large numbers of people in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries migrated from one part of Europe to another in search of land, food, and work. Everywhere in Europe, towns recruited people from the countryside as well. In frontier regions, townspeople were usually long-
In the early periods of conquest and colonization, and in all regions with extensive migrations, a legal dualism existed: native peoples remained subject to their traditional laws; newcomers brought and were subject to the laws of the countries from which they came. The great exception to this broad pattern of legal pluralism was Ireland. The English distinguished between the free and the unfree, and the entire Irish population, simply by the fact of Irish birth, was unfree. When English legal structures were established beginning in 1210, the Irish were denied access to the common-
The later Middle Ages witnessed a movement away from legal pluralism or dualism and toward legal homogeneity and an emphasis on blood descent. The dominant ethnic group in an area tried to bar others from positions of church leadership and guild membership. Marriage laws were instituted that attempted to maintain ethnic purity by prohibiting intermarriage, and some church leaders actively promoted ethnic discrimination.
The most extensive attempt to prevent intermarriage and protect ethnic purity is embodied in the Statute of Kilkenny (1366), a law the ruling English imposed on Ireland, which stated that “there were to be no marriages between those of immigrant and native stock; that the English inhabitants of Ireland must employ the English language and bear English names; that they must ride in the English way [that is, with saddles] and have English apparel; that no Irishmen were to be granted ecclesiastical benefices or admitted to monasteries in the English parts of Ireland.”2
Late medieval chroniclers held that peoples differed according to language, traditions, customs, and laws. None of these were unchangeable, however, and commentators increasingly also described ethnic differences in terms of blood, which made ethnicity heritable. As national consciousness grew with the Hundred Years’ War, for example, people began to speak of French blood and English blood. Religious beliefs came to be conceptualized in terms of blood as well, with people regarded as having Jewish blood, Muslim blood, or Christian blood. Blood also came to be used as a way to talk about social differences, especially for nobles. As Europeans increasingly came into contact with people from Africa and Asia, and particularly as they developed colonial empires, these notions about blood also became a way of conceptualizing racial categories.