‘A deeply researched and penetrating scholarly work addressing an important aspect of medieval political ritual: the array of coronation rites that marked a ruler's ascension to the throne throughout the medieval West, with a particular focus on self-crowning. Broad in its range and conclusions, the manuscript engages the reader with its lively narrative, arguments, and conclusions.'
Gabrielle M. Spiegel - Johns Hopkins University
‘A magisterial book drawing on an impressive array of written sources and material artefacts. It offers an innovative and finely tuned analysis of a curious phenomenon - the self-coronation of kings, raising important questions about the relationship between religion and politics that has defined European history well into the twentieth century.'
Björn Weiler - Aberystwyth University
‘Thoroughly researched and engaging, this erudite book is a major contribution to our knowledge. Addressing a specific aspect of medieval political rituals - the act of self-coronation (not as uncommon as some historians have thought) and coronation rites - Aurell offers an original and much need analysis of these ceremonies over la longue durée. An important book to be read with care and pleasure.'
Teofilo F. Ruiz - UCLA
‘Overall, this wide-ranging, well-founded, and highly readable study by Jaume Aurell … offers a very valuable contribution to medieval ritual studies and rulership research in a comparative perspective.’
Tanja Skambraks
Source: Historische Zeitschrift
‘Medieval Self-Coronations is an ambitious project due to the vastness of its geographic-temporal coordinates and its interdisciplinary nature, since it handles anthropological, historical,ritual and liturgical resources, as well as those coming from the history of art … undoubtedly a new key study for international medieval historiography.’
Marta Serrano Coll
Source: RESEÑAS
'Aurell offers us a deeply researched, comparative, and chronological survey of the ideas, rituals, imageries, and ideologies around the practices of royal accession through late antiquity and the long Middle Ages. … One of this book’s great strengths is its mastery and synthesis of an extraordinarily large and complex scholarly literature of several centuries.'
M. Cecilia Gaposchkin
Source: Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies