Lordship, capitalism, and the state in Flanders (c. 1250-1570) /
Recreating the seigneurial landscape of Flanders (home to one per cent of the population of Europe) for the first time, this book challenges the interpretation of the Burgundian-Habsburg Low Countries as a proto-bourgeois society demonstrating the seigneurie was a vital institution with societal imp...
| Main Authors: | , |
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| Format: | eBook |
| Language: | English |
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Oxford :
Oxford University Press,
[2025]
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| Series: | Oxford studies in medieval European history.
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Connect to the full text of this electronic book |
| Summary: | Recreating the seigneurial landscape of Flanders (home to one per cent of the population of Europe) for the first time, this book challenges the interpretation of the Burgundian-Habsburg Low Countries as a proto-bourgeois society demonstrating the seigneurie was a vital institution with societal impact throughout the late medieval period. |
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| Abstract: | "This book engages with recent debates on lordship as a cornerstone of rural society in Europe. As a distinct outlier in the spectrum of possibilities, Flanders provides an extreme example of a scenario in which seigneuries were not so much vehicles for noble rulership as instruments for village communities to defend their interests. Imagining the Low Countries as a proto-bourgeois society, historians always assumed that local lordship was effectively crushed between strong cities and states, but in fact its importance for Flemish society was just as great and possibly greater at the start of the Dutch Revolt in 1567 than it was around the mid-thirteenth century, where this study begins. As both towns and princely administrations provided villagers with a shield against capricious lords, the seigneurie could only continue to function if it was closely aligned with the interests of peasants. The self-rule of Flemish peasantries through lordship meant that the seigneurie was the forum in which contemporaries made a critical decision, that being how to respond to the new and all-encompassing phenomenon of agrarian capitalism, a mode of agricultural production that first emerged in the Low Countries and Flanders before spreading to the rest of the globe. The birth of what we call ‘middle-class lordship' helps scholars to understand how power relations between lords and peasants differed from one region to the next in dialogue with different trajectories in urbanization, economic change, and state formation"-- Oxford Academic. |
| Physical Description: | 1 online resource : illustrations, maps. |
| Audience: | Specialized. |
| Bibliography: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
| ISBN: | 9780198945758 0198945752 9780198945734 0198945736 9780198945741 0198945744 |