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Lordship and the Decentralized State in Late Medieval Europe
Erika Graham-Goering, Jim Van der Meulen, Frederik Buylaert (éd.)
The origins of modern European states are often traced back to the expansion of royal and princely authority in the late Middle Ages, transforming scattered power structures into centralized governments.
Lordship and the Decentralized State in Late Medieval Europe rethinks state formation as a process of decentralization, exploring how these governments willingly left power to lesser political players. It challenges the assumption that the rise of states made lordship obsolete, showing instead how distributing authority among local lords reinforced the development of new political systems.
The contributors tackle this fresh perspective on lordship and state formation from two complementary angles. Detailed snapshots of lordship in France and the Low Countries assess the political significance of different aspects of lordly power. Historiographical essays discuss frameworks for understanding relationships between lordship and the state in contexts across Europe. These comparative perspectives establish an innovative approach to a key question in political history.
Erika Graham-Goering is Associate Professor in the Department of Archaeology, Conservation, and History at the University of Oslo.
Jim van der Meulen is a social historian at Ghent University with a broad specialisation in the Low Countries between 1300 and 1700, combining expertise in political, socio-economic, cultural, and environmental history.
Frederik Buylaert, Professor of History at Ghent University, is a social historian of the Low Countries with a side interest in comparative history and the history of historiography.
Table des matières :
List of Figures and Maps
List of Tables
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Foreword, Justine Firnhaber-Baker
Introduction : Lordship and the Decentralized State in Late Medieval Europe, Erika Graham-Goering, Jim van der Meulen, and Frederik Buylaert
1:Lordship and the State : Alloy or Emulsion ?, John Watts
Part I Case Studies of Lordship in France and the Low Countries
2:Integrative Approaches to (Co-)Lordship in Late Medieval Languedoc, Erika Graham-Goering
3:Rehabilitating Norman Lordship : The Fief of Hauberk and its Judicial Rights in the 15th and 16th Centuries, Ysaline Bourgine de Meder
4 :(De)Centralizing Governance in Late Medieval France : Actors and Mechanisms, Georg Jostkleigrewe
5:Seigneurial Lordship and the State in the County of Flanders (c. 1350-1550), Frederik Buylaert
6:Pursuit of Nobility and the Priorities of Political Representatives in Early 15th-Century Flanders, Wim Blockmans
7:Lordship in Medieval Holland and Zeeland, Rombert Stapel and Arie van Steensel
8:Urban Political Elites and Seigneurial Lordship : Antwerp and its Hinterland (c. 1400-1550), Janna Everaert and Sieben Feys
9:The Seigneurial Landscapes of Riverine Brabant and Guelders (15th-16th Centuries), Mario Damen and Jim van der Meulen
Conclusions to Part I : Lordship, Commonwealth, Variegated Polities, and the State, Elizabeth A. R. Brown
Part II European Historiographies of Lordship
10:Lordship and State Formation in Late Medieval England, Chris Given-Wilson
11:Lordship and State Formation in Scotland, 1300-1500, Alice Taylor
12:Lordship and State Formation in the Holy Roman Empire, 1300-1550, Hillay Zmora
13:A Land of Lords : Lordship and State Formation in the Italian Peninsula, Francesco Bozzi
14:Jurisdiction : The Crooked Leg of Lordship ? State Formation in Castile in the 15th Century, José Antonio Jara Fuente
15:Lordship and State in Scandinavia, c. 1300-1500, Hans Jacob Orning
Conclusions to Part II : State and Lordship : Concluding Remarks, Jean-Philippe Genet
Index
GRAHAM-GOERING Erika, VAN DER MEULEN Jim, BUYLAERT Frederik (éd.), Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2025.
ISBN : 978-0-19726-784-4.