Urban Elites and Family Strategies
Background:
As a result of its important role in shaping both the political and economic spheres in
late
medieval cities, the urban patriciate has received significant scholarly
attention in both
historical sociology and economic history. Case studies on various
de facto-independent
late medieval city states e.g. in Italy and widely autonomous
cities in Germany (such as
Freie Städte, Reichsstädte) have identified specific and
general patterns in family and
kinship structures and the commercial orientation and
political strategies of patrician
family clans, which are crucial for our
understanding of path-dependency in economic
development and political history.
Primary challenges of cross-European comparative
approaches to urban patrician elites
result from the vast amount of possible variables
(e.g. geographical conditions,
religion, political systems, territorial size) that impact upon
family structure.
Thus, comparative histories of urban patriciates are typically designed
as
comprehensive studies covering political and economic incentives as well as
cultural
dispositions and collective social mentalities.
Aims:
In this session, we look at elite constitution and behaviour in urban medieval
England
and France (covered by R.H. Hilton’s comparative study), across the Italian
peninsula
(described in D. Kent’s book chapter) and in Late-Tang China (subject of
Tackett’s
article). Specifically, we enquire about
1. the relationship between
urban elites and the surrounding feudal nobility: rivalry,
interdependence, or
emulation?
2. social hierarchies within the urban patriciate: to what extent was the
urban
patriciate a homogenous social class and how concrete was the
correlation
between economic potency and political influence? Was there social
mobility
towards the patriciate? What was the role of patronage in consolidating
political
power?
3. the significance of kinship structures in determining economic
co-operation and
political dependencies: what was the role of intra-family
oligarchies?
4. the interdependences between social elites and institutions of
political and
economic pertinence (such as religious institutions, guilds, state
bureaucracy):
dominance of the family?
5. the roles of ritual and representation
More generally, we are interested in the social composition of medieval
cities, the
relationship between the nobility, other political and social elites, and
the populace, and
the extent to which the overall social structure determined the
means and intensities of
communication within and between societal spheres.
Participants are invited to think of
relevant examples from their own research and to
contribute these towards the
discussion.
Core reading:
Hilton, R. H.: English and French towns in feudal society: a comparative
study,
Cambridge etc.: Cambridge University Press, 1992, chapter 3: Urban social
structures
(pp. 53-86); chapter 4: Urban rulers (pp. 87-104).
Kent, Dale: "The power of the elites: family, patronage, and the state", in: Najemy,
John
M. (Hg.), Italy in the Age of the Renaissance 1300-1550, Oxford: Oxford
University Press
2004.
Tackett, Nicolas: "Great Clansmen, Bureaucrats, and
Local Magnates: The Structure and
Circulation of the Elite in Late-Tang China", in:
Asia Major 21 (2008), No. 1, pp. 101–152.
Recommended further reading:
Chojnacki, Stanley: "In Search of the Venetian Patriciate: Families and Factions in
the
Fourteenth Century", in: Hale, John Rigby (ed.), Renaissance Venice, Totowa, N.
J.:
Rowman and Littlefield, 1973, pp. 47-90.
Chojnacki, Stanley: "Marriage Legislation and Patrician Society in
Fifteenth-Century
Venice", in: Bachrach, Bernard S., Nicholas, David (eds.), Law,
Custom and the Social
Fabric in Medieval Europe - Essays in Honor of Bryce Lyon,
Kalamazoo (MI): Medieval
Institute Publications, Western Michigan University, 1990,
pp. 163-184.
Clark, Peter (ed.): The Oxford Handbook of Cities in World History, Oxford:
Oxford
University Press, forthcoming 2013. Particularly chapters
1: Introduction
(Peter Clark)
12: Medieval Europe (Marc Boone)
15: The Ottoman City (Ebru
Boyar)
16: China 600-1300 (Hilde De Weerdt)
21: Economy (Bas van Bavel, Eltjo
Buringh, Maarten Bosker, Jan Luiten van
Zanden)
22: Population and Migration –
European and Chinese experiences compared
(Anne Winter)
23: Power (Wim
Blockmans, Marjolein 't Hart)
24: Culture: Representations (Peter Burke)
WITH
KIND PERMISSION OF THE EDITOR, DRAFT VERSIONS OF CHAPTERS 21 AND 23
WILL BE MADE
AVAILABLE VIA THE COURSE DROPBOX FOLDER. THESE ARE INTENDED
STRICTLY FOR INTERNAL USE
AND NOT TO BE CIRCULATED FURTHER.
Crabb, Ann: The Strozzi of Florence - Widowhood & Family Solidarity in the
Renaissance,
Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2000.
Greif, Avner: "The Study of Organizations and Evolving Organizational Forms
Through
History: Reflections from the Late Medieval Family Firm", in: Industrial and
Corporate
Change 5 (1996), No. 2, pp. 473-502.
Habermas, Jürgen: The structural transformation of the public sphere: an inquiry into
a
category of bourgeois society, Cambridge (Mass.): MIT Press 1989 (esp. chapters
I.2,
II.5,6).
Heers, Jacques: Le clan familial au moyen âge étude dur les structures politiques
et
sociales des milieux urbains, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1974.
Herlihy, David: "Family solidarity in medieval Italian history", in: Explorations
in
Economic History 7 (Autumn-Winter 1969), No. 1-2, pp. 173-184.
Hibbert, A. B.: "The Origins of the Medieval Town Patriciate", in: Past & Present 3
(Feb.,
1953), pp. 15-27.
Hughes, Daine Owen: "Urban Growth and Family Structure in Medieval Genoa", in:
Past
& Present 66 (Feb., 1975), pp. 3-28.
Kamenaga-Anzai, Yoko: "The Family Consciousness in Medieval Genoa: The Case of
the
Lomellini", in: The Mediterranean World XIX (June 2008).
Padgett, John F.:
"Open Elite? Social Mobility, Marriage and Family in Florence, 1282-
1494", in:
Political Networks Paper Archive Working Papers, 2009.
Rigby, Stephen H.: "Approaches to Pre-industrial Social Structure", in: Denton,
Jeffrey
Howard (ed.), Orders and Hierarchies in Late Medieval and Renaissance Europe,
Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 1999.
Rigby, Stephen H.: English society in the later Middle Ages: class, status, and
gender,
London: Macmillan, 1995.
Queller, Donald E.: The Venetian Patriciate: Reality versus Myth, Urbana and
Chicago:
University of Illinois Press, 1986.
Wickham, Chris: Framing the Early Middle Ages: Europe and the Mediterranean, 400-
800,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006 (esp. chapter 10).
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