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Negotiating lordship :Efforts of the Consulat of Toulouse to retain autonomy under Capetian rule (ca. 1229--1315) (France).
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Negotiating lordship :
其他題名:
Efforts of the Consulat of Toulouse to retain autonomy under Capetian rule (ca. 1229--1315) (France).
作者:
Gardner, Christopher Kenrick.
面頁冊數:
389 p.
附註:
Advisers: John W. Baldwin; Gabrielle M. Spiegel.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 63-03, Section: A, page: 1075.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International63-03A.
標題:
History, Medieval.
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3046457
ISBN:
0493606475
Negotiating lordship :Efforts of the Consulat of Toulouse to retain autonomy under Capetian rule (ca. 1229--1315) (France).
Gardner, Christopher Kenrick.
Negotiating lordship :
Efforts of the Consulat of Toulouse to retain autonomy under Capetian rule (ca. 1229--1315) (France). [electronic resource] - 389 p.
Advisers: John W. Baldwin; Gabrielle M. Spiegel.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Johns Hopkins University, 2002.
Oaths were not the only means by which “loyal resistance” was practiced. Petitions for aid or impositions of taxes (invariably for military campaigns) from various lords of the town were met with demands for the expansion and/or protection of Consular prerogatives. Only at the turn of the fourteenth century did the Consules begin to align their judicial and administrative practices with those of Philip IV, an alignment that reflected both shifts in the understanding of adjudication within Toulouse and the awareness that the (re)emerging powers of the regional nobility undermined the abilities of the Consules to capture the attention of their lord.
ISBN: 0493606475Subjects--Topical Terms:
212705
History, Medieval.
Negotiating lordship :Efforts of the Consulat of Toulouse to retain autonomy under Capetian rule (ca. 1229--1315) (France).
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Oaths were not the only means by which “loyal resistance” was practiced. Petitions for aid or impositions of taxes (invariably for military campaigns) from various lords of the town were met with demands for the expansion and/or protection of Consular prerogatives. Only at the turn of the fourteenth century did the Consules begin to align their judicial and administrative practices with those of Philip IV, an alignment that reflected both shifts in the understanding of adjudication within Toulouse and the awareness that the (re)emerging powers of the regional nobility undermined the abilities of the Consules to capture the attention of their lord.
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The dissertation explores the resistance and negotiations enjoined by the members of the town council of Toulouse (the Consulat) with the Capetian royal family, who came into possession of the town via the Treaty of Paris of 1229. My study investigates the ways the inhabitants sought to retain their juridical and jurisdictional autonomy as the Capetians sought to impose their oversight of the courts and administration of the town. Emphasis is placed on the agency of the Consules and their supporters to redefine their legal and cultural identities in a context of legal and administrative intrusion. The practical machinations of governance in an era of institutional experimentation (not “state-building,” as is often presumed) are also explored.
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The leading families of Toulouse who participated on the Consulat successfully resisted many of the demands placed upon them by the Capetian prince, Count Alfonse (1249–1271), and his successor, King Philip III (r.1271–1285), via a process I term “loyal resistance,” namely, avowals of loyalty from the Consules and <italic>universitas</italic> of Toulouse coupled with sweeping demands that severely limited the exercise of Capetian governance. The clearest examples of the process are the oaths periodically exchanged between townsfolk and lord, and oaths between the 1180s and 1315 are studied in some detail. The oaths were not merely formulae designed to reinforce a relationship between townsfolk and lord, but statements over which the Consules fought to have their lord guarantee their customary authority.
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