European University Institute Library

The origins of peasant servitude in medieval Catalonia, Paul Freedman

Label
The origins of peasant servitude in medieval Catalonia, Paul Freedman
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The origins of peasant servitude in medieval Catalonia
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
55718741
Responsibility statement
Paul Freedman
Series statement
Cambridge Iberian and Latin American studiesCambridge Social Sciences eBooksACLS Humanities E-Book
Summary
This 1991 book describes the history of peasants in Catalonia, the wealthiest and politically dominant part of the medieval Kingdom of Aragon, between the ninth and fifteenth centuries. It focuses on the period from 1000 to 1300, when free peasants who had held property under favourable frontier conditions were progressively subjugated by their lords. Between 1462 and 1486 Catalan peasants mounted the most successful peasants' war of the Middle Ages, and achieved the formal abolition of servitude. Professor Freedman seeks to explain both the process by which servitude was strengthened over the centuries, and its eventual weakening before a direct moral and military challenge. He addresses both the causes of enserfment and the limitations on its effectiveness. The book integrates archival evidence with the theories of society elaborated by medieval jurists. Comparisons are drawn between Catalonia and other regions, and its experience is situated within a spectrum of different social and economic conditions.--, Provided by publisher
Content
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