European University Institute Library

Transregional territories, crossing borders in the early modern Low Countries and beyond, edited by Bram De Ridder, Violet Soen, Werner Thomas, Sophie Verreyken

Label
Transregional territories, crossing borders in the early modern Low Countries and beyond, edited by Bram De Ridder, Violet Soen, Werner Thomas, Sophie Verreyken
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Transregional territories
Oclc number
1163642274
Responsibility statement
edited by Bram De Ridder, Violet Soen, Werner Thomas, Sophie Verreyken
Series statement
Habsburg worlds,, volume 2, 2565-8476
Sub title
crossing borders in the early modern Low Countries and beyond
Summary
The early modern world was one of movement, contact, and exchange. Yet, this does not mean that it was borderless. On the contrary, connection existed only when people moved along and across the separations between polities, religions, and mentalities. So in order to understand early modern connections, one also needs to analyse the boundaries that accompanied them. In Transregional Territories, the early modern Low Countries are chosen as a ‘laboratory’ for studying border formation and border management through the lens of transregional history. Eight different cases highlight the impact of boundaries on the actions and strategies of individuals and governments. Crossing borders in early modern times was not merely an act of negating a territorial division, but rather a moment of intimate interaction with the separation itself. As such, this volume illustrates how borders forced historical actors to adapt their behaviour, and how historians can use a transregional vantage point to better understand these changes. The cases are presented by leading border specialists and scholars of the early modern Low Countries: Fernando Chavarría Múgica, Victor Enthoven, Raingard Esser, Yves Junot, Marie Kervyn, Christel Annemieke Romein, and Patricia Subirade. Bram De Ridder, Violet Soen, Werner Thomas, and Sophie Verreyken are all members of the Early Modern History Research Group of the KU Leuven. Together, they have published extensively on transregional history and the history of the early modern Low Countries, grouped under the label of transregionalhistory.eu. --, Provided by publisher
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