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Associative Political Culture In The Holy Roman Empire Upper Germany 13461521 Duncan Hardy

  • SKU: BELL-9958724
Associative Political Culture In The Holy Roman Empire Upper Germany 13461521 Duncan Hardy
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Associative Political Culture In The Holy Roman Empire Upper Germany 13461521 Duncan Hardy instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 35.27 MB
Pages: 320
Author: Duncan Hardy
ISBN: 9780198827252, 0198827253
Language: English
Year: 2018

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Associative Political Culture In The Holy Roman Empire Upper Germany 13461521 Duncan Hardy by Duncan Hardy 9780198827252, 0198827253 instant download after payment.

What was the Holy Roman Empire in the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries? At the turning point between the medieval and early modern periods, this vast Central European polity was the continent's most politically fragmented. The imperial monarchs were often weak and distant, while a diverse array of regional actors played an autonomous role in political life. The Empire's obvious differences compared with more centralized European kingdoms have stimulated negative historical judgements and fraught debates, which have found expression in recent decades in the concepts of fractured "territorial states" and a disjointed "imperial constitution."Associative Political Culture in the Holy Roman Empirechallenges these interpretations through a wide-ranging case study of Upper Germany-the southern regions of modern-day Germany plus Alsace, Switzerland, and western Austria-between 1346 and 1521. By examining the interactions of princes, prelates, nobles, and towns comparatively,Associative Political Culture in the Holy Roman Empiredemonstrates that a range of actors and authorities shared the same toolkit of technologies, rituals, judicial systems, and concepts and configurations of government. Crucially, Upper German elites all participated in leagues, alliances, and other treaty-based associations. As frameworks for collective activity, associations were a vital means of enabling and regulating warfare, justice and arbitration, and even lordship and administration.
On the basis of this evidence,Associative Political Culture in the Holy Roman Empireoffers a new and more coherent depiction of the Holy Roman Empire as a sprawling community of interdependent elites who interacted within the framework of a shared political culture.

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