The Black Death and the Borough Court: The Changing Pattern of Social and Judicial Representation in Late Medieval Lincoln

Author(s):  
Alan Kissane
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Peter Linehan

This book springs from its author’s continuing interest in the history of Spain and Portugal—on this occasion in the first half of the fourteenth century between the recovery of each kingdom from widespread anarchy and civil war and the onset of the Black Death. Focussing on ecclesiastical aspects of the period in that region (Galicia in particular) and secular attitudes to the privatization of the Church, it raises inter alios the question why developments there did not lead to a permanent sundering of the relationship with Rome (or Avignon) two centuries ahead of that outcome elsewhere in the West. In addressing such issues, as well as of neglected material in Spanish and Portuguese archives, use is made of the also unpublished so-called ‘secret’ registers of the popes of the period. The issues it raises concern not only Spanish and Portuguese society in general but also the developing relationship further afield of the components of the eternal quadrilateral (pope, king, episcopate, and secular nobility) in late medieval Europe, as well as of the activity in that period of those caterpillars of the commonwealth, the secular-minded sapientes. In this context, attention is given to the hitherto neglected attempt of Afonso IV of Portugal to appropriate the privileges of the primatial church of his kingdom and to advance the glorification of his Castilian son-in-law, Alfonso XI, as God’s vicegerent in his.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Robert Blackmore

Abstract This article examines the impact of a developed bourgeois legal status on late medieval Bordeaux’s wine market, between 1348—the year of the arrival of the Black Death—and 1449, shortly before the end of Plantagenet rule (in 1453). Through their control of the city’s powerful commune, the bourgeoisie acquired a portfolio of commercial advantages that distorted the export market in the interests of its members: a minority of influential townspeople, ecclesiastics—both individuals and institutions—as well as knights and secular lords allied to the English crown. Using considerable new quantitative evidence from Bordeaux’s customs books, this group is shown to have increased its exports at a time when trade was in decline, and—in turn—invested profits in the city’s hinterland, its suburbs and the wider Bordelais.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 367-393 ◽  
Author(s):  
TREVOR DEAN

ABSTRACTThe historiography of epidemics and crime suggests that we might find effects of plague on criminal behaviour in the years of the Black Death and its aftermath, yet this question has not been systematically investigated by late medieval historians. For the first time, a continuous series of trial records covering the 1340s – for the city of Bologna – is here analysed, and the issue of a ‘breakdown in law and order’ is addressed. The particular patterns of criminal prosecution are revealed and explained, including unusual and unexpected features of continuity in 1348, and surprising developments in the years following, with changes in political context and judicial procedures outweighing any ongoing effects of plague.


1972 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 196-223 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renee Neu Watkins

It was Petrarch's lot to live through the massive onslaught of bubonic plague in 1348 known as the Black Death. In poetry and prose, he recorded his subjective response. We know him indeed more intimately than any other man of the late medieval West. This paper concerns the way he looked at the event—the way he responded to private losses and to public calamity. My plan is essentially narrative, to tell a psychological story. The story helps to illuminate both Petrarch's creative processes and the way the Black Death touched and modified cultural history.Petrarch scholars have recognized, of course, the centrality of the theme of death in his work. Of Bosco's Francesco Petrarca, it has been said, ‘Seeking a single key, [Bosco] views the sense of life's transitoriness as the radiant core of the Petrarch phenomenon … ‘.


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