scholarly journals Loving Husbands, Caring Fathers, Glorious Ancestors : Male Family Roles in Early Modern Transylvania

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 624-649
Author(s):  
Angelika Orgona

The study examines how a Transylvanian nobleman, Gáspár Kornis of Göncruszka (1641–1683), created a narrative concerning four generations of his family. Though in his memoir, a patrilineal lineage scheme dominates, a close reading of scattered family documents also provides insights into the practices of horizontal bonding among relatives. The letters and last wills reflect the life cycle changes and represent emotional relationships among family members. By considering the act of writing as an emotional practice, the essay tests the claims of the memoir with the help of other archival and extratextual sources. What were the narrated roles of heroized protagonists, and what were the everyday duties of noble heads of family in the early modern period? The study depicts the transformations of the family network during crisis situations in the Transylvanian Principality.

2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 3-22
Author(s):  
Alister E. McGrath

The new interest in special divine action has led to a close reading of the great debates and discussions of the early modern period in an attempt to understand contemporary resistance to the notion of divine action, and to develop strategies for reaffirming the notion in a refined manner. Although continuing engagement with and evaluation of the Humean legacy on miracles and divine action will be of central importance to this programme of review, there are other issues that also need to be addressed. In this article I identify some of the factors that have caused or continue to cause difficulties for the articulation of a concept of special divine action and I suggest how they might be engaged.


Author(s):  
Stephanie Burt ◽  
Jenn Lewin

Ideas about song, and actual songs, inform literary works in ways that go back to classical and to biblical antiquity. Set apart from non-musical language, song can indicate proximity to the divine, intense emotion, or distance from the everyday. At least from the early modern period, actual songs compete with idealized songs in a body of lyric poetry where song is sometimes scheme and sometimes trope. Songs and singers in novels can do the work of plot and of character, sometimes isolating songwriter or singer, and sometimes linking them to a milieu beyond what readers are shown. Accounts of song as poetry’s inferior, as its other, or as its unreachable ideal—while historically prominent—do not consider the variety of literary uses in English that songs—historically attested and fictional; popular, vernacular, and “classical”— continue to find.


Author(s):  
Megan Matchinske ◽  
Katharine Landers

Lady Anne Clifford (b. 30 January 1590–d. 22 March 1676) spent a considerable portion of her life embroiled in lawsuits attempting to recover her father’s extensive land holdings after they had been transferred out of her hands and into the possession of his younger brother, Francis. With no living sons of his own, Clifford’s father had willed, wrongly it appears, the family properties to his titular heir apparent, the next earl in the Clifford line, and it would be a full thirty-eight years before Clifford would eventually regain her rights to her land, and only then because her male cousin Henry had died without male issue. During the whole of that process, Clifford wrote, recording not only her frustrations with the injustice of the actions against her but also of her observations more generally. These entries found their way into her Great Books of Record, meticulously kept genealogies of family history that she updated throughout her life. Deeply interested in historical recovery, not only of the retrieval of her namesake but also of her family’s place in the wider arena of England’s past, Clifford actively supported antiquarian research; hired men to comb England’s as-yet-unsifted archives; and worked assiduously herself to recover whatever she could of those earlier ancestors, recording dates, times, and events in an attempt to verify and authenticate her ancestral heritage. An early benefactor and patron, she held an abiding interest in the lands of her forebears and was a local advocate for the tenant farmers who worked her estates. She was a builder of almshouses, a restorer of castles, a commissioner of portraits, and a developer of public works. To this day she is still very much revered in her native Cumbria with something approximating celebrity status. Married twice, first to Richard Sackville, third earl of Dorset, and then to Philip Herbert, earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, Clifford struggled against, made use of, and eventually outlived both men in her bid to retain her rights to her lands, at one point even defying then King James I. She was also deeply close to her mother and would pass her legacy to her two daughters and their children. At the same time, she saw her patrimony as the most important testament she would leave to future generations. Accordingly it wasn’t finally or simply the titles she acquired by marriage that mattered, but rather those that she held in her own right, suo jure, as baroness and high sheriff, as daughter to a father who was, in turn, a son to a father before him that ultimately came to matter, and it was her willingness to fight for those titles and to insist that her daughters pass them forward eventually, hopefully, to sons who would ensure their longevity in a less tenuous or embattled state. Clifford is remembered across communities for her contributions to art, to architecture, to life writing, to antiquarianism, and to feminist scholarship. But it is Clifford’s penchant for personal recordkeeping that most directly cuts across these many and varied communities, bearing witness as well to another phenomenon of the Early Modern period, the construction of a written and introspective self. Lady Anne, fourteenth Baroness Clifford and hereditary high sheriff of Westmoreland, explores what it meant to be an Englishwoman of great standing, and she did so with wit, self-reflection, and candor.


Author(s):  
Yakov Z. Mayer

Abstract Elijah of Fulda was the first Ashkenazi Jew in the Early Modern period to write a commentary on the Palestinian Talmud, printed in Amsterdam in 1710. Through a close reading of the nine approbations that preface Elijah’s commentary, this article reconstructs his itinerary throughout Europe and his journey from relative obscurity to the center of the Hebrew and Jewish book world of his day ‐ Amsterdam. The article argues that although other commentaries replaced that of Elijah of Fulda in popularity in subsequent editions, he should be remembered as the first to establish a tradition of Ashkenazic study of the Palestinian Talmud, and as the scholar who shaped the impagination of subsequent editions.


2021 ◽  

This book answers three simple questions. First, what mistaken assumptions do we make about the early modern period when we ignore women's literary contributions? Second, how might we come to recognise women's influence on the history of literature and culture, as well as those instances of outright pathbreaking mastery for which they are so often responsible? Finally, is it possible to see some women writers as world-makers in their own right, individuals whose craft cut into cultural practice so incisively that their shaping authority can be traced well beyond their own moment? The essays in this volume pursue these questions through intense archival investigation, intricate close reading, and painstaking literary-historical tracking, tracing in concrete terms sixteen remarkable women and their world-shaping activities.


Author(s):  
Bernard Capp

The Conclusion draws together the book’s themes and findings, and offers some broader reflections on the family and kinship. Historians study both continuities and change, and the Conclusion considers which aspects of the sibling relationship remained stable in this period, which changed, and why. It discusses why the phenomenon of the ‘dissatisfied younger brother’ was such a prominent phenomenon in England in the early modern period. It also sets the book’s demonstration of emotionally intense relationships between siblings in this period against the argument, advanced by some recent scholars, that close sibling ties in European society did not develop until the later eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.


2016 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-17
Author(s):  
Fiona Williamson

This article tells the story of a contested provincial election for sheriff which took place in Norwich during 1627. In light of recent scholarly critiques of studies that frame the early-modern period in terms of binary opposites, this article demonstrates that 1620s political culture is hard to define in such stark terms. Through a close reading of the events, characters, and outcomes of the election, this article also shows the importance of embedding local peculiarities into wider historiographical narratives of change, or continuity, and reveals the essential role of the urban middling sorts in shaping the political narratives of the Stuart period.


2019 ◽  
pp. 321-347
Author(s):  
Witold Miedziak

The paper is a monograph of the churches founded by the Doliwita Rozdrażewski family, which make a significant percent of the total number of churches built in the region of Wielkopolska at the turn of the 17thcentury. Those churches, constructed under the supervision of Hieronim, Archbishop of Włocławek, and the Poznań Chamberlain Jan, have not been analyzed by scholars, and some of them have not been even mentioned in scholarly publications. The analysis presented in the paper allows one to consider the churches founded by the Rozdrażewski family in the context of the architecture of the region, Poland, and the neighboring countries. The features of the period, as well as a religious controversy among the family members, made it possible to approach a number of problems connected to contemporary artistic changes, such as the so-called “gothic style around 1600,” relations between Protestant and Roman Catholic architecture, and claims about the purposeful “archaism” of the architecture of the period, emulating the Romanesque or the Gothic style. Responding to the research postulates formulated by other scholars, the author proposed a new term, “early modern Gothic,” coined to replace other, ambiguous terms referring to the architecture of those times. Moreover, he proposed an innovative way of interpreting Gothic architecture of the early modern period, based on following its transformations from the end of the Middle Ages till the turn of the 17thcentury, which results in a claim that Gothic architecture continued until then. 


1997 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 571-595 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. A. WRIGLEY

Anglican parish registers have been the basis for most studies of population trends and characteristics in early modern England, and one of the most important of the techniques used in analysing them has been family reconstitution. But Anglican registers at all times were an incomplete and inaccurate record of vital events, and their defects tended to become more pronounced in the later part of the period during which they afford the chief source of empirical information about population behaviour. And there are inherent limitations and biases in the results that can be obtained by family reconstitution. This article attempts to describe the range of difficulties and dilemmas involved in studying the demography of populations in the past when using this source of data and this technique of analysis. A variety of tests is deployed to establish the degree of reliability attaching to the results obtained in a recent exercise based on the family reconstitution of 26 parishes, and more generally to assess the opportunities open to scholarship in this area and the pitfalls associated with such work. The conclusion is that reliable results can be obtained but that great care is needed in the selection of suitable registers, and that a number of tests should be employed to monitor the internal consistency and the demographic plausibility of any findings.


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