
The Clash Of Legitimacies Makes An Innovative Contribution To The History Of The State-building Process In Late Medieval Lombardy (during The 13th To 15th Centuries), By Illuminating Myriad Conflicts Attending The Legitimacy Of Power And Authority At Different Levels Of Society. Through The Analysis Of The Rhetorical Forms And Linguistic Repertoires Deployed By The Many Protagonists (not Only The Prince, But Also The Cities, Communities, Peasants, And Political Factions) To Express Their Own Ideals Of Shared Political Life, This Volume Reveals The Depth Of The Conflicts In Which Opposing Political Actors Were Not Only Inspired By Competing Material Interests - As In The Traditional Interpretation To Be Found In Previous Historiography - But Also Often Were Guided By Differing Concepts Of Authority. From This Comes A Largely New Image Of The Late Medieval And Early Renaissance State, One Without A Monopoly Of Force - As Has Been Shown In Many Studies Since The 1970s - And One That Did Not Even Have The Monopoly Of Legitimacy. The Limitations Of Attempts By Governors To Present The Political Principles That Inspired Their Acts As Shared And Universally Recognized Are Revealed By A Historical Analysis Firmly Intent On Investigating The Existence, In Particular Territorial Or Social Ambits, Of Other Political Cultures Which Based Obedience To Authority On Different, And Frequently Original, Ideals.
This work investigates how competing concepts of legitimacy, rather than mere material interests, shaped the state-building process in late medieval Lombardy. Andrea Gamberini, a scholar of medieval Italian history, utilizes a wide array of primary sources to challenge traditional historiography. He argues that the state during the 13th to 15th centuries lacked a monopoly on both force and legitimacy, as various social actors operated under distinct political cultures and ideals of authority.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of medieval political structures and the decentralization of power. Scholars frequently note the author's success in shifting the focus from purely economic motivations to the ideological foundations of political obedience.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192557599
ISBN-13:
9780192557599
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