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True Citizens
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This first book-length, English-language study of medieval urban citizenship focuses on Perpignan, a town second in population only to Barcelona in fourteenth-century Catalonia, yet neglected by mo...
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31 March 2000

This first book-length, English-language study of medieval urban citizenship focuses on Perpignan, a town second in population only to Barcelona in fourteenth-century Catalonia, yet neglected by modern historians. True Citizens describes and analyzes the rules that governed membership in the community of citizens, the definition of citizenship, and how the development of divergent memories within the community resulted in a crisis of citizenship.
This study uses urban citizenship to shed new light on many important historiographical issues, such as Jewish-Christian relations, the place of towns in feudal society, the place of Catalonia in the urban history of medieval Europe, and the transition from the High to the Late Middle Ages.
This study uses urban citizenship to shed new light on many important historiographical issues, such as Jewish-Christian relations, the place of towns in feudal society, the place of Catalonia in the urban history of medieval Europe, and the transition from the High to the Late Middle Ages.
Price: $250.00
Pages: 284
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Publication Date:
31 March 2000
ISBN: 9789004115712
Format: Other
'...useful and stimulating...'
Peter Rycraft, English Historical Review, 2001.
'The volume has a great deal to offer and stands as a fitting tribute to William Brinner...this timely and thouthful collection of essays...'
Michael Frassetto, TMR.
'...an important resource for historians working in this rich and fascinating area of medieval Europe.'
Daniel Lord Smail, Speculum, 2002.
Peter Rycraft, English Historical Review, 2001.
'The volume has a great deal to offer and stands as a fitting tribute to William Brinner...this timely and thouthful collection of essays...'
Michael Frassetto, TMR.
'...an important resource for historians working in this rich and fascinating area of medieval Europe.'
Daniel Lord Smail, Speculum, 2002.
Philip Daileader, Ph.D. (1996) in History, Harvard University, is Assistant Professor of History at the College of William and Mary. He has published articles in Speculum, Journal of Medieval History, and Archivum Historiae Pontificiae.