Family and Community in Early Modern Spain
James Casey offers an innovative study of prestige, power and the role of the family in a Mediterranean city during the early modern period. He focuses on the structure and values of the ruling class of Granada, where a new elite consolidated its authority. The study suggests that their power was linked to the pursuit of honour, which demanded participation in the politics of the commonwealth and depended greatly on the network of personal relations which they were able to build with kinsmen, clients and patrons. It explores the way in which this system contributed to the relative tranquillity of the community during a turbulent time of religious and political change, that of the rise of absolutism and of the Counter Reformation. The book sheds fresh light on the nature of the early modern family and will be essential reading for historians of early modern Spain and Europe.
- Combines history, social anthropology and literary studies to shed new light on the social history of early modern Spain
- Written by one of the leading historians of early modern Spain
- The book will appeal to scholars of early modern Spain, early modern Europe and social, cultural and urban history
Product details
January 2009Paperback
9780521107839
332 pages
229 × 152 × 19 mm
0.49kg
2 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1. Knights and citizens
- 2. Nobles of the doubloon
- 3. Lords of Granada
- 4. The web of inheritance
- 5. The network of marriage
- 6. Blood wedding
- 7. Home of the citizen
- 8. The shadow of the ancestors
- 9. The spirit of the clan
- 10. The law of honour
- 11. Good commonwealth men
- 12. Defenders of the fatherland
- Conclusion
- Genealogies
- Bibliography.