This book examines the role of information as a crucial means for governance and negotiation, through which Renaissance rulers and governments managed the composite polities under their control.
The Renaissance world was characterized by the presence of numerous composite polities and political unions, consisting of distinct territories governed by a single ruler or government. These entities varied in scale, ranging from medium-sized polities including cities and lordships to thalassocracies encompassing distant and sometimes lands separated by sea, and vast global empires comprising multiple territories and diverse populations. The chapters in this book explore how information enabled authorities to monitor events within their dominions and colonies, shape policies and decision-making processes, and interact and negotiate with local political societies. The diverse examples presented in this volume illustrate how information, communication, and archival strategies varied across regions, adapting to the constitutional structure of each polity and their geographical scope.
This volume is essential reading for students, researchers, and academics interested in political history, information studies, historical governance and European studies. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of European Review of History.
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Postgraduate, Undergraduate Advanced, and Undergraduate Core
Maße
Höhe: 250 mm
Breite: 175 mm
Dicke: 14 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-041-04127-6 (9781041041276)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Alessandro Silvestri is Associate Professor at the Universita degli Studi di Salerno, Italy. His research focuses on the Mediterranean in the later Middle Ages, with particular attention to Sicily and the Crown of Aragon. His areas of expertise include the history of administration, information management, and taxation.
1. Information and the government of the composite polities of the Renaissance world (c. 1350-1650) 2. Ruling by information, governing by records: the spoken and written grammar of power in post-communal Italy (c. 1350-1520) 3. Archiving the Swiss Tagsatzung in the early modern era: from distributed protocols to confederal archive 4. 'We want to know and be clearly informed': official records, unofficial correspondence and oral communication in the fourteenth-century Crown of Aragon (Majorca, Sardinia, Sicily) 5. Jem Sultan and Venice's intelligence system: sorting and deploying information in Venice's 'letterocracy' 6. An imperial formation joins a composite polity: the Portuguese Empire and the information system of the Hispanic Monarchy (1580-1640) 7. Manila and their agents in the court: long-distance political communication and imperial configuration in the seventeenth-century Spanish monarchy 8. The composite world of early modern information