Skip to main content Site map

Magnanimous Dukes and Rising States: The Unification of the Burgundian Netherlands, 1380-1480


Magnanimous Dukes and Rising States: The Unification of the Burgundian Netherlands, 1380-1480

Hardback by Stein, Robert (Senior University Lecturer in Medieval History, Senior University Lecturer in Medieval History, Leiden Institute for History, Leiden University)

Magnanimous Dukes and Rising States: The Unification of the Burgundian Netherlands, 1380-1480

WAS £132.50   SAVE £26.50

£106.00

ISBN:
9780198757108
Publication Date:
9 Mar 2017
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
336 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 24 - 29 May 2024
Magnanimous Dukes and Rising States: The Unification of the Burgundian Netherlands, 1380-1480

Description

In the late fourteenth and the fifteenth centuries, the Dukes of Valois-Burgundy created a composite monarchy in the Netherlands, an area that had been dominated for centuries by several regional dynasties. In this way they laid the foundation for the modern states of the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxemburg. The rise of the House of Burgundy can be read as the success story of a dynasty that in little over a century managed to assemble a great number of principalities, thus creating a new state. The Burgundian takeover, however, resulted in a modernization of administration, jurisdiction, and finances. The process of unification and the character of the union are the central topics of Magnanimous Dukes and Rising States. Robert Stein mirrors continuity and modernisation in Burgundian times with the bankruptcy of the former dynasties and the decline of feudal government. The powerful towns played an important background role; it was only with their support that a unification of the Netherlands was possible, but this support was not unselfish. This study is about the development of power relations and institutions in the field of tension between ruler and subject, between centralisation and particularism.

Contents

1: The Burgundian union: By way of introduction 2: The titles 3: The representative institutions 4: The attraction of a union 5: Towards a new structure of government 6: The jurisdiction 7: The financial organization 8: The taxes 9: Summa summarum Epilogue Bibliography

Back

York St John University logo