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oapen-20.500.12657-856292023-11-28T03:34:19Z Chapter Pervasività della signoria Carocci, Sandro Middle Ages aristocracy pervasiviness lordship bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History The article examines two explicitly different meanings of the expression 'pervasiveness of lordship'. The first moves from the more commune meaning of pervasiveness, understood as a synonym of capillary diffusion, to distinguish between areas of seigniorial centrality and areas of seigniorial marginality in late medieval Italy. The second meaning understands “pervasiveness” in a less usual sense, i.e. as the capacity of lordship to thoroughly penetrate the surrounding world. After describing this notion of pervasiveness, the article illustrates some examples, drawn from various late medieval Italian regions, of lordships without pervasiveness and of pervasive lordships, questioning the capacity of seigniorial pervasiveness to survive and reconfigure itself in the late Middle Ages. 2023-11-27T17:13:21Z 2023-11-27T17:13:21Z 2023 chapter ONIX_20231127_9791221501872_39 2704-6079 9791221501872 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/85629 ita Reti Medievali E-Book application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 38354.pdf https://books.fupress.com/doi/capitoli/979-12-215-0187-2.12 Firenze University Press 10.36253/979-12-215-0187-2.12 The article examines two explicitly different meanings of the expression 'pervasiveness of lordship'. The first moves from the more commune meaning of pervasiveness, understood as a synonym of capillary diffusion, to distinguish between areas of seigniorial centrality and areas of seigniorial marginality in late medieval Italy. The second meaning understands “pervasiveness” in a less usual sense, i.e. as the capacity of lordship to thoroughly penetrate the surrounding world. After describing this notion of pervasiveness, the article illustrates some examples, drawn from various late medieval Italian regions, of lordships without pervasiveness and of pervasive lordships, questioning the capacity of seigniorial pervasiveness to survive and reconfigure itself in the late Middle Ages. 10.36253/979-12-215-0187-2.12 bf65d21a-78e5-4ba2-983a-dbfa90962870 9791221501872 45 18 Florence open access
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The article examines two explicitly different meanings of the expression 'pervasiveness of lordship'. The first moves from the more commune meaning of pervasiveness, understood as a synonym of capillary diffusion, to distinguish between areas of seigniorial centrality and areas of seigniorial marginality in late medieval Italy. The second meaning understands “pervasiveness” in a less usual sense, i.e. as the capacity of lordship to thoroughly penetrate the surrounding world. After describing this notion of pervasiveness, the article illustrates some examples, drawn from various late medieval Italian regions, of lordships without pervasiveness and of pervasive lordships, questioning the capacity of seigniorial pervasiveness to survive and reconfigure itself in the late Middle Ages.
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