Book Series The Medieval Countryside, vol. 3

Land, Power, and Society in Medieval Castile

A Study of Behetría Lordship

Cristina Jular Pérez-Alfaro, Carlos Estepa Díez (eds)

  • Pages: 338 p.
  • Size:156 x 234 mm
  • Illustrations:10 tables b/w.
  • Language(s):English, Latin, Spanish
  • Publication Year:2010

  • € 65,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
  • ISBN: 978-2-503-52623-2
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  • € 65,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
  • ISBN: 978-2-503-53925-6
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A lively, thorough reassessment of medieval Castile’s most characteristic and least known form of lordship.

Review(s)

"This is a most valuable contribution to a topic that has been hitherto ignored or not noticed by historians of medieval rural society elsewhere. The foundations of the book rest on the authors' impressive mastery of the sources, and their admirable willingness to ask questions and suggest possible answers, while refusing, in most cases, to advance any overarching and dogmatic interpretation."

(Teofilo F. Ruiz, in The Medieval Review, 10.09.06)

Summary

This work offers an up-to-date discussion of medieval Castilian lordship and social relations, approached through an analysis of behetría lordship, a power-structure of fundamental importance in medieval Castile. The origins of behetría lordship, a complex phenomenon in both theory and practice, are obscure. Knowledge of the behetrías has therefore hitherto been limited to a narrow circle of traditionalist, highly specialized legal historians. The present volume redresses this imbalance, as its various contributors explore the question of behetría lordship from a broad social perspective, thereby demonstrating the crucial role played by this seigneurial structure within medieval Castilian society. This collection of essays thus focuses less on legal intricacies than on deeper social, territorial, and political issues, which are also examined in relation to other better-known forms of lordship exercised both within Castile and beyond. This volume provides rich historical material on medieval Castile rarely available to an English readership; it represents a gateway to a wealth of relatively little-known literature and information on the social history of medieval Spain, and will provide an invaluable tool for comparative research.