International audienceThis paper examines how the degree of gender-egalitarianism embedded in inheritance rules impacts state capacity at its early stages during medieval times. We present a theoretical model in which building state capacity enables nobles to raise taxes and overcome rivals. The model addresses the use of inheritance to consolidate landholding dynasties, also accommodating interstate marriages between landed heirs. On the one hand, dynastic continuity—of utmost importance to medieval lords—directly encourages state-building. Male-biased inheritance rules historically maximize the likelihood of dynastic continuity. We weigh this effect against the indirect impact of the more frequent land-merging marriages under gender-egali...
In the Middle Ages women in the Italian Alps had substantially more rights on collective properties ...
In the 16th century, the customary law of Liège, a middle-sized estate of the Holy Roma...
How to regulate the transfer of wealth from one generation to the next has been hotly debated among ...
International audienceThis paper examines how the degree of gender-egalitarianism embedded in inheri...
This paper examines how the degree of gender-egalitarianism embedded in inheritance rules impacts st...
We analyse how two different inheritance systems might affect the creation of centralised and admini...
Dialogues ÉconomiquesWhy did medieval inheritance rules prioritize men over women? Èric Roca Fernánd...
This paper considers ruling women through the lens of gender and succession, mostly between 1300 and...
In this paper I examine the idea that patriarchal family structure among elites in stratified societ...
Does property rights allocation on the commons affect marriage strategies and fertility? We focus on...
Inheritance in the lands of the Loire was fluid and largely dictated by family circumstance. Unlike ...
In an open economy with common property resources at the community level, marriage and migratory dec...
Why are some societies more unequal than others? The French revolutionaries believed unequal inherit...
Starting from the Medieval period, women in the Italian Alps experienced a progressive erosion in pr...
Why are some societies more unequal than others? The French revolutionaries believed unequal inherit...
In the Middle Ages women in the Italian Alps had substantially more rights on collective properties ...
In the 16th century, the customary law of Liège, a middle-sized estate of the Holy Roma...
How to regulate the transfer of wealth from one generation to the next has been hotly debated among ...
International audienceThis paper examines how the degree of gender-egalitarianism embedded in inheri...
This paper examines how the degree of gender-egalitarianism embedded in inheritance rules impacts st...
We analyse how two different inheritance systems might affect the creation of centralised and admini...
Dialogues ÉconomiquesWhy did medieval inheritance rules prioritize men over women? Èric Roca Fernánd...
This paper considers ruling women through the lens of gender and succession, mostly between 1300 and...
In this paper I examine the idea that patriarchal family structure among elites in stratified societ...
Does property rights allocation on the commons affect marriage strategies and fertility? We focus on...
Inheritance in the lands of the Loire was fluid and largely dictated by family circumstance. Unlike ...
In an open economy with common property resources at the community level, marriage and migratory dec...
Why are some societies more unequal than others? The French revolutionaries believed unequal inherit...
Starting from the Medieval period, women in the Italian Alps experienced a progressive erosion in pr...
Why are some societies more unequal than others? The French revolutionaries believed unequal inherit...
In the Middle Ages women in the Italian Alps had substantially more rights on collective properties ...
In the 16th century, the customary law of Liège, a middle-sized estate of the Holy Roma...
How to regulate the transfer of wealth from one generation to the next has been hotly debated among ...