This article provides a comparative analysis of four large towns in the Southern Low Countries between c. 1350 and c. 1550. Combining the data on Ghent, Bruges and Antwerp – each of which is discussed in greater detail in the articles in this special section – with recent research on Bruges, the authors argue against the historiographical trend in which the political history of late medieval towns is supposedly dominated by a trend towards oligarchy. Rather than a closure of the ruling class, the four towns show a high turnover in the social composition of the political elite, and a consistent trend towards aristocracy, in which an increasingly large number of aldermen enjoyed noble status. The intensity of these trends differed from town t...
This article focuses on the social and political features of the knighthood in one of the most dense...
This article discusses the historiographical assumption that the unification of the Low Countries in...
Plural Nobility. Some Methodological Remarks on Comparative Research of the Nobility in the Burgundi...
In this contribution a comparative case-study of two families from the urban elite is used to determ...
This article explores the social history of the political elites of Mechelen, a town that evolved fr...
Proceeding from an in-depth analysis of the Liberty of Bruges, an important rural district in the la...
Twentieth-century scholarship gave birth to two distinct and antagonistic traditions regarding the f...
Noblemen in the Late Medieval County of Zeeland. An Analysis of their Political and Socio-Economic P...
This dissertation studies civic political participation in late medieval towns, particularly in the ...
Recent historiography on the economic position of the later medieval nobility has seen a marked shif...
This paper analyses the hierarchy and ranking of the towns of the Duchy of Brabant within the Estate...
This paper analyses the hierarchy and ranking of the towns of the Duchy of Brabant within the Estate...
Town halls are well-known remnants of late medieval urban society. Research has often focused on the...
It has long been assumed that the position of nobility in the Low Countries weakened in the later M...
Nobility and processes of ennoblement in Late Mediaeval Flanders: a state of the art In the county o...
This article focuses on the social and political features of the knighthood in one of the most dense...
This article discusses the historiographical assumption that the unification of the Low Countries in...
Plural Nobility. Some Methodological Remarks on Comparative Research of the Nobility in the Burgundi...
In this contribution a comparative case-study of two families from the urban elite is used to determ...
This article explores the social history of the political elites of Mechelen, a town that evolved fr...
Proceeding from an in-depth analysis of the Liberty of Bruges, an important rural district in the la...
Twentieth-century scholarship gave birth to two distinct and antagonistic traditions regarding the f...
Noblemen in the Late Medieval County of Zeeland. An Analysis of their Political and Socio-Economic P...
This dissertation studies civic political participation in late medieval towns, particularly in the ...
Recent historiography on the economic position of the later medieval nobility has seen a marked shif...
This paper analyses the hierarchy and ranking of the towns of the Duchy of Brabant within the Estate...
This paper analyses the hierarchy and ranking of the towns of the Duchy of Brabant within the Estate...
Town halls are well-known remnants of late medieval urban society. Research has often focused on the...
It has long been assumed that the position of nobility in the Low Countries weakened in the later M...
Nobility and processes of ennoblement in Late Mediaeval Flanders: a state of the art In the county o...
This article focuses on the social and political features of the knighthood in one of the most dense...
This article discusses the historiographical assumption that the unification of the Low Countries in...
Plural Nobility. Some Methodological Remarks on Comparative Research of the Nobility in the Burgundi...