When applying the prosopographical method to the late medieval nobility of the Low Countries, several methodological problems come to the fore. Late medieval sources usually do not label individuals as noble, thus complicating efforts to define a clear-cut population. Therefore, researchers usually combine different criteria to reconstruct the nobility. When comparing nobilities in different principalities of the Low Countries, as is our aim, this approach will inevitably result in serious distortions. Therefore, in this article we propose to create four different populations, each based on a single, uniform and sourcebased criterium: knightly title, possession of a seigniory, possession of a castle and participation in the Estates. This wi...
This article provides a comparative analysis of four large towns in the Southern Low Countries betwe...
In order to gain the allegiance of the major families during the creation of their new state in the ...
The research is focused on the architecture of the nobility, specifically the higher ranks of court ...
Plural Nobility. Some Methodological Remarks on Comparative Research of the Nobility in the Burgundi...
It has long been assumed that the position of nobility in the Low Countries weakened in the later M...
Noblemen in the Late Medieval County of Zeeland. An Analysis of their Political and Socio-Economic P...
Nobility and processes of ennoblement in Late Mediaeval Flanders: a state of the art In the county o...
Nobles in the Flemish Urban Network. A Quantitative Analysis of the Urban Nobility of Late Medieval ...
In this contribution a comparative case-study of two families from the urban elite is used to determ...
The practices of marriage and inheritance and the representation of kinship among the medieval nobil...
In this contribution a series of documents are edited, dated and contextualised that give reliable a...
Historical Research into the Nobility during the Late Mediaeval and Early Modern Period in Belgium a...
The Dutch Republic offers a remarkable picture of two parallel elites that developed side by side in...
Nobility in the Low Countries from Medieval Times to the Modern Era. The Creation of a Dynastic Nobi...
This article focuses on the social and political features of the knighthood in one of the most dense...
This article provides a comparative analysis of four large towns in the Southern Low Countries betwe...
In order to gain the allegiance of the major families during the creation of their new state in the ...
The research is focused on the architecture of the nobility, specifically the higher ranks of court ...
Plural Nobility. Some Methodological Remarks on Comparative Research of the Nobility in the Burgundi...
It has long been assumed that the position of nobility in the Low Countries weakened in the later M...
Noblemen in the Late Medieval County of Zeeland. An Analysis of their Political and Socio-Economic P...
Nobility and processes of ennoblement in Late Mediaeval Flanders: a state of the art In the county o...
Nobles in the Flemish Urban Network. A Quantitative Analysis of the Urban Nobility of Late Medieval ...
In this contribution a comparative case-study of two families from the urban elite is used to determ...
The practices of marriage and inheritance and the representation of kinship among the medieval nobil...
In this contribution a series of documents are edited, dated and contextualised that give reliable a...
Historical Research into the Nobility during the Late Mediaeval and Early Modern Period in Belgium a...
The Dutch Republic offers a remarkable picture of two parallel elites that developed side by side in...
Nobility in the Low Countries from Medieval Times to the Modern Era. The Creation of a Dynastic Nobi...
This article focuses on the social and political features of the knighthood in one of the most dense...
This article provides a comparative analysis of four large towns in the Southern Low Countries betwe...
In order to gain the allegiance of the major families during the creation of their new state in the ...
The research is focused on the architecture of the nobility, specifically the higher ranks of court ...