Borders and Freedom of Movement in the Holy Roman Empire: Studies in German History
Autor Luca Scholzen Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 feb 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198845676
ISBN-10: 0198845677
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 18 images and maps
Dimensiuni: 163 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Studies in German History
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198845677
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 18 images and maps
Dimensiuni: 163 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Studies in German History
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Rich in detail and analysis and innovative in its methodology and approach, Borders and Freedom of Movement in the Holy Roman Empire will undoubtedly provoke new research into many areas of historical research for years to come
"... impressive and important ... A particularly valuable aspect of Scholz's book is the way in which he examines the actions of rulers and governments alongside the role of low-level officials and local communities in policing or promoting that movement, while also making efforts to recover how ordinary people experienced the act of moving in this period
... excellent ... at every stage, Scholz's analysis is embedded in the latest scholarship relating to frontiers in other European countries such as France and Spain. He also considers work on non-European frontiers of the same period in Asia, notably Japan. Above all his own re- search in over twenty German archives is impressively wide ranging and meticulous.
Excellent ... Borders and Freedom of Movement should be read by all scholars of the Holy Roman Empire and early modern Europe.
Sophisticated and nuanced ... Scholz's rich and illuminating case studies both underscore the value of anthropologically informed, historicizing approaches and offer powerful evidence in support of his deeper propositions—that early modern mobility and boundaries bore only a faint resemblance to the closable borders that have predominated since the eighteenth century
Scholz has presented a fluently written and rigorously argued study that is based on intensive source work in twenty archives ... an innovative book that offers new thought-provoking impulses to many areas of research on the Holy Roman Empire
Scholz's explanation provides a practical understanding of how people experienced borders and boundaries while on the road
Admirable ... thanks to his solid theoretical background, Scholz shows that the real question at stake is not if borders mattered in the early modern world but rather when, how, why, and for whom they mattered.
With Borders and Freedom of Movement in the Holy Roman Empire, Luca Scholz has provided a highly interesting, relevant, yet easily accessible study that makes a significant contribution to a better understanding of borders in the Empire. The book - and with it the theme of borders in the early modern period - deserves wide future reception.
It is an extremely successful work, which not only argues stringently, but is also written very vividly by concentrating on individual case studies.
The historiographical art when dealing with the pre-modern Empire and its territories lies in alternating a territorial perspective with comprehensive, systematic understanding. Luca Scholz's book is a prime example.
Luca Scholz's conclusions reach well beyond the borders of early modern Central Europe. His analysis of embodied and material movement as a critical venue for contestations and theatrics of power is original and important, and scholars studying mobility and state control in the modern period will find much to consider in the alternative landscapes Scholz's subjects inhabited and the meanings they ascribed to them.
"... impressive and important ... A particularly valuable aspect of Scholz's book is the way in which he examines the actions of rulers and governments alongside the role of low-level officials and local communities in policing or promoting that movement, while also making efforts to recover how ordinary people experienced the act of moving in this period
... excellent ... at every stage, Scholz's analysis is embedded in the latest scholarship relating to frontiers in other European countries such as France and Spain. He also considers work on non-European frontiers of the same period in Asia, notably Japan. Above all his own re- search in over twenty German archives is impressively wide ranging and meticulous.
Excellent ... Borders and Freedom of Movement should be read by all scholars of the Holy Roman Empire and early modern Europe.
Sophisticated and nuanced ... Scholz's rich and illuminating case studies both underscore the value of anthropologically informed, historicizing approaches and offer powerful evidence in support of his deeper propositions—that early modern mobility and boundaries bore only a faint resemblance to the closable borders that have predominated since the eighteenth century
Scholz has presented a fluently written and rigorously argued study that is based on intensive source work in twenty archives ... an innovative book that offers new thought-provoking impulses to many areas of research on the Holy Roman Empire
Scholz's explanation provides a practical understanding of how people experienced borders and boundaries while on the road
Admirable ... thanks to his solid theoretical background, Scholz shows that the real question at stake is not if borders mattered in the early modern world but rather when, how, why, and for whom they mattered.
With Borders and Freedom of Movement in the Holy Roman Empire, Luca Scholz has provided a highly interesting, relevant, yet easily accessible study that makes a significant contribution to a better understanding of borders in the Empire. The book - and with it the theme of borders in the early modern period - deserves wide future reception.
It is an extremely successful work, which not only argues stringently, but is also written very vividly by concentrating on individual case studies.
The historiographical art when dealing with the pre-modern Empire and its territories lies in alternating a territorial perspective with comprehensive, systematic understanding. Luca Scholz's book is a prime example.
Luca Scholz's conclusions reach well beyond the borders of early modern Central Europe. His analysis of embodied and material movement as a critical venue for contestations and theatrics of power is original and important, and scholars studying mobility and state control in the modern period will find much to consider in the alternative landscapes Scholz's subjects inhabited and the meanings they ascribed to them.
Notă biografică
Luca Scholz is a historian of early modern Europe who combines social, legal, and intellectual history with geospatial and digital methods. He holds a PhD in History from the European University Institute in Florence after previously studying history and economics in Paris and Heidelberg. He has published English, German, French, and Italian articles and chapters on passports, serfdom, the politics of protection, and spatial history. After teaching in Berlin and at Stanford University, he is currently a lecturer at the University of Manchester.