Early Modern History
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Most cited papers in Early Modern History
This book examines a wide range of dissident practices, from street protests to political poetry, in an attempt to demonstrate that they are becoming an increasingly important aspect of global politics. The author draws on several case... more
From the late Middle Ages onwards, many regions of Western Europe experienced heightened levels of inequality in the distribution of land, caused in many cases by the consolidation of property in the hands of various interest groups.What... more
This article investigates the deliberate use and manipulation of chivalric culture and iconography by James IV of Scotland to position the Stewart dynasty's claims to the English throne in contest with the concurrent consolidation of... more
During the early modern period, island books (isolari) were among the major print genres by which the Venetian reading public learned about the Mediterranean and the New World. This article focuses on the intellectual, social and cultural... more
Was Lord Anthony Ashley Cooper, the Third Earl of Shaftesbury a libertine? This article seeks to identify the libertine elements in Shaftesbury’s thought and actions in order to provide a more nuanced understanding of his sexuality and... more
This article explores the Counter-Reformation medievalization of Polish-Lithuanian St. Kazimierz Jagiellończyk (1458-84)-whose canonization was only finalized in the seventeenth century-as a case study taking up questions of the reception... more
‘Amsterdam is standing on Norway’– this was a popular saying in the Dutch Republic of the seventeenth century. There was more than one inflection to the phrase. Amsterdam was, in the first instance, built atop a subterranean forest of... more
A number of important insights into the peopling of the New World have been gained through molecular genetic studies of Siberian and Native American populations. While there is no complete agreement on the interpretation of the... more
In the first of two essays in this Journal, I seek to unify the historical geography of early modern ‘European expansion’ (Iberia and Latin America) with the environmental history of the ‘transition to capitalism’ (northwestern Europe).... more
The ‘golden saying’ in early modern medicine was ‘Nature is the healer of disease’. This article uncovers the meaning and significance of this forgotten axiom by investigating perceptions of the agents and physiological processes of... more
This essay sketches a post-Occidental interpretation on the historical/conceptual relationships between modern western education and modern European civilizational identity formation. Modern western education will be interpreted as a... more
This article examines the Ballet des Polonais (1573), a magnificent festival given by Catherine de Médicis on the occasion of the election of her son, Henri de Valois, the future Henri III of France, to the throne of Poland. It argues... more
This article addresses a relative vacuum of the historiography of early-seventeenth-century navies. The central question is how European states established and sustained their navies. The article presents the main historiographical... more
Current research on the cartography of the Venetian Empire rests on a state-centred perspective which reduces maps to mere technical tools in the service of maritime expansion and colonial government. In contrast, this paper argues that... more
This article analyzes the business organisation and activities of Genoese naval entrepreneurs who managed galleys for the Spanish Empire in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. While conventional narratives of business... more
Philosophy and Memory Traces defends two theories of autobiographical memory. One is a bewildering historical view of memories as dynamic patterns in fleeting animal spirits, nervous fluids which rummaged through the pores of brain and... more
The continuing debates amongst early modern historians about the supposed rise of a public sphere have invigorated the history of the British coffeehouse. This article interrogates one central aspect of many histories of the coffeehouse –... more
Giant bones unearthed throughout the Mesoamerican countryside provoked early modern thinkers to grapple with the earth's ages, partially syncre-tizing Nahua histories of human conquest with Spanish colonial medicinal and natural... more
This essay examines the consequences of the wars of Leopold I. Whereas the diffusion of the “fiscal-military state” thesis transformed our understanding of central institutions over the past three decades, most studies focusing on early... more
The book furnishes a unique insight into the world of meanings and emotions associated with hospital life by including narratives from both patients and caregivers. The story is told in a dozen episodes which illustrate the transformation... more
Examines how the body - its organs, limbs, viscera - was represented in the literature and culture of early modern Europe. How and why did 16th and 17th century medical, religious, and literary texts portray the body part by part, rather... more
This article tests the usefulness of concepts from translation studies to understand the dynamics and mechanisms of cultural translation. It asks what is happening when people translate. What do they do when they translate? From a... more
This paper will mainly focus on the material culture surrounding the administration of the Lord’s Supper in the Reformed churches of the Dutch Republic. After a brief survey of the ecclesiastical setting for the service and the practical... more
Shapin: "Brian Cowan is a political and social historian, but The Social Life of Coffee is systematically sceptical about Habermas’s claims. ... By the 1670s and 1680s, London’s coffee houses were swarming with informants, notably... more
The inquisitorial processes undertaken in Cordoba at the end of the reign of Isabella the Catholic provoked a series of problems for the new Christians (conversos), destabilizing the kingdom of Castile. Although the socio-religious... more
The Ottoman State benefited from the traditions of the Greek population on the coasts and islands of the Mediterranean Sea in regard of military and security aspects and built or developed some new shipyards in the region. In this... more
The Mediaeval Journal 2017, Issue 7.1 Abstract: Bérault Stuart was an important Franco-Scottish commander active during the French invasions of Italy at the end of the fifteenth century. This paper examines Bérault Stuart's... more
The labouring classes of early modern Venice, the popolani, made up nearly ninety per cent of the city’s population. Historiography to this point has focused almost exclusively on their professional and civic role. It is the core... more
In this article the author critically discusses the notion of petitions as a peaceful way of interaction between rulers and subjects in early-modern Europe. Specifically, he targets the idea of petitions as a safety valve. According to... more
Winner of the 2018 Nancy L. Roelker Prize for best article on sixteenth-century French history and the 2018 Harold J. Grimm Prize for best article on the legacy of the Reformation. The article examines how Protestant and Catholic... more