Description

Book Synopsis
This volume offers the first comprehensive analysis of wills in late medieval Krakow. It presents the origins of testamentary acts in the Kingdom of Poland and its centre, Krakow, and their subsequent transformation from so called ‘canonical wills’ to ‘communal wills’. Wysmułek discusses the socio-cultural role of wills and sets them in their contemporary legal, social, and economic context. In doing so, he uncovers their influence on property ownership and family relations in the city, as well as on the religious practices of the burghers. Ultimately, this work seeks to change the perception of wills by treating the testamentary act itself as an important agent of historical social change – a ‘tool of power’.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements List of Figures and Tables Abbreviations Introduction  1 Definition of a ‘Will’  2 The Will – A Theoretical Perspective  3 Source Base  4 Subject Literature  5 Structure of the Work 1 The Institution of the Will  1 Wills in Poland in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries  2 Church Guardianship over Wills  3 Property Laws in Medieval Cities  4 The Influence of Roman Law  5 Property Bequests and Canonical Wills in Fourteenth-Century Krakow  6 Emergence of the Communal Will in Krakow  7 Open and Closed Wills in the Fifteenth Century  8 Fifteenth-Century Wills “Made in Sickness and in Health”  9 Formula for Wills from 1485  10 Liber Testamentorum from 1450  11 The Number of Wills in Krakow from 1300 to 1500  12 The Reasons for Writing Wills 2 The Socio-economic Position of Testators  1 Social Characteristics of the Late Medieval City  2 Categories of Urban Social Subdivisions  3 Municipal Authorities as Testators  4 Occupational Structure of Testators   4.1 Merchants and Stallholders   4.2 Goldsmiths and Belt Makers   4.3 Food-Related Crafts   4.4 Clothing-Related Crafts   4.5 Metalworking and Armour-Making Crafts   4.6 Professionals of the Written Word   4.7 Other Crafts   4.8 Summary: Trade and Handicraft  5 The Financial Situation of Krakovian Testators  6 Social Structure in Other Cities and Towns  7 Wealth and Social Status  8 Dower Records in Krakovian Wills  9 Estimates of Testators’ Wealth  10 Characteristics of Particular Social Groups   10.1 Impoverished Testators   10.2 Testators of Modest Means   10.3 Moderately Well-Off Testators   10.4 Wealthy Testators   10.5 Extremely Wealthy Testators  11 Female Testators  12 Immigrant Testators   12.1 Immigration and the City’s Population   12.2 Newcomers to the City   12.3 Cultural Capital of Newcomers  13 Determinants of Testators’ Social Position   13.1 Economic Capital   13.2 Cultural Capital – Education   13.3 Social Capital – Quarter Captains, Tower Commanders and Administrators  14 Changes in Social Position   14.1 The Dower and Level of Wealth   14.2 Social Mobility 3 The Burgher Family  1 Family and Marriage in the Light of Law and Tradition  2 New Forms of Bequests for Wives  3 The Situation of the Widow  4 Children  5 Grandchildren  6 Siblings, Nieces and Nephews  7 Other Relatives  8 Servants and Co-workers  9 The Image of the Burgher Family as Presented in Late-Medieval Wills 4 The Burgher Religiosity  1 A Personal Relationship with God   1.1 Clergy    1.1.1 Confessors    1.1.2 Preachers    1.1.3 Other Clergy   1.2 Religious Objects in Wills    1.2.1 Rosaries    1.2.2 Books and Paintings    1.2.3 Expensive Symbols of Piety: Crosses and Agnus Dei Medaillons   1.3 Participation in the sacrum: Personal Belongings Used for Religious Purposes  2 The Familial Dimension of Piety  3 The Corporate Dimension of Burghers’ Piety  4 Parish Identity and Ties to Other Religious Institutions in the Medieval City  5 Religion Civique – Communal Religiosity   5.1 Beguinages  6 Christian Duty  7 Summary Conclusion Appendix Glossary Bibliography Index

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    A Hardback by Jakub Wysmułek

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      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 03/06/2021
      ISBN13: 9789004448162, 978-9004448162
      ISBN10: 9004448160

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This volume offers the first comprehensive analysis of wills in late medieval Krakow. It presents the origins of testamentary acts in the Kingdom of Poland and its centre, Krakow, and their subsequent transformation from so called ‘canonical wills’ to ‘communal wills’. Wysmułek discusses the socio-cultural role of wills and sets them in their contemporary legal, social, and economic context. In doing so, he uncovers their influence on property ownership and family relations in the city, as well as on the religious practices of the burghers. Ultimately, this work seeks to change the perception of wills by treating the testamentary act itself as an important agent of historical social change – a ‘tool of power’.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements List of Figures and Tables Abbreviations Introduction  1 Definition of a ‘Will’  2 The Will – A Theoretical Perspective  3 Source Base  4 Subject Literature  5 Structure of the Work 1 The Institution of the Will  1 Wills in Poland in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries  2 Church Guardianship over Wills  3 Property Laws in Medieval Cities  4 The Influence of Roman Law  5 Property Bequests and Canonical Wills in Fourteenth-Century Krakow  6 Emergence of the Communal Will in Krakow  7 Open and Closed Wills in the Fifteenth Century  8 Fifteenth-Century Wills “Made in Sickness and in Health”  9 Formula for Wills from 1485  10 Liber Testamentorum from 1450  11 The Number of Wills in Krakow from 1300 to 1500  12 The Reasons for Writing Wills 2 The Socio-economic Position of Testators  1 Social Characteristics of the Late Medieval City  2 Categories of Urban Social Subdivisions  3 Municipal Authorities as Testators  4 Occupational Structure of Testators   4.1 Merchants and Stallholders   4.2 Goldsmiths and Belt Makers   4.3 Food-Related Crafts   4.4 Clothing-Related Crafts   4.5 Metalworking and Armour-Making Crafts   4.6 Professionals of the Written Word   4.7 Other Crafts   4.8 Summary: Trade and Handicraft  5 The Financial Situation of Krakovian Testators  6 Social Structure in Other Cities and Towns  7 Wealth and Social Status  8 Dower Records in Krakovian Wills  9 Estimates of Testators’ Wealth  10 Characteristics of Particular Social Groups   10.1 Impoverished Testators   10.2 Testators of Modest Means   10.3 Moderately Well-Off Testators   10.4 Wealthy Testators   10.5 Extremely Wealthy Testators  11 Female Testators  12 Immigrant Testators   12.1 Immigration and the City’s Population   12.2 Newcomers to the City   12.3 Cultural Capital of Newcomers  13 Determinants of Testators’ Social Position   13.1 Economic Capital   13.2 Cultural Capital – Education   13.3 Social Capital – Quarter Captains, Tower Commanders and Administrators  14 Changes in Social Position   14.1 The Dower and Level of Wealth   14.2 Social Mobility 3 The Burgher Family  1 Family and Marriage in the Light of Law and Tradition  2 New Forms of Bequests for Wives  3 The Situation of the Widow  4 Children  5 Grandchildren  6 Siblings, Nieces and Nephews  7 Other Relatives  8 Servants and Co-workers  9 The Image of the Burgher Family as Presented in Late-Medieval Wills 4 The Burgher Religiosity  1 A Personal Relationship with God   1.1 Clergy    1.1.1 Confessors    1.1.2 Preachers    1.1.3 Other Clergy   1.2 Religious Objects in Wills    1.2.1 Rosaries    1.2.2 Books and Paintings    1.2.3 Expensive Symbols of Piety: Crosses and Agnus Dei Medaillons   1.3 Participation in the sacrum: Personal Belongings Used for Religious Purposes  2 The Familial Dimension of Piety  3 The Corporate Dimension of Burghers’ Piety  4 Parish Identity and Ties to Other Religious Institutions in the Medieval City  5 Religion Civique – Communal Religiosity   5.1 Beguinages  6 Christian Duty  7 Summary Conclusion Appendix Glossary Bibliography Index

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