Three typological approaches to Catalonian archival evidence, 10-12 centuries

[EN] This tripartite study draws upon the vast documentation surviving from Catalonia in the tenth through twelfth centuries. It focuses in turn on the following processes, each represented by numerous surviving charters of a specific type: testamentary proof and publication (Nathaniel L. Taylor), &...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Benito Monclús, Pere, Kosto, Adam J., Tayloe, Nathaniel L.
Format: article
Publication Date:1996
Country:España
Institution:Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)
Repository:DIGITAL.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC
OAI Identifier:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/103938
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/103938
Access Level:Open access
Description
Summary:[EN] This tripartite study draws upon the vast documentation surviving from Catalonia in the tenth through twelfth centuries. It focuses in turn on the following processes, each represented by numerous surviving charters of a specific type: testamentary proof and publication (Nathaniel L. Taylor), "convenientiae" and agreement enforcement (Adam J. Kosto), and agrarian "precaria" (Pere Benito). In each case, comparison of large numbers of similar documents has enabled the construction of complex typology, not just in the traditional diplomatic sense, but also considering the function of the ducuments and the social causes and implications of changes in form or function. The testamcntary probate documents illuminate a long-standing civil judiciary; changes in the form of the documcnts and the identity of testamentary authorities reflect the obsulescence and transformation of this judiciary in the eleventh and twelfth century. A case study of an eleventh-century comital conflict revealed in "conventientiae" shows notarial responses to changes in political behavior. Finally, agrarian precaria also follow modalities in tenurial structure. Drawing on a very rich archival resources, these findings support the relationship of social change and documentary change. Together, these studies demonstrate the nature of comparative work that can be done with studies based on large numbers of documents of superficially similar type.