La corte en la cultura de la nobleza española de los siglos XVI-XVIII: disonancia, resistencia y fortuna
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Publication date
2021
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Editorial Sanz y Torres S. L.
Citation
Martínez Hernández, S. La corte en la cultura de la nobleza española de los siglos XVI-XVIII: disonancia, resistencia y fortuna. A. J. Cruz, A. Franganillo Álvarez y C. Sanz Ayán (eds.). La nobleza española y sus espacios de poder (1480-1715). Madrid: Sanz y Torres, 2021: 21-47
Abstract
En las últimas décadas han proliferado publicaciones colectivas que han puesto de manifiesto la extraordinaria capacidad adaptativa de la nobleza europea en periodos de crisis y cambios sociales, políticos, económicos o dinásticos. No obstante, han sido pocos los estudios colectivos dedicados a analizar la multiplicidad de espacios en los que los integrantes de la aristocracia hispana desarrollaron ámbitos de poder propios. El presente volumen pretende llenar este vacío a través de doce capítulos que muestran cómo los hombres y mujeres pertenecientes a la nobleza, desplegaron sus capacidades y demostraron su versatilidad a la hora de adaptar o generar, desde finales del siglo XV y hasta comienzos del XVIII, una diversidad de lugares de influencia a lo largo y ancho de aquella policéntrica y trasnacional Monarquía.
The past decades have seen a proliferation of publications that have singled out the European nobility’s extraordinary adaptability during periods of crisis and of social, political, economic, and dynastic change. Few studies, however, have analyzed the multiplicity of spaces created by the Hispanic aristocracy in which to exercise their own power. The volume’s twelve chapters intend to fill this lack by showing how, from the end of thefifteenth to the beginning of the eighteenth centuries, the men and women belonging to the nobility deployed their proficiency and versatility in generating and adapting to diverse sites of influence across the length and breadth of the polycentric and transnational Spanish Monarchy.
The past decades have seen a proliferation of publications that have singled out the European nobility’s extraordinary adaptability during periods of crisis and of social, political, economic, and dynastic change. Few studies, however, have analyzed the multiplicity of spaces created by the Hispanic aristocracy in which to exercise their own power. The volume’s twelve chapters intend to fill this lack by showing how, from the end of thefifteenth to the beginning of the eighteenth centuries, the men and women belonging to the nobility deployed their proficiency and versatility in generating and adapting to diverse sites of influence across the length and breadth of the polycentric and transnational Spanish Monarchy.