Women, Property and Urban Space in Tenth‐Century Milan
Identifieur interne : 000091 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000090; suivant : 000092Women, Property and Urban Space in Tenth‐Century Milan
Auteurs : RBID : ISTEX:9BD1C4ED6A8004D69DBEB3BE4386EE155FB80630Abstract
This paper deals with Milan, north‐west Italy, in the tenth century CE. It investigates the nature of property ownership and transfer, within the intramural circuit, in the suburbs and further afield. Its particular focus is on the property in which women dealt, both as members of religious communities and as wives and widows. The main conclusion is that women of all sorts and in many different sorts of situations owned far less property than men. The reasons for this pattern, which is common across western Europe in this period, remain obscure. It certainly has something to do with perceptions of female passivity prevalent in contemporary texts but it does not necessarily mean that some women could not have agency in other ways, notably as nuns with spiritual power.
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DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0424.2011.01657.x
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<author><name sortKey="Balzaretti, Ross" uniqKey="Balzaretti R">Ross Balzaretti</name>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="eng">This paper deals with Milan, north‐west Italy, in the tenth century CE. It investigates the nature of property ownership and transfer, within the intramural circuit, in the suburbs and further afield. Its particular focus is on the property in which women dealt, both as members of religious communities and as wives and widows. The main conclusion is that women of all sorts and in many different sorts of situations owned far less property than men. The reasons for this pattern, which is common across western Europe in this period, remain obscure. It certainly has something to do with perceptions of female passivity prevalent in contemporary texts but it does not necessarily mean that some women could not have agency in other ways, notably as nuns with spiritual power.</div>
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