The economy of the late medieval Low Countries is often portrayed in terms of dynamism and economic growth. However, several regions within this larger entity followed an alternate path of development. One example of this is the Campine (Kempen), a communal peasant region situated to the northeast of the sixteenth-century 'metropolis' of Antwerp. By contrast with other regions in the Low Countries, this area was characterised by a remarkable stability.
By focusing on 'independent' peasant elites, this study explores the social structures and the characteristics of inequality of this region, showing how these factors led to a different, more stable mode of economic development. Looking past standard societal measurements such as property distribution, this work combines a wide variety of sources to grasp the nuances of inequality in a communal society. It therefore takes into account other economic factors such as control over the commons, and market integration. It also focuses on political and social inequality, shedding light on aspects of inequality in village politics, social life, and poor relief. Thus, in contrast to dominant depictions of pre-modern societies on the road to capitalism, this book provides a comprehensive portrayal of inequality and elite groups in a communal peasant society.
Author(s): Eline Van Onacker
Series: The Medieval Countryside, 17
Publisher: Brepols
Year: 2017
Language: English
Pages: 362
City: Turnhout
List of Illustrations ix
Introduction xix
Chapter 1. Manorial and Stately Power and (In)Equality 1
Chapter 2. Social and Fiscal Inequality in the Late Medieval and Early Modern Campine Area 33
Chapter 3. Controlling the Campine Commons 79
Chapter 4. Campine Peasants and Market Integration: Activities in the Pre-Modern Commodity and Factor Markets 117
Chapter 5. Campine Tenant Farmers and the Village Community 165
Chapter 6. Village Government and Office Holding in the Campine Area 201
Chapter 7. Social Cohesion and the Village Community: A Focus on Church Life and Poor Relief 231
Conclusion 269
Appendix 287
Bibliography 295