Available Formats
Power and Urban Space in Pre-Modern Holland: Arenas of Appropriation in the Netherlands, 1500-1850
By (Author) Dr Cl Lesger
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
22nd February 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Urban communities
949.2
Hardback
312
Width 236mm, Height 160mm, Spine 22mm
620g
Cities and urban societies have many faces. In this study, the pre-modern cities of Holland are presented as arenas where power relations between social classes are expressed in a more or less permanent appropriation of physical space and through discursive strategies. The continuity of the power relations in the cities of Holland, spanning centuries, makes it urgent to look not only at the assumption of urban space as an expression of power relations within society, but also at the contribution of this appropriation to the acceptance and continuity of the existing power relations in pre-modern Holland. Within this broad area, extensive attention is paid to: the very prominent and enduring appropriation of urban space in the field of housing; the less permanent, but violent appropriation of urban space during the public execution of scaffold punishments; the maintenance of public order by civic militias; and appropriation during riots and revolts. In addition, city descriptions, maps and pictures of the pre-modern cities of Holland are scrutinised for what they can reveal about the appropriation of urban spaces. These themes each have an extensive historiography, but they have never been brought together in an interpretative framework that fits in with Pierre Bourdieus model of society and the work of especially John Allen on power until now.
Cl Lesger is Associate Professor of History at University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He is the author of several books, including The Rise of the Amsterdam Market and Information Exchange; Merchants, Commercial Expansion and Change in the Spatial Economy of the Low Countries, c.1550-1630 (2006) and Shopping spaces and the urban landscape in early modern Amsterdam, 1550-1850 (2020).