Blanc SHS 3 - Blanc - SHS 3 - Cultures, arts, civilisations

Processes of political community formation : the example of Angevin Europe (13th - 15th Centuries) – EUROPANGE

EUROPANGE

Processes of political community formation : the example of Angevin Europe (13th - 15th Centuries)

Processes of political integration

This programme addresses the emergence of a political society, by questioning a specific group of administrators, the officers, in the Angevine domains: Anjou, Maine, Provence, Lorraine, South of Italy and Sicily, Piedmont, Lombardy and Tuscany, Hungry, Poland, Morea, Albany. This disjointed space and its discontinued existence put into question the capacities of the political authorities to gather and administrate, to create a common political discourse.

The laboratory UMR LIRIS is in the process of building a prosopographical and geographical database documenting the officers in the entire Angevine domain.
The members of the research team and their collaborators collect the unedited and edited documentation, drawing on the work of an international network of scholars that convenes annually on the occasion of congress.
Part of our research takes place at the level of historiographical reflexion; we also foster comparative approaches, taking into account the different historical milieus of the program member countries.

International Congress of Bergamo, October 2013 : I grandi ufficiali nello spazio angioino
International Congress of Naples, November 2014 : Periferie Finanziarie Angioine
International Congress of Angers, November 2015: Parcours universitaires et formations intellectuelles des officiers angevins

International Congress of Saint-Etienne, November 2016 :Les officiers et la chose publique dans les territoires angevins (XIIIe-XVe siècle) : vers une culture politique ? / Gli ufficiali e la cosa pubblica nei territori angioini (XIII-XV secolo): verso una cultura politica?

Th. Pécout dir., Ch. Beck, G. Butaud, M. Hébert, D. L. Smail, A. Venturini éd., L’enquête générale de Leopardo da Foligno en Provence (1332-1334) : réformation et vérifications, Paris, CTHS, 2015 (781 pages).
N. Coulet et Thierry Pécout dir., Provence historique, 64, 2014, Hommage à Jean-Paul Boyer (351 pages).
Th. Pécout dir., S. Burri, J.-L. Bonnaud, J. Drendel, É. Sauze éd., L’enquête générale de Leopardo da Foligno en basse Provence (mars-juin 1332), Paris, CTHS, 2014 (956 pages).
Mailloux Anne, Verdon Laure (dir.), L'Enquête en questions. De la réalité à la «vérité« dans les modes de gouvernement (Moyen Âge-Temps modernes), CNRS, Paris, 2014, 256 pages
Boyer Jean-Paul, «Prediche e sentenze a Napoli intorno al 1300. Il modello del logoteta Bartolomeo di Capua», Rassegna storica salernitana, n° 61 juin 2014, 2014, p. 39-80
Eniko Csukovits, Magyarország helye Kelet-Európában. A Descriptio Europae Orientalis országleírásai, dans Archivariorum historicorumque magistra. Történeti tanulmányok Bak Borbála tanárno 70. születésnapjára, éd. Zsófia Kádár, Bálint Lakatos, Áron Zarnóczki, Budapest, 2013, p. 71-82.
Riccardo Rao, L’oro dei tiranni: i vicariati venali di Enrico VII e la signoria cittadina nell’Italia padana, in Enrico VII e il governo delle città italiane (1310-1313), a cura di G.M. Varanini, «Reti Medievali. Rivista», 15/1 (2014), 17 pp.
Riccardo Rao, Les marquis de Ceva et la politique féodale angevine au Piémont (1260-1382), in «Provence Historique», 255 (2014), p. 85-112.
Serena Morelli, VIII Edizione del “Premio Aldo Morelli” 2013. Consegna dei premi Science & Philosophy, vol. 1, 2014, p. 136-138;
Serena Morelli, Lo spazio angioino: alcuni confronti, in Mélanges de l'Ecole francaise de Rome - Moyen Age, vol. 126/1, 2014;
J.-M. Matz, « Un grand officier des princes angevins à la fin du XIVe siècle : le chancelier Jean Le Fèvre d’après son journal », Provence historique, fascicule 256, 2014, p. 313-325

Europe is currently debating the methods and foundations of its own political integration; it is also questioning the role of states and regions in this process. The problems arising from current situations are unsettling the legacy and the secular processes that have shaped both our political and our administrative culture, a culture in which the three last centuries of the Middle Ages have played a crucial role; such problems also force historians to consider and reconsider the slow, constitutive movements that led not only to the emergence of states during the medieval period, but also to a specific mode of control and political discourse for which Michel Foucault coined the term “governmentality”. To grasp the pace and methods of the development of polities requires a similar reflection taking longue durées into consideration. Only then can we assess the specificities of our current political institutions, the deep and ancient patterns that have shaped them, and their capabilities and limitations in face of scale change. The period running from the 13th to the 15th Century represent an ideal moment for observing these phenomena, for this is when organizations, discourses, methods and administrative bodies are established, thus allowing national and princely states to take shape. The specific type of political construction under consideration here will provide an excellent viewpoint for examining these processes, especially the regional-level political constructs that are not restricted by any cultural or linguistic unit. For the sovereign and his agents, they represented a new challenge in administrating humans and objects. These fragmented political constructs, sometimes based on personal unions, precisely did not bring about a permanent legacy with respect to the Nation States that eventually emerged in the modern and contemporary periods. For this reason, they were neglected for a long time by national historiographies that considered them a priori unviable. To the contrary, we believe that their pragmatism and their capabilities to synthesize and make political and administrative innovations provide an ideal approach to the study of the aforementioned processes and situations. The territories under Anjou domination from the 13th to the 15th Century constitute a case in point that is well documented at the continental level. Our project examines one of its most significant aspects, through the emergence of a milieu and a political society, by questioning the constitution of a corps of administrators – the officers – along with their networks, education, and know-how in the diverse territories under Anjou domination: Anjou, Maine, Provence, Lorraine, the South of Italy, Sicily, Piedmont, Lombardy and Tuscany, Hungary, Poland, Morea and the Balkans. This entity, disjointed in space and discontinuous in time, questions the political authorities’ ability to unite, administrate and create a common political discourse, which highlight and make particularly relevant the current reflections on European construction. What is thus also at stake in questioning our shared political past is a way to comprehend this construction through a study of its agents, the officers. A prosopographical database will provide the initial research tool for a reflection to be conducted at the international level.

Project coordination

Thierry Pecout (Centre Européen de Recherche sur les Congrégations et Ordres Religieux (université Jean Monnet, Saint-Etienne))

The author of this summary is the project coordinator, who is responsible for the content of this summary. The ANR declines any responsibility as for its contents.

Partner

INSA DE LYON - LIRIS Institut National des Sciences Appliquées - Laboratoire d'Informatique en Image et Systèmes d'Information (Institut national des sciences appliquées de Lyon)
UMR 6258 CERHIO Centre de Recherches Historiques de l'Ouest (université d'Angers)
EFR Ecole française de Rome, Direction des études (Moyen Âge)
UJM/LEM-CERCOR Centre Européen de Recherche sur les Congrégations et Ordres Religieux (université Jean Monnet, Saint-Etienne)

Help of the ANR 320,000 euros
Beginning and duration of the scientific project: January 2014 - 48 Months

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