Imaginary Cartographies: Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille / Edition 1

Imaginary Cartographies: Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille / Edition 1

by Daniel Lord Smail
ISBN-10:
0801436265
ISBN-13:
9780801436260
Pub. Date:
12/14/1999
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
ISBN-10:
0801436265
ISBN-13:
9780801436260
Pub. Date:
12/14/1999
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Imaginary Cartographies: Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille / Edition 1

Imaginary Cartographies: Possession and Identity in Late Medieval Marseille / Edition 1

by Daniel Lord Smail

Hardcover

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Overview

How, in the years before the advent of urban maps, did city residents conceptualize and navigate their communities? In his strikingly original book, Daniel Lord Smail develops a new method and a new vocabulary for understanding how urban men and women thought about their personal geography. His thorough research of property records of late medieval Marseille leads him to conclude that its inhabitants charted their city, its social structure, and their own identities within that structure through a set of cartographic grammars which powerfully shaped their lives.Prior to the fourteenth century, different interest groups—notaries, royal officials, church officials, artisans—developed their own cartographies in accordance with their own social, political, or administrative agendas. These competing templates were created around units ranging from streets and islands to vicinities and landmarks. Smail shows how the notarial template, which privileged the street as the most basic marker of address, gradually emerged as the cartographic norm. This transformation, he argues, led to the rise of modern urban maps and helped to inaugurate the process whereby street addresses were attached to citizen identities, a crucial development in the larger enterprise of nation building.Imaginary Cartographies opens up powerful new means for exploring late medieval and Renaissance urban society while advancing understanding of the role of social perceptions in history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801436260
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/14/1999
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Daniel Lord Smail is Assistant Professor of History at Fordham University. He was awarded the William J. Koren Jr. Award for best article in French history in 1997 by the Society for French Historical Studies.

What People are Saying About This

Josef W. Konvitz

Smail began his work on the notaries of Marseille, who played a critical role in the late medieval period, as today, in transfers of property and in contracts more generally. The collections of notarial records in Marseille, as throughout Provence and Languedoc, are rich enough to support many different thematic studes, including studies of the notaries themselves as a professional group and of the individuals whose names appear in their records (some 14,000 in this case). Smail's study began as such, but evolved into something else, more imaginative, provocative and also tentative. A better first book is hard to find.

Teofilo F. Ruiz

In his superb and original Imaginary Cartographies, Daniel Smail shows how physical space and identity were constructed—through verbal mappings of the world—in the late medieval and early-modern city. A great achievement!

Barbara H. Rosenwein

In this original and gracefully written book, Daniel Smail transforms the mundane name and place entries of notarial records into rich and exciting conceptual categories that challenge our illusions about the origins of modernity. This is a book as compelling for its methodology as for its historical insights.

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