Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
One of the major developments in the history of western Europe between 1100 and 1300 was the construction of large-scale political organizations. Before 1100 political life had often been intensely local, its horizons limited to the village, parish, or county. But in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the old local communities of post-Carolingian Europe were aggregated into the kingdoms and city-states that formed such a prominent feature of European life in the high Middle Ages. This essay is concerned with one aspect of this process of political construction: the factors that determined the possible pathways that a local community could follow as it was incorporated into a larger political organization.
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(32) Ramière de Fortanier, Chartes, pp. 40–46.
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(35) Ibid. p. 29.
(36) Williams-Jones, Merioneth Lay Subsidy, p. xxvi.
(37) Given, Economic consequences, pp. 29–31.
(38) Ibid. pp. 34–36.
(39) Strayer, Joseph R., Consent to Taxation under Philip the Fair, in Studies in Early French Taxation, by Joseph R. Strayer and Charles Taylor (Cambridge, MA, 1939), pp. 51–55.Google Scholar
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(59) Printed in Fawtier, Robert and Maillard, François (eds), Comptes royaux (1285–1314), 3 vols. (Paris 1953–1956), I, pp. 432–495.Google Scholar
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