"All issues of the Bulletin de la Commission royale d'Histoire (from 1837 to the most recent one) are freely available for consultation on the site of Persée".
For orders, please contact ASP - info@aspeditions.be.
Abstract - About one hundred year ago a fifteenth-century formulary was transferred from the State Archives in Mons to the University Library in Ghent, where it is now part of the rich medieval manuscript collection. Because of this transfer the manuscript was saved from the disastrous fire that would strike the archival depot of the Hainaut capital during the Second World War. Up until now, this source has not revealed much of its secrets so far and an in-depth study of it has not yet been conducted. However, the formulary offers a unique view on the late medieval organization of voluntary jurisdiction within the county of Hainaut and provides some important indications about the specific share in this of comital vassals or hommes de fief. Because of the value of this manuscript a critical text edition is required to render its content more accessible. This contribution aims to meet this need in the first place, but also tends to (1) elaborate on the facts that are already known; (2) formulate alternatives to nuance former interpretations; (3) initiate additional research to fill in the existing gaps.
Falco Van der Schueren (born May 8, 1992) obtained a bachelor’s degree in secondary education at the Artevelde University College in 2016 and a master’s degree in history at Ghent University in 2019. For his thesis ‘Ars notariatus Hanoniensis: openbare notarissen en hommes de fief in de organisatie van vrijwillige rechtspraak binnen laatmiddeleeuws Henegouwen (1345-1467)’ he received the André Schaepdrijver Award. After his studies he worked as a freelance researcher. He is currently preparing his dissertation ‘Gedeeld belang of onderlinge wedijver? De organisatie van vrijwillige rechtspraak in de Zuidelijke Lage Landen tijdens de late middeleeuwen (1278-1433)’, for which the Ghent University Special Research Fund awarded him a doctoral scholarship.
Abstract –The juridification and the increasing degree of writing in the Burgundian government, combined with a courtly knight culture, defined the Burgundian diplomacy. The ongoing professionalization of the diplomacy in the age of duke John the Fearless (1404-1419) encouraged the specialization and formalization of diplomatic documents. This contribution presents a range of the most commonly used types of diplomatic documents: letters of credence, procuration letters, letters of instruction and letters of safe-conduct.
Christian De Borchgrave (°1966), PhD in history, is first advisor at the Belgian House of Representatives and voluntary researcher at the Ruusbroec Institute (University of Antwerp). He is the author of books and articles on the diplomacy under the Burgundian duke John the Fearless and on the history of the Catholic Church in Flanders in the interwar period.
Bert Verwerft (°1985), MA in history, works as heritage expert at the municipality of Beveren. He is co-editor of the journal Het Land van Beveren and voluntary researcher at the Department of History at Ghent University. His scientific interests lie at the intersection of social and political history, with a particular focus on late medieval warfare and the sociogenesis of the
Burgundian nobility.
Abstract - War deeply disrupted the economy in medieval and modern times, and led to the suspension of the normal functioning of State institutions if not to their temporary collapse. The latter, however, reacted quickly by implementing complex administrative procedures aimed at restoring their grip on society. Two investigations carried out by the Chamber of Accounts of Lille in 1486 and 1495 are presented here, the first at the request of the farmer of the county estate of Ninove, the second at the request of the receiver of the Extraordinary of Flanders. Ninove’s investigation provides valuable information on the effects of war on demography, manpower and agriculture. It shows that a few months of military operations reduced the product of an entire three year cycle by a third to a half. The information requested by the receiver of the Extraordinary of Flanders, for its part, reveals the obstacles that an officer of the Prince had to overcome in the exercise of his duties. Both documents illustrate the importance of routine in the development of the State: the discourse of “administrative rationality” carried by the Chambers of Accounts was in fact made performative by the repetition of control procedures rather than by their efficiency.Amable Sablon Du Corail – A former student of the Ecole nationale des Chartes, Amable Sablon Du Corail is Chief Curator at the French National Archives, where he heads the Department of the Middle Ages and the Ancien Régime. Most of his work focuses on political, financial and military history in the late Middle Ages and early modern period, in France and in the Burgundian Netherlands. He has recently published La guerre, le prince et ses sujets. Les finances des Pays-Bas bourguignons sous Marie de Bourgogne et Maximilien d’Autriche (1477-1493) (Brepols, 2019).
Jean-Louis Kupper & Julien Maquet, The Church of Cologne consults the Church of Liège on a problem created by the application of the Pax Dei (1128-1137), p. 5-22
Abstract - The present paper consists of the publication of a study bearing on the often-ignored correspondence between the cathedral chapters of Cologne and Liège; those letters comment on the implementation of the Paix de Dieu (Peace of God) in the years 1128-1137. They also shed light on the early introduction of Roman law into the Meuse country during the first half of the 12th century.
Jean-Louis Kupper is corresponding member of the Institut de France, member of the Académie royale de Belgique and emeritus professor of the Université de Liège. He is also deputy secretary-treasurer of the Commission royale d’histoire.
Julien Maquet is curator of the Treasure House of the Cathedral of Liège and part-time professor at the Université de Liège. He is also secretary of the Royal Commission for the publication of Ancient Laws and Ordinances of Belgium.
Abstract - Simon Borluut belonged to a well-established family of patricians in his place of birth, Ghent, where he occupied several political functions. In this private financial document he allows a glimpse into the way he used his personal financial means, and as such it illustrates how a prosperous man from Ghent living in the middle of the fifteenth century spent his finances. The document therefore offers a welcome addition to what we know concerning prices and wages. Simon Borluut acted as head of a numerous household that occupied a big number of diverse servants. There were of course the obvious daily expenses for food, attire and costs of living, but the strikingly numerous investments in religious activities and in the maintenance of the memory of his lineage also attract notice. ‘Big’ politics remain discreet in the background, notwithstanding the role Simon Borluut fulfilled and the inevitable impact of the war the city of Ghent waged till 1453 against its overlord, duke Philip the Good of Burgundy.
Marc Boone (Ghent, 1955) full professor at the Ghent University, PhD in 1987, dean of the faculty of Arts and Philosophy between 2012 and 2018. Invited professor at the Université de Bourgogne (Dijon), the University of Paris IV, and the ‘École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales’ (Paris) and at the Università degli Studi di Milano, internal Belgian Francqui chair at ULB. Member of the Royal Flemish academy of Belgium (KVAB) and of the Academia Europeae. President of the Pro Civitate committee (Royal academies of Belgium) and of the Society for history and archaeology of Ghent. Research fields: urban history, political and socio-economic history of the late Middle Ages, Burgundian history.
Abstract. - During the bombings of 1914, the vast majority of the medieval archives of Ypres disappeared, and with them the important collection of chirographs. However, these are not completely lost to the historian, since some of them were transcribed or analysed before their destruction. The large number of debt acknowledgements kept in these two forms makes it possible, among other things, to study the credit network of the Flemish city in the XIIIth century. With this in mind, we have compiled all the editions and summaries available today, and have entered all the information collected into the Diplomata Belgica database. This article accompanies this integration, and gives a description of the resulting corpus of acts.
Sébastien de Valeriola, born in 1984, holds a licenciate degree in mathematics, a doctorate in science, a master's degree in actuarial science and a master's degree in history. He is a lecturer at the ICHEC Brussels Management School and pursues a joint doctorate in medieval history at the Université catholique de Louvain and the Universiteit Gent. His historical work focuses on default risk management in Flanders and northern France in the XIIIth and XIVth centuries.
Abstract. - This contribution publishes fourteen fifteenth-century lease contracts for bathhouses and brothels in the city of Leuven Brabant, Low Countries). Such contracts are very useful for historians, as they offer a unique insight into the rich material culture and the history of the so-called ‘stews’ (stoven, étuves). Some of those houses were brothels too, where prostitutes offered their services. Historians still too often see prostitution as a marginal phenomenon, but these contracts show that at least owners and managers of brothels were not living on the fringes of society. Furthermore, the publication of these contracts also demonstrates that the registers in which they can be found (the so-called schepenregisters, registers of the aldermen) are sources that contain numerous acts of voluntary jurisdiction of city dwellers, but because of their inaccessibility they are hardly consulted by historians. This edition is therefore a first step towards opening up the Leuven registers and demonstrating that, through a focus on one type of document from this source, historians still have a gold mine at their disposal to study medieval urban life.
Jelle Haemers (1980) lectures social and political history of the Middle Ages at the KU Leuven. He is closely involved in inter-university research into urban society in the Low Countries, and has published numerous articles and books on late medieval history. His research currently focuses on political conflicts in the cities of late medieval Flanders and Brabant, and the gender history of European cities.
Abstract. - Guillaume Des Marez and Hanns Schlitter were historians, university professor and archivists – the former in Brussels, the latter in Vienna. They exchanged a rich correspondence spanning the first decade of the 20th century. The present article offers a critical edition of the 83 documents (in French and in German) of which it is composed. This correspondence not only contains interesting biographical information concerning both scholars; it also sheds light on their scientific activities and on their professional and private networks. These letters vividly testify of the mutations of archival and historical sciences at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, both on the methodological and international levels. Finally, these documents also contain surprising information relating to Des Marez's and Schlitter's opinions concerning the current political and social situation and to their relationship with freemasonry.
Leopold Auer was born in 1944 in Vienna; studies at the university of Vienna (history, classical philology) and at the Institute for Austrian Historical Research (Austrian history, auxiliary sciences, art and legal history) 1962-68; 1968 PhD, fellow of the Austrian Institute, archivist at the Haus-, Hof- und Staatsarchiv (director 1999-2008). 1970 post graduate training at the Stage technique international d’archives in Paris, 1984-2000 member of governing bodies of the International Council on Archives (ICA) and of the editorial board of Archivum, since 2004 honorary member of ICA. Since 1988 honorary professor at the university of Vienna, 2007-2013 fellow of the Commission on Austrian legal history of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. His main research areas are the history of international relations in the early modern period, the history of the Holy Roman Empire, and the auxiliary sciences of history. During the last fifteen years, he particularly focused on the War of the Spanish succession and on the judicial system of the Holy Roman Empire.
André Vanrie was born in 1940. After graduating as a MA in Philosophy and Letters at the Université libre de Bruxelles (specializing in History, Art History and Archaeology, Oriental Philology and History), he started a career at the Belgian State Archives in 1962 as "candidat archiviste". When he retired in 2005, he was acting head of the department of Walloon archives. He was also curator of the Municipal Museums of Brussels (1975-1977) and (successively) secretary, treasurer (acting as editor-in-chief) and honorary treasurer of the journal Archives et Bibliothèques de Belgique – Archief- en Bibliotheekwezen in België (1974-2013). He was also the secretary general of the Société royale d’Archéologie de Bruxelles (1977-2013) and editor-in-chief of Cahiers bruxellois – Brusselse Cahiers (2006-2019) and Archivum, the journal of the International Council of Archives (1986-2000), before becoming an honorary member of the latter.
Fragments de guerre – Oorlogsfragmenten 1914-1918. Bulletin de la Commission royale d'Histoire, 184, 2018, 406 p.
Abstract. – The study concerns the publication of a war diary (1914-1918) by Maurice Dartevelle (1890-1974). As a young artillery second lieutenant he was billeted at Fort Andoy on May 30, 1914. The fort was supposed to defend the Namur stronghold. He describes his life and the atmosphere reigning between August 4 and 24, 1914, the day on which the fort had to surrender after fierce shelling and he was made prisoner. The text is preceded by an introduction summarising the author’s life and career.
Pierre Lierneux (1965), PhD in History of Catholic University of Louvain, specializing in military history at the Royal Military Academy, curator of the Royal Military and of the Armed Forces Museum, now head of the scientific institute’s museum-exhibitions department. He is a member of the Royal Academy of Archeology of Belgium
Jean-Louis Van Belle (1942) has a PhD in history ; he was particularly interested in the stone industry under the Old Regime. In this context, he founded in 1974 the International Glyptographic Research Center (CIRG) devoted to the study of lapidary signs. Since 1979 he has organized twenty international symposiums across Europe, devoted to the contribution of these signs to the study of the archeology of buildings. He is also the author of numerous publications on these subjects.
Abstract. – In the autumn of 1916 the Belgian soldier Gabriel Vercken makes contact with Joseph de Dorlodot, head of the “Service of correspondence and documentation” based in Folkestone. A native of Verviers, he relates of having closely witnessed the events that took place in his hometown and its region during the first days of the war and proposes to establish an account. The publication of this unpublished manuscript addresses three principal concerns. Firstly, Gabriel Vercken’s text, while unfinished, provides very accurate indications with regard to the events that he came to report during the first days of the war and makes an a posteriori, but undeniable contribution to testimonies that have already been published. It not only confirms a number of elements known among specialists, but also contains new information on the psychosis of the “free shooters” and the wrongdoings committed by the 14th German infantry brigade in the region of Verviers (Verviers, Battice, Fécher, Herve, Micheroux, Soiron et Soumagne). Secondly, it is important to point out that the archives of the “Service of correspondence and documentation” contain a huge number of other manuscripts on the events that occurred in Belgian municipalities during the first days of the war, whose volume and importance compare to Gabriel Vercken’s text. Finally, one should highlight the precise nature and the extreme diversity of activities deployed by Joseph de Dorlodot’s “Service of correspondence and documentation”, the various ramifications of which have not yet been covered at present.
Pierre-Alain Tallier is acting head of the “Brussels” Department and head of the section “Contemporary Archives” at the State Archives. He is doctor in History at the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB) and author of several publications on the history of the First World War and the archives related to this subject. He has, amongst others, led science policy’s research project dedicated to the Source Guide on the history of the First World War in Belgium: Hans Vanden Bosch, Michaël Amara & Vanessa D’Hooghe, sous la direction de / onder leiding van Pierre-Alain Tallier, Guide des sources de la Première Guerre mondiale en Belgique – Archievenoverzicht betreffende de Eerste Wereldoorlog in België, Bruxelles – Brussels, AGR, 2010, 1057 p.
Abstract. – Pierre Pirenne (1895-1914) was one of the four sons of historian Henri Pirenne and his wife Jenny Vanderhaeghen. He volunteered for military service at the age of nineteen and was killed after only a few months. Although (the preserved part of) his war diary covers only the first few weeks of war, it still paints a haunting picture of a young man determined to go to battle – not only against the German enemy, but also against his reputation as a fils à papa.
Sarah Keymeulen completed her PhD in History at Ghent University in 2017 with a study on Henri Pirenne: The Pirenne phenomenon. The history of a reputation. Before that, she published, with Jo Tollebeek, a synthesis on the life and work of the famous historian: Henri Pirenne, Historian: A Life in Pictures (Leuven, 2011).
Abstract. – Jules Wellens (1853-1932) was appointed to the presidency of the Military Court – the highest court of the Belgian military justice – in 1913. One year later, the outbreak of the First World War radically changed his destiny. From the first days of the war, as he began to follow the retreat of the army, the magistrate began writing a diary, a copy of which is kept in the National Archives of Belgium. For more than three years, he described his daily life marked by the suffering of a man separated from his loved ones and his fight to improve the functioning of the military justice. In permanent struggle with the Auditor General and some of the army commanders, Wellens managed, however, to profoundly change the way Belgian military Justice worked. This makes the excerpts of this rare testimony all the more interesting, since this exceptional source highlights the unfairly forgotten fight of a courageous magistrate.
Michaël Amara holds a PhD in contemporary history (Université libre de Bruxelles). Specialist in the history of the First World War, he is currently head of the “Contemporary Archives” Service at the National Archives of Belgium (State Archives).
Arnaud Charon is a PhD student in contemporary History at the Belgian State Archives (National Archives of Belgium) and Université libre de Bruxelles. He specializes in the history of the deportation of the Belgian population during the First World War.
Jean Bourgeois (°1955, master History and Archaeology in 1978, PhD History and Archaeology in 1985, with a thesis on a diachronological study of the Comines-Warneton area in Belgium). After his PhD, he focused his research on the Metal Ages in Western Europe. Together with prof. Jacques Nenquin and pilot Jacques Semey, he launched the aerial prospection project in Flanders (Centre for Historical and Archaeological Aerial Photography, CHAL). A more recent part of this research focuses now on historical aerial photographs, especially dating from the World War I period. In 1991 he became associate professor and is now senior full professor at the Department of Archaeology (Ghent University). He is Korrespondierende Mitglied of the Deutsche Archäologische Institut (1996), Francqui Research professor (2010-2013), Member of the Academia Europaea (2011) and Member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts (2011).
Birger Stichelbaut (°1982) has general research interests in archaeological prospection, aerial photography for archaeology, conflict archaeology and the application of geographical information systems. In 2009 he obtained his PhD in Archaeology with the dissertation ‘World War One Aerial photographs: an Archaeological Perspective’, research funded by FWO scholarship (2005-2009). He currently works as a postdoctoral researcher and coordinator at the Centre for Historical and Archaeological Aerial Photography (Department of Archaeology) carrying out a large-scale landscape analysis of World War I sites in Belgium using historical aerial photographs (1915-1918). This is a collaboration between the In Flanders Fields Museum, the Province of West-Flanders and the University of Ghent Department of Archaeology.
Abstract. – The publication of this correspondence yields a better understanding of the propaganda produced by Belgium during the First World War, in order to restore its image of a country with pro-German sensibilities before 1914. This set of fourteen letters written in 1915 and 1916 and a retrospective memorandum of 1919 shed new light on the strategies developed by official Belgium in exile (Paul Hymans, Eugène Beyens and Georges Lorand) in order to restore its international image.
Vincent Genin (° 1989) has a PhD in History and is assistant at the University of Liège. He is the author of several works on the history of international relations and defended his doctoral thesis in January 2017 entitled : Un « Laboratoire belge » du droit international ? Réseaux internationaux, expériences et mémoires de guerres des juristes belges (1869-1940) (2 vol., 748 p.). Contact : V.Genin@ulg.ac.be
Abstract. – On 8 October 1915 a conference took place in Brussels, organised by the German occupation authorities, over the fight against venereal diseases in the occupied country. This was the result of concerns dating back to 19th century, but which were exacerbated by the mass mobilisation in a long-term war. The topic of the conference affected both the occupiers and the occupied people, and women as well as men, but the organisation and participation were nevertheless monopolized by occupying and masculine power. The presentation of the measures taken and their results was inspired by a resolutely neo-regulationist view, but left room for a real debate around issues such as the disclosure requirement, the contamination offence or the use of occupied countries as a laboratory for experimentation then exportable to Germany.
Emmanuel Debruyne (°1975) is professor at the Université catholique de Louvain (UCL) where he teaches modern and contemporary history since 2007. His research, which benefited in 2014-2015 from a fellowship at the Paris Institute for Advanced Study, focuses on military occupations during the two world wars. Researcher at CEGESOMA from 1999 to 2007, he contributed to the research mission on the attitudes of the Belgian authorities regarding the persecution of the Jews. Consequently, he is one of the authors of La Belgique docile (Luc Pire, 2007). His doctoral dissertation on the Belgian intelligence networks during World War II, defended in 2006, was published under the title La guerre secrète des espions belges (Racine, 2008). Several of his publications also focus on the military occupation of World War I, whether in terms of memory, intimate relationships between occupiers and occupied women, resistance or repression, such as in Je serai fusillé demain (Racine, 2011), written with Laurence van Ypersele. His latest book, “Femmes à Boches”. Occupation du corps féminin dans la France et la Belgique de la Grande Guerre (Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 2018), examines the question of sexual relations between occupying forces and occupied population during the First World War. More recently, his research led him to question the issue of bankruptcy and its impact on the individual during the 19th century.
Abstract. – Minutes of the monthly conferences held in primary school nr. 10 in Brussels, kept for the period of the First World War, under German occupation, testify to the commitment of the Director Nicolas Smelten and his fellow teachers to maintain, despite the circumstances, a high quality teaching. Pedagogical issues are regularly raised, as well as those pertaining to discipline. Special attention is given to the well-being, health and leisure of the children, as the war continues and brings more and more deprivation.
Jean Houssiau formerly was an archivist at the Belgian State Archives and the Brussels City Archives. He is currrently entrusted with the conception and realisation of transversal history projects of the Public education department of the City of Brussels. He mainly published on urban history in general, and on the history of urban public teaching in particular.
Christian Vreugde serves as an archivist at the Brussels City Archives. He has inventoried most of the archival records of the Public teaching department and public schools of the City of Brussels. He has published on the history of teaching, among other subjects.
Abstract. – This contribution publishes the minutes of the board of directors of the company “Verreries de Jumet” (Jumet’s Glassworks) from May 15th 1915 to October 26th 1918. It documents the economical and industrial history in Belgium during the First World War and shows that, in spite of the cliché of the demise the Belgian industry, many industrials pursued a policy “of lesser evil”.
Catherine Thomas is PhD in History, Art history and Archaeology of the Université catholique de Louvain. Her thesis focused on the top civil servants of the central governement of the Southern Netherlands during the Spanish regime (1598-1700). At present, she is curator of the Musée du Verre of Charleroi and studies the Art nouveau et Art déco stained-glass windows in the public space, and the attitude of the glass industry during the First World War.
Summary - Manuscript G 13860 of Ghent University Library is a scroll of approximately 2.5 meters. In its current state, it consists of four strips of two columns each. The author of this contribution shows that its original form was a parchment poster (about 700 × 580 mm) with eight columns of text. This text is a chronicle on the history of Flanders in over eight hundred Middle Dutch verses. On the basis of this Ghent manuscript, this contribution delivers the editio princeps of this Korte rijmkroniek van Vlaanderen (short rhymed chronicle of Flanders). Attention is also paid to a fragment in the Royal Library of Belgium (ms. 2810-13, f. 1 *), which may be a witness of the same text. The chronicle pays great attention to the Ghent uprisings in the fourteenth century. It appears to have been composed in 1431. The exact position of this text within the Flemish historiography of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries deserves further investigation.
Remco Sleiderink is professor of Medieval Dutch literature at the University of Antwerp and is also affiliated with KU Leuven in Brussels. In his research, he often focuses on the compositional contexts of Middle Dutch literature, with specific attention to the Duchy of Brabant and the dynamics between court and city. He is also highly invested in material philology, which provides an integrated approach to text and manuscript transmission. Other constant focuses in his research are literary analysis, intertextuality and multilingualism.
Summary. – Founded in 1499, the confraternity of our Lady of Seven Sorrows was one the most prominent associations of medieval and early modern Brussels. The Burgundian-Habsburg court, giving way to an important art patronage, actively promoted it. The elevated position of the confraternity strongly contrasts with the scarcity of the preserved source material: almost all archival sources are missing or lost. One of the few surviving documents is a seventeenth-century inventory, which gives an overview of the art works, jewellery, real estate and obligations in possession of the confraternity at that particular moment. The inventory further contains a detailed account of the acquisitions, the donors and a description of the physical appearance of the objects. As such, it provides a unique insight into both the material culture and the history of the association. Because of the importance of this document for the history of the confraternity, and the political, religious and artistic past of the city of Brussels, it is made accessible for research through a critical edition.
Brecht Dewilde (1982) studied history and art history. At the University of Leuven he wrote a dissertation on the functioning of formal networks in times of economic crisis, which was awarded the Prize Pro Civitate of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium (Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie van België). Until 2017 he was a postdoctoral research fellow of the IAP-project City and Society in the Low Countries, c. 1200-c. 1850 (Belspo). Since January 2018 he has been working as an assistant curator at the Ghent City Museum (STAM).
Bram Vannieuwenhuyze (1980) studied history at Ghent University, where he obtained his PhD in 2008. His research focuses on town development and urban morphology of medieval and early modern towns, historical cartography and landscape history. In 2015, he has been named professor by special appointment of Historical Cartography at the University of Amsterdam, a chair established on behalf of the Cartographiae Historicae Cathedra Foundation. He also works as an independent scholar for (www.caldenberga.be).
Summary - Who were the members of the Estates of Brabant and could receive a summons letter for an assembly in the fifteenth century ? In this study, I give an overview and an analysis of the composition of this representative institution on the basis of four undated summons lists. Given the importance of these lists for the political- institutional and social history of the Duchy of Brabant, a complete critical edition of the lists is the backbone of this study. Moreover, all listed persons are identified in brief biographical notes. New lists were composed by the ducal chancery on the occasion of major political events when the presence and participation of the (most powerful) representatives of the citizens was required. A closer examination showed that these summons lists were compiled on the occasion of the inauguration of Duke Anthony of Burgundy in 1406, the inauguration of Duke John IV in 1415 and to celebrate the peace concluded between Archduke Maximilian and the rebellious cities of Brabant in August 1489. These lists, together with the Brabantine part of the convocation list for the Estates General of 1464, offer an overview of the persons who were considered by their contemporaries as the political representatives of the three Estates: the clergy, the nobility and the Third Estate. This overview is then compared with the attendance at several important meetings of the Estates in the first quarter of the fifteenth century. To make the process of convocation yet more transparent, the lists are followed by a critical edition of some summons letters for the abbot of Park, Engelbert I of Nassau, lord of Breda, and the city of Antwerp.Mario Damen is assistant professor of medieval history at the University of Amsterdam. He is especially interested in the social, political and cultural history of the late medieval Low Countries and publishes on the nobility, tournaments, political representation, stained-glass windows and the Burgundian- Habsburg princes. Furthermore, since 2016 he directs a research programme subsidized by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) entitled Imagining a territory. Constructions and representations of late medieval Brabant.
Summary - The Benedictine Guibert of Gembloux is mostly known as the last secretary of the renowned Renish visionary Hildegard of Bingen. However, he also left behind a rich literary legacy that sheds light on the world of a traditional monk during the central Middle Ages. One of his works is De destructione monasterii Gemblacensis, preserved in MS 5535-37 of the Manuscripts Department at the Royal Library of Belgium in Brussels. The text sheds light on Guibert’s concept of authorship, in particular of a collection of fourteen letter treatises that follow De destructione in the manuscript. By employing topoi and biblical exempla, Guibert justified his literary ambitions, placing himself within the traditional learnt discourse on authorship. In addition, De destructione offers insight into the debate on the state of traditional coenobitism during a period in which it was encountering increasing competition from other monastic groups. Guibert employed the discourse of decline of traditional monasticism partly as a literary strategy in order to justify his actions.Sara Moens (Ghent University) defended her Ph.D. “De horizonten van Guibertus van Gembloers (ca. 1124-1214). De wereld van een benedictijns briefschrijver in tijden van een verschuivend religieus landschap” [“The horizons of Guibert of Gembloux (c 1124-1214). The world of a Benedictine letter- writer from the decades after the ‘crisis’ of traditional coenobitism”] (supervisor J. Deploige) in April 2014. Since October 2014 she has been employed as a postdoctoral fellow of the Research Foundation – Flanders on her new research project on Cistercian nuns and the cura monialium in the southern Low Countries, 1150-1275.
The enfeoffment of the county of Hainaut to the Church of Liege (1071) is known through a number of documents, among which a notitia, the interest and the potential of which do not seem to have been fully appreciated yet. The present study aims at rehabilitating this notitia while offering a new critical edition of it.
Jean-Louis Kupper – Corresponding member of the Institut de France. Member of the Académie royale de Belgique. Emeritus professor of the Université de Liège. Deputy secretary-treasurer of the Commission royale d’Histoire.
This contribution aims to shed light on the statutes of the chapter of Saint Pharahild in Ghent, from the Middle Ages to the end of the Ancien Régime. Notwithstanding the minor importance of this religious institution on the Flemish canonical scene, an interesting set of documents was preserved. Five subsequent versions of the internal regulations, dating from 1225 to 1788 offer a unique picture of the organization and functioning of the institution. As a whole, they reflect the evolutions and adaptations to which the chapter was submitted, in an attempt to adjust to ever changing circumstances and to overcome periods of crisis. Furthermore, in each version of the statutes, the Institutio canonicorum, the Aachen rule dating from the ninth century, is strongly embedded. This rule not only established the principles of canonical life; it shaped its features for centuries. The statutes of the chapter of Saint Pharahild thus show a great concern for the protection of tradition and the image of the chapter, as well as actual interference – often compelled by events or circumstances – to serve this purpose.
Annelies Somers (Bruges, 1984) obtained a Master’s degree in history at Ghent University in 2006. She completed the Advanced Master in Archival Science at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel in 2008. She finished a PhD on the secular clergy, funded by the Belgian Science Policy Office in collaboration with Ghent University and the Ghent State Archives. More particularly, her research concerned the church of Saint Nicolas and the chapter of Saint Pharahild in Ghent (1384-1614).
Over the last thirty years, a growing number of scholars have been studying the settlement and activities of Lombard traders north of the Alps. Yet, no systematic study of the relations between these moneylenders and the bishopric of Liège has been undertaken to this day. In this very wealthy and prestigious bishopric, the prince-bishops nevertheless maintained frequent and intense contacts with those financiers, whether these contacts were profitable or not. In this context, we will examine the attitude of the successive bishops towards the practice of usury. We will focus on Adolphe de Waldeck, who expelled the Lombards in 1302, and on the motives behind this significant gesture. Our starting point is an act dating from November 7, 1303. Hereby, two brothers of the Abellonei family, coming from Asti and settled in Liège, authorized their brothers who had remained in Italy to perform a whole series of financial transactions. By studying this act, we want to explore the status of the Lombard moneylenders in Liège at the end of the thirteenth and the beginning of the fourteenth centuries.
Antoine Bonnivert is a Junior researcher (aspirant FRS-FNRS) at the Université libre de Bruxelles. He started his PhD research in medieval history in 2014 under the supervision of Professor Alexis Wilkin. His thesis is entitled “Crosier, Sword and Bread: Bishops and Access to Food in the Rheno-Mosan Area (13th-15th Centuries)”. It aims to study the measures undertaken by successive bishops of Liège, Utrecht, and Cologne in order to regulate the access to food of their bishopric’s population.
This contribution aims to shed new light on the Brabantine revolt of 1488-1489 against Maximilian of Austria, regent of the Burgundian Netherlands. Whereas former studies have primarily focused on the war-efforts and the military course of the conflict, this article addresses the dialogue that was ensued between the involved parties in these turbulent years. The four edited documents in attachment illustrate how Maximilian, his entourage, the deputies of the Estates General and the insurgents diverted, influenced and sometimes intentionally suppressed deliberations to increase their impact on the conflict. A thorough analysis of these texts offers explanations for the failure of the peace negotiations with the insurgents and makes it possible to study the mediating role of the deputies of the Estates General during the conflict. In addition, the article discusses the arguments that were employed to influence the acts of other parties, next to illustrating that both Maximilian’s entourage and the insurgents sometimes avoided and restrained dialogue in order to secure their own policy.
Valerie Vrancken works as a researcher at the University of Leuven (KU Leuven). Within the framework of the IAP-project “City and Society in the Low Countries” (P7/26), she is currently preparing a doctoral dissertation on political culture in late medieval Brabant and the Inauguration Charters of the Brabantine dukes in particular. She obtained a Master’s degree in history at the KU Leuven in 2012 with a dissertation on the Brussels revolt against Maximilian of Austria (1488-1489).
Nicolas Schroeder & Alexis Wilkin, Documents de gestion inédits provenant de l’abbaye de Stavelot-Malmedy et concernant les domaines de Lantremange, Jenneret et Louveigné (xe-xiie siècle) (p. 5-48)
Four estate records from the abbey of Stavelot-Malmedy and concerning the estates of Lantremange, Jenneret and Louveigné (Belgium, Province de Liège) are introduced and edited. The introduction gives information about the textual transmission of the documents. Although dating remains uncertain, a relative chronology is given, which suggests that the documents were written at different moments between the 10th and the end of the 12th century. The historiographic and thematic framing of the edited evidence contributes to develop a new understanding of monastic estates and economy in Lotharingia, from the Carolingian period to the high Middle Ages. The organisation of Stavelot-Malmedy’s estates, the importance of writing in their management and the role of manorial officers are also considered.
The office of clerc-juré (sworn clerk) first appeared in the Duchy of Luxembourg either at the end of the 14th century or the start of the 15th. Its role in the 16th century, can be understood thanks to the 1529 instructions issued by the Chambre des Comptes de Bruxelles (Brussels Finance Court) to the holder of the post in the capital, to various provisions of the Arlon practice of 1532 and to the account of the mission in the Duchy led by two officers of the Finance Court in 1546. The latter raises various issues relating to the way the documents were kept as well as instances of allegiance to collectors or provost marshals. This same situation significantly damaged the credibility of the certifications put in place for the Principality’s or Offices of Justice’s receipts and expenses. The role of the clercs-jurés (sworn clerks) in the authentication of the documents, or even in the translation of the same, is also significant. In the absence of a prosopographic study of this material, we do nevertheless have access to information concerning some individuals that shows that many agents belonged to professional dynasties.
The court ordinance of June 21, 1517 was drafted when the court of Charles V was preparing itself for the journey to Spain. Compared with the previous ordinance of October 25, 1515 (valid as from January 1, 1516), this new document marks a significant change in de organization of the Burgundian court. The service in terms, seen by Werner Paravicini as one of the most distinguishing features of the Burgundian court, was abolished. The number of courtiers present at any given time grew considerably, while the total number of people that could call itself a member of the court - at least during a few months of the year - strongly diminished. This document, often neglected, shows how the court in Brussels was trying to adapt itself to the Spanish inheritance. It proves that a real shift took place within the character and the structure of the court, a clear break that is easily disregarded because all departments and functions retained their former designations. The new ordinance made it much more difficult for the new Burgundian court of Charles V to reflect all territories under his sovereignty. This may explain the strained relationship of the court with the Spanish aristocracy in the near future. The court ordinance of 1517 is a bureaucratic working document, written in several hands, with erasions and additions. The names of some of the functionaries are still left open, to be added later. In this first complete edition of the court ordinance of 1517, efforts have been made to identify as many names as possible of the functionaries who are mentioned in the document.
Besides the publication of a new correspondence between Navarrian mercers frequenting the fairs of Castile and big international merchants living in the Netherlands, the authors study in the introduction to these letters many aspects of the personal and commercial links between this province and the kingdom of Castile. First, they are interested in the merchants established in Antwerp (emigrated from Bearn, Castile and the Basque country), in their interrelations, in their links with their homeland of origin as well as in their strategy of upward social mobility in their new country. The small mercers, without comparable size, turn to their protection, to their financing and to their mediation to amplify their field activity, and imbricate by this way big trade with retail trade, what entails disappointments and conflicts. The economic aspects of these exchanges are also approached: goods, routes, fairs system, credit and foreign exchange. Moreover, published letters allow a fine analysis of circumstances and of the impact of political decisions on the commercial and private life of the actors, as well as on their mental universe, and give a very alive picture of all of these elements.