Marriage Alliance in Late Medieval Florence, Volume 114

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Harvard University Press, 1994 - Family & Relationships - 458 pages

How did propertied families in late medieval and early modern Florence maintain their power and affluence while equally important clans elsewhere were fatally undermined by the growth of commerce and personal freedom, and the consequences of the Plague? Drawing on a vast array of archival research--from letters and memoirs to fiscal declarations to records of the Dowry Fund, Anthony Molho suggests that the answer is found in the twin institutions of arranged marriage and the dowry.

Molho focuses on the relations between Florentine families of this period and demonstrates that the links among families--created by arranged marriages within a narrow and well-defined social class, a system of dowries that was a combination of speculation and manipulation, and an entrenched memory of these processes--account for the resilience of this ruling class. The individuals or single families whose records Molho has scrutinized, as well as his analysis of several thousand marriages over nearly a century and a half, illuminate a culture that consistently and relentlessly subordinated individual goals and preferences to larger and deeper concerns. The book combines the application of quantitative methods and close reading of contemporary texts in order to gain new insights into the history of Florence in the late Middle Ages.

 

Contents

The Monte delle Doti
27
Investors and Beneficiaries
80
Registrations in the Monte
128
Norms and Numbers
181
Marriages in the Ruling Class
233
Aristocratization Dowries and Endogamy
298
Sources
351
The libri grandi of the Monte delle doti
354
The Catasto of 1480
361
The Florentine Population According to
411
Guicciardini and Martelli Marriages
427
Manuscript Sources and Their Abbreviations
433
Index
445
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About the author (1994)

Anthony Molho is Associate Professor of History, Brown University.

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