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Title The key to power? : the culture of access in princely courts, 1400-1750 / edited by Dries Raeymaekers and Sebastiaan Derks
Published Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2016]

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 352 pages) : illustrations
Series Rulers & elites : comparative studies in governance ; volume 8
Rulers & elites ; v. 8.
Contents Introduction: Repertoires of access in princely courts / Dries Raeymaekers and Sebastiaan Derks -- Part 1. Articulating access -- Access to the prince's court in late medieval Paris / Florence Berland -- The court on the move : ceremonial entries, gift-giving and access to the monarch in France, c. 1440-c. 1570 / Neil Murphy -- Deceptive familiarity : European perceptions of access at the Mughal court / Audrey Truschke -- Part 2. Regulating access -- Accessing the shadow of God : spatial and performative ceremonial at the Ottoman court / Michael Talbot -- Access at the court of the Austrian Habsburg dynasty (mid-sixteenth to mid-eighteenth century) : a highway from presence to politics? / Mark Hengerer -- Part 3. Monopolizing access -- Holders of the keys : the Grand Chamberlain, the Grand Equerry and monopolies of access at the early modern French court / Jonathan Spangler -- Patronage, friendship and the politics of access : the role of the early modern favourite revisited / Ronald G. Asch -- The struggle for access : participation and distance during a royal Swedish minority / Fabian Persson -- Part 4. Visualizing access -- Meeting the prince between the city and the family : the resignification of Castello San Giorgio in Mantua (fourteenth-sixteenth centuries) / Christina Antenhofer -- Forging dynasty : the politics of dynastic affinity in Burgundian-Habsburg birth and baptism ceremonial (1430-1505) / Steven Thiry
Summary "Proximity to the monarch was a vital asset in the struggle for power and influence in medieval and early modern courts. The concept of 'access to the ruler' has therefore grown into a dominant theme in scholarship on pre-modern dynasties. Still, many questions remain concerning the mechanisms of access and their impact on politics. Bringing together new research on European and Asian cases, the ten chapters in this volume focus on the ways in which 'access' was articulated, regulated, negotiated, and performed. By taking into account the full complexity of hierarchies, ceremonial rites, spaces and artefacts that characterized the dynastic court, The Key to Power? forces us to rethink power relations in the late medieval and early modern world. Contributors are: Christina Antenhofer, Ronald G. Asch, Florence Berland, Mark Hengerer, Neil Murphy, Fabian Persson, Jonathan Spangler, Michael Talbot, Steven Thiry, and Audrey Truschke"--Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on August 04, 2016)
Subject Political culture -- Europe -- History
Power (Social sciences) -- Europe -- History
Political culture -- Asia -- History
Power (Social sciences) -- Asia -- History
HISTORY -- Europe -- Western.
Courts and courtiers
Kings and rulers
Political culture
Power (Social sciences)
SUBJECT Europe -- History -- 1492-1648. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85045693
Europe -- History -- 1648-1789. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85045700
Europe -- Court and courtiers -- History
Europe -- Kings and rulers -- History
Asia -- Court and courtiers -- History
Asia -- Kings and rulers -- History
Subject Asia
Europe
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Raeymaekers, Dries, editor.
Derks, Sebastiaan, editor.
ESF Research Networking Programme.
LC no. 2016027987
ISBN 9789004304246
900430424X