Criminal Justice and Peace-making in Early Modern Italy : Governing Hatred, c.1500-c.1700 (Law, Peace, and Justice in Medieval and Early Modern Europe)

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Criminal Justice and Peace-making in Early Modern Italy : Governing Hatred, c.1500-c.1700 (Law, Peace, and Justice in Medieval and Early Modern Europe)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 426 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781914967184
  • DDC分類 340.09450903

Full Description

An exceptional study of private peace pacts in early modern Italy that challenges earlier notions of the place of these private agreements in the development of the courts and state.

Private settlements were among the most prominent yet least conspicuous aspects of justice in early modern Europe. Traditionally seen as incompatible with our notions of judicial modernity, these settlements reflected a deeply ingrained culture of negotiation and transaction-one that often viewed resolution by litigation with extreme scepticism. However, rather than existing in opposition to sovereign justice, this practice of private settlement coexisted with the implacable authority of rulers who alternated between exemplary punishments and royal pardons to maintain social harmony.

In this English translation of his seminal study, Governare l'odio. Pace e giustizia criminale nell'Italia moderna (secoli XVI-XVII), Paolo Broggio shows how private settlements were far from being a purely benevolent mechanism of reconciliation, often carrying unsettling similarities to institutional coercion and even acts of revenge. Judicial authorities are revealed as not only tolerating these private agreements but shown to have actively facilitated and manipulated them as a means of exerting their control within a community. Religious justifications further lent these agreements a veneer of moral obligation, masking the underlying pressures at play. Through detailed examples such as proceedings in the Papal States, Broggio explores how courts encouraged settlements not only to manage caseloads but to also reinforce existing social hierarchies and power structures.

This expansive study re-examines the role of peace settlements in early modern justice, revealing them as a fundamental yet coercive tool of governance rather than a simple, private, alternative to judicial authority.

Contents

Introduction

1. Vendetta, Justice, Peace: Definitions and Contextualisations
2. Governing Violence and Conflict in the Papal States
3. Negotiated Justice and Centre-Periphery Relations
4. A European Culture of Social Containment through Conciliation
5. The Peace of Christians

Conclusions
Bibliography
Index

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