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To browse Academia. The aim of the book is to contribute to the discussion about medieval urbanisation of Central and Eastern Europe, and the transformation of lifestyle that took place in the 12th—14th centuries. It was expressed in a new organisation of the urban space, emergence of private plots of land and new living conditions.
The starting point for the present analysis is a thesis that the urban living conditions were special, different from the conventions typical of rural areas and elite communities.
Life in urban areas went on in separate but overlapping public and private spaces. Both spheres were necessary to the urban lifestyle, reconciling communal interests, economic objectives and private life.
The breakthrough was based on the adoption of a new model of the economy and its driving force was the influx of settlers from Western Europe. The transformation of Central European proto-towns into communal towns was a process of their adaptation to new economic challenges. The urban law and structure, too, were adapted to them. Partsch from Processes of Cultural Exchange in Central Europe, —, eds. Monograph: The book opens a little-explored topic in Czech historiography: the beginnings of institutionalized social control in late medieval towns.
The presented interpretation of urban riots in the 15th and 16th centuries combines the approaches of modern urban historiography with extensive archival heuristics. A fundamental transformation of political communication is characterized in the book. The authors have formulated a hypothesis about a change in the policy of town councils. The aldermen began to replace negotiating a compromise with major guilds by controlling the entire town space.