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Making archives in early modern Europe : proof, information and political record-keeping, 1400-1700

Title
Making archives in early modern Europe : proof, information and political record-keeping, 1400-1700 / Randolph C. Head.
ISBN
9781108473781
1108473784
9781108462525
1108462529
Publication
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Copyright Notice Date
©2019
Physical Description
xvii, 348 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Summary
European states were overwhelmed with information around 1500. Their agents sought to organize their overflowing archives to provide trustworthy evidence and comprehensive knowledge that was useful in the everyday exercise of power. This detailed comparative study explores cases from Lisbon to Vienna to Berlin in order to understand how changing information technologies and ambitious programs of state-building challenged record-keepers to find new ways to organize and access the information in their archives. From the intriguing details of how clerks invented new ways to index and catalog the expanding world to the evolution of new perspectives on knowledge and power among philologists and historians, this book provides illuminating vignettes and revealing comparisons about a core technology of governance in early modern Europe. Enhanced by perspectives from the history of knowledge and from archival science, this wide-ranging study explores the potential and the limitations of knowledge management as media technologies evolved.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
September 16, 2019
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction: Records, tools and archives in Europe to 1700
Archival history: Literature and outlook
PART I: The Work of Records (1200- )
Probative objects and Scholastic tools in the High Middle Ages
A late medieval chancellery and its books: Lisbon, 1460-1560
Keeping and organizing information from the Middle Ages to the 16th Century
Information management in early modern Innsbruck, 1490-1530
Part II: The Challenges of Accumulation (1400- )
The accumulation of records and the evolution of inventories
Early modern inventories: Habsburg Austria and Würzburg
Classification: The architecture of knowledge and the placement of records
The formal logic of classification: Topography and taxonomy in Swiss urban records, 1500-1700
Part III: Comprehensive visions and differentiating practices (1550- )
Evolving expectations about archives, 1540-1650
Registries: Tracking the business of governance
Part IV: Rethinking records and state archives (1550- )
Understanding records: New perspectives and new readings after 1550
New disciplines of authenticity and authority: Mabillon's diplomatics and the ius archivi
Conclusion: The era of chancellery books and beyond.
Citation

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