COMMUNE, in Medieval History

kômˈyoon, in medieval history, collective institution that developed in continental Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire. Because of the importance of the commune in municipal government, the term is also used to denote a town itself to which a charter of liberties was granted by the sovereign or feudal overlord. Although in most cases the development of communes was inextricably connected with that of the cities, there were rural communes, notably in France and England, that were formed to protect the common interests of villagers.

Development

To build defenses, regulate and improve trade, raise taxes, and maintain order, organization of an urban area was necessary. The earliest attempts at united action of the burghers involved the forming of associations in which the burghers swore an oath binding themselves together in a personal bond of mutual support and defense. The communes grew in power and, as autonomous corporate entities, became extremely influential in organizing city government. By the late 12th cent., when cities were well established, all who chose to live in them had to take an oath acknowledging the authority of the communes.

Because the town was located on land belonging to a king or emperor (see feudalism), the town owed allegiance to its lord and paid him tribute and, in wartime, service or money payment. Suzerains often favored the communes as sources of wealth and confirmed their rights in liberal charters. Disputes, nevertheless, frequently arose between communes and their overlords. In the struggle between kings and nobles, the kings usually strengthened the communes and sought alliances with them. However, in the 16th and 17th cent., when European states (notably France and Spain) became centralized, the privileges of the communes were gradually withdrawn.

The extent of their liberties and the details of their organization varied widely. A common feature was the elected council. The magistrates were usually called consoli, podestàs, and capitouls in Italy and S France, échevins and jurés in N France and the Low Countries, Senatoren and Ratsherren in Germany. Corporations and guilds gained a prominent share in the government. Militia insured the defense.

Important Communes

The earliest communes arose in N and central Italy. In the struggle between emperors and popes, the communes forming the Lombard League gained a great deal of independence and became almost synonymous with the cities themselves. In the 14th cent., however, the communes were usurped by local tyrants. The commune of Rome was established by Arnold of Brescia in 1144. In the Low Countries, e.g., in Flanders, communes arose very early and enjoyed very wide privileges. In S France, Avignon, Arles, and Toulouse were outstanding examples of self-governed communes, as Barcelona was in Spain. In Germany, cities such as Frankfurt, Cologne, Nuremberg, Augsburg, and Lübeck became republics immediately subject to the emperor (imperial and free imperial cities). Others, such as Magdeburg, held charters that became models for numerous towns in N Germany, Bohemia, and Moravia.

Bibliography

See W. F. T. Butler, The Lombard Communes (1906, repr. 1969); H. Pirenne, Medieval Cities (tr. 1925, repr. 1969); M. V. Clarke, The Medieval City State (1926, repr. 1966); J. H. Mundy and P. Riesenberg, The Medieval Town (1959).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...AND THE WORLD ESSAYS IN MEDIEVAL HISTORY IN HONOUR OF BARBARA HARVEY...cloister and the world: essays in medieval history in honour of Barbara Harvey/edited...DIANA GREENWAY, Reader in Medieval History at the Institute of Historical...
ESSAYS IN MEDIEVAL HISTORY ESSAYS IN MEDIEVAL HISTORY PRESENTED TO THOMAS FREDERICK TOUT EDITED BY A...NORMANDY, 1420-1422 By W. T. WAUGH, Professor of Medieval History in McGill University; formerly Jones Fellow and Bishop...
...1. Literature, Medieval--History and criticism. 2...criticism. 3. Love in literature. 4...Their depiction of medieval marriage thereby...development of the history of women, Barbara...the complex ways in which women accommodated...
...different. So it was in every instance connected...different members of the Commune, the storming of...appeared on the page of history. PARIS, August...Sitting of the Commune -- Official Circular...Speech of M. Thiers in the Assembly...Department -- His History -- Issy summoned...
...Studies in Medieval History presented...dispute", in Medieval Legal Records in Memory of...in British History , ed. J...Holdsworth , History of English...Courts of Medieval England...rights to land in the early...
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...thereby illuminating not only the churchs history, but the historical transition from medieval to modern society as well. Noting that...feature the episcopal office prominently in the origins of the commune only to have the bishop disappear in its...
...C. H. Lawrence, Medieval Monasticism (New...as Mother. Studies in the Spirituality...C. Dereine, `Vie commune, regle de saint Augustin...twelfth century, in the `First Parable...of life as a late medieval genre, Medieval Studies...the Church through history; Hugh of Saint-Victor...
...Peter Denley. Commune and Studio in Late Medieval and Renaissance...institutional history of the University...explored. The history of the University of Siena in these 150...tidbits as the Commune of Siena...Sapienza in 1388, rather...institutional history. He raises...
...the semantic links between them in the medieval period, cannot be justified. If the new...be seen that Levy was basically correct in his contention that the source of the...fole vye, baude, putere, ... (p. 332); commune baude ou putere (p. 337); comunes baudes...
...stage in their history the Waldensians...Pope Lucius III in 1184, whose...guided by a commune that would choose...achieved by any medievalist in the twentieth...An economic history of medieval Europe . New...communities in Western Europe...
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...Press, 1987) and |Cities of God: the Italian Communes at War in Studies in Church History 20: The Church and War, ed. W.J. Sheils (Basil...Communities of Saint Martin: Legend and Ritual in Medieval Tours (Cornell University Press, 1991); Miri...
...building--played out in a typical medieval Italian commune. Mills in the Medieval Economy. England 1300-1540 by John Langdon (Oxford...95 amp;#91;pounds sterling amp;#93;) details the history of the Valois dynasty, which ruled France between...
...Visitors to a museum of medieval torture may miss the point: these methods are still in use. by Charles Glass...Florence and Siena. The commune (council) permits no cars...that were familiar. Not from history, but from the present...
...Towns, Commerce and Crafts 1086-1348 (Addison Wesley Longman, 1995). Emma Mason is Honorary Research Fellow in Medieval History at Birkbeck College, London, and the author of Westminster Abbey and its People c.1050-c.1216 (Boydell, 1996).
...begun, the longest trial in English legal history concluded with a judgment against David...crusaders, and though it ultimately succeeded in obtaining a token judgment of forty thousand...Alcott created Fruitlands, the meat-free commune in nineteenth-century Massachusetts that...
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...watching a lot of cricket, studying medieval history at Leicester University and freelancing...was art director of Malings Pottery in Newcastle for more than 30 years...and zoo animals. Finally, the Paris Commune put Leonies husband on their death...
...Cumbria, where it is rumoured a commune of womenlives. Ostensibly all...tosuggest that if they succeeded in their revolution, they would...at teaching basic skills and history to children who havemissed out...era and plays truant to read medieval history andpolitical philosophy...
...linked with the sea and studded by enchanting medieval towns where time stands still, it has a history as long as time; from the megoliths of Carnac...Explore the origins of Impressionist painting in delightful Pont-Aven and marvel at some of...
...an important Roman military city, an independent commune and a dominion of Florence. The city reached its...constructed. Every year on the penultimate Sunday in June, Arezzos medieval history is revived with the Giostra del Saracino (Joust...
...satanist who claimed he could commune with the devil in druginduced trances. He went on...corridors in an area of London full of medieval resonances, was perfect for the...his naked wife up in a cupboard. History does not relate how or why - but...
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encyclopedia articles on: Commune in Medieval History  - 13 results

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COMMUNE , in medieval history kom yoon, in medieval history, collective...developed in continental...importance of the commune in municipal...numerous towns in N Germany...The Lombard Communes (1906, repr...Pirenne, Medieval Cities...
...universal and unifying institution. While some independence from feudal rule was gained by the rising towns (see commune , in medieval history), their system of guilds perpetuated the Christian and medieval spirit of economic life, which stressed...
...economic and social system of medieval Europe under which peasants...Fr. seigneur ) of an estate in return for fixed dues in kind...be only part of an estate. History Local manorial institutions...through the Middle Ages (see commune ). In Spain it was soon modified...
...much of the later history of Italy and of...of the popes. Medieval Italy In the divisions...the city (see commune and city-state...Society and Politics in Medieval Italy (1973...see B. King, A History of Italian Unity...
...art. Among the other numerous medieval and Renaissance palaces, the...Rucellai deserve special mention. History Florence was the site of...the site of the Roman Forum). In the 5th and 6th cent. a.d. the...Lombards. It became an autonomous commune in the 12th cent. In the 13th...
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