Article: Nobles, patricians and officers: the making of a regional political elite in late medieval Flanders.

In the county of Flanders the late medieval period was an era of important social mobility among the dominant classes, as a result of the formation process of the Burgundian state. I argue that in the course of the later Middle Ages, and more specifically in the period of Burgundian domination (1384-1492), a regional political elite was made, as much as it made itself, in the county of Flanders, to paraphrase E. P. Thompson. (1) Significant groups of the lower and higher nobility, the urban and rural dominant classes who did not belong to the nobility and the new social group of princely officers, itself made up of noble and non-noble elements, gradually integrated ...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles:

 
 
Newsweek Harper's Magazine The Washington Post Chicago Tribune Crain's Chicago Business PRNewswire Pediatric News The Nation Advertising Age The Economist (US) A FREE trial gives you access to over 80 million articles! Access over 6,500 publications with a FREE trial!