Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)

<p class="ABSTRACT">This paper studies the effects of legal violence on political negotiation carried out by public institutions to solve litigation regarding economic matters in mediterranean Europe at the beginning of the early modern age. Different legal frameworks and economic go...

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Main Author: Jose Antonio MATEOS ROYO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2019-06-01
Series:Studia Historica: Historia Moderna
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/Studia_Historica/article/view/17760
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spelling doaj-ae48ce369aec4d24bd365503676eb0802020-11-25T02:23:46ZengEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaStudia Historica: Historia Moderna0213-20792386-38892019-06-0141129132210.14201/shhmo201941129132217268Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)Jose Antonio MATEOS ROYO0Universidad de Zaragoza<p class="ABSTRACT">This paper studies the effects of legal violence on political negotiation carried out by public institutions to solve litigation regarding economic matters in mediterranean Europe at the beginning of the early modern age. Different legal frameworks and economic goals, as well as mistrust between public institutions governing Catalonia and Aragon hampered the resolution of two legal disputes concerning public debt. As a result, Catalan retaliation on Aragonese trade did persit during long time. In the first case, the Spanish monarchy imposed in 1499 a political mediation and solution. In the second, damage of this legal violence to regional trade weakened the Aragonese bargaining power: the Diputación or permanent government accepted in 1532 the Catalan conditions to suppress retaliation. These practical considerations ruled proposals of mutual tariff reductions coming from the Aragonese Parliament since 1537, finally approved by the Catalan Parliament in 1564, in order to promote trade between both territories. </p>https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/Studia_Historica/article/view/17760comercio, deuda censal, violencia legal, instituciones públicas, cataluña, aragón, siglo xvi
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jose Antonio MATEOS ROYO
spellingShingle Jose Antonio MATEOS ROYO
Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
Studia Historica: Historia Moderna
comercio, deuda censal, violencia legal, instituciones públicas, cataluña, aragón, siglo xvi
author_facet Jose Antonio MATEOS ROYO
author_sort Jose Antonio MATEOS ROYO
title Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
title_short Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
title_full Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
title_fullStr Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
title_full_unstemmed Trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the Catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
title_sort trade, credit debt and legal violence: aragonese public institutions and the catalan retaliations (1484-1564)
publisher Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
series Studia Historica: Historia Moderna
issn 0213-2079
2386-3889
publishDate 2019-06-01
description <p class="ABSTRACT">This paper studies the effects of legal violence on political negotiation carried out by public institutions to solve litigation regarding economic matters in mediterranean Europe at the beginning of the early modern age. Different legal frameworks and economic goals, as well as mistrust between public institutions governing Catalonia and Aragon hampered the resolution of two legal disputes concerning public debt. As a result, Catalan retaliation on Aragonese trade did persit during long time. In the first case, the Spanish monarchy imposed in 1499 a political mediation and solution. In the second, damage of this legal violence to regional trade weakened the Aragonese bargaining power: the Diputación or permanent government accepted in 1532 the Catalan conditions to suppress retaliation. These practical considerations ruled proposals of mutual tariff reductions coming from the Aragonese Parliament since 1537, finally approved by the Catalan Parliament in 1564, in order to promote trade between both territories. </p>
topic comercio, deuda censal, violencia legal, instituciones públicas, cataluña, aragón, siglo xvi
url https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/Studia_Historica/article/view/17760
work_keys_str_mv AT joseantoniomateosroyo tradecreditdebtandlegalviolencearagonesepublicinstitutionsandthecatalanretaliations14841564
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