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IMC 2022: Sessions

Session 336: Diplomatic Clauses and Political Borders in Medieval Iberia, III: Agrarian Contracts in the Kingdom of Castile, 15th-16th Centuries

Monday 4 July 2022, 16.30-18.00

Sponsor:Agencia Estatal de Investigación (AEI) Proyecto 'Notariado y construcción social de la realidad. Hacia una codificación del documento notarials, siglos XII-XVII', Commission Internationale de Diplomatique
Organiser:Pilar Ostos Salcedo, Departamento de Historia Medieval y Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas, Universidad de Sevilla
Moderator/Chair:Cristina Cunha, Departamento de História e de Estudos Políticos e Internacionais, Universidade do Porto
Paper 336-aAgrarian Contracts in Rural Castile, 15th-16th Centuries: The Case of Guadalajara
(Language: Español)
José Miguel López Villalba, Departamento de Historia Medieval y Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, Madrid
Index terms: Charters and Diplomatics, Economics - Rural
Paper 336-bLong-Term Notarial Contracts of Land Lease in the Context of 15th-Century Economic Growth
(Language: Español)
Néstor Vigil Montes, Centro Interdisciplinar de História, Culturas e Sociedades, Universidade de Évora
Index terms: Charters and Diplomatics, Economics - Rural
Paper 336-cNotarial Contracts of Censo consignativo in a Nunnery from the Kingdom of Sevilla: From the Medieval Inheritance to the 16th Century
(Language: Español)
Federico Ortega Flores, Departamento de Historia Medieval y Ciencias y Técnicas Historiográficas, Universidad de Sevilla
Index terms: Charters and Diplomatics, Economics - Rural
Abstract

This is the third session in a strand that considers various aspects of notarial diplomatic in the Iberian kingdoms. This session examines the ways in which late medieval notaries public wrote long-term notarial contracts of land lease. The first paper considers the case of Guadalajara. The second paper analyses the different ways in which the notaries of the 15th century expressed models of agrarian contracts adapted to different spaces in the kingdom of Castile. The third paper focused on a Sevillian nunnery, explores the survival of medieval formularies in 16th century charters.