FONTES, João Luís, ANDRADE, Maria Filomena, PIRES, Natália Albino, SOUSA, Teresa Faria de (coord.), Dom Lourenço Vicente. Percursos de um Arcebispo em tempos de mudança, Centro de Estudos Históricos da Lourinhã / Município da Lourinhã, , 2023
FONTES, João Luís, ANDRADE, Maria Filomena, PIRES, Natália Albino, SOUSA, Teresa Faria de (coord.... more FONTES, João Luís, ANDRADE, Maria Filomena, PIRES, Natália Albino, SOUSA, Teresa Faria de (coord.), Dom Lourenço Vicente. Percursos de um Arcebispo em tempos de mudança, Centro de Estudos Históricos da Lourinhã / Município da Lourinhã, 2023.
João Luís FONTES, Maria Filomena ANDRADE, Natália Albino PIRES, Teresa Faria de SOUSA, Dom Lourenço Vicente. Percursos em torno de um Arcebispo em tempos de mudança, 2023
in FRANÇA, Susani S. L.; FRANÇA, Jean M. C.; GONÇALVES, Rafael Afonso (orgs), Viver e conviver n... more in FRANÇA, Susani S. L.; FRANÇA, Jean M. C.; GONÇALVES, Rafael Afonso (orgs), Viver e conviver nas duas margens do Atlântico (Séculos XIII-XIX), São Carlos: EDUFSCAR, 393-412.
Woodacre, Elena; Dean, Lucinda H. S.; Jones, Chris; Martin, Russel E.; Rohr, Zita Eva (eds), The Routledge History of Monarchy, , The Routledge History of Monarchy, Reino Unido: Routledge, 70-88., 2019
SILVA, Manuela Santos. 2019. "Regal power and the royal family in a thirteenth-century Iberian le... more SILVA, Manuela Santos. 2019. "Regal power and the royal family in a thirteenth-century Iberian legislative programme". In Woodacre, Elena; Dean, Lucinda H. S.; Jones, Chris; Martin, Russel E.; Rohr, Zita Eva (eds), The Routledge History of Monarchy, Reino Unido: Routledge (A), 70-88.
Acoger, abastecer y financiar la corte: las relaciones entre las Cortes Ibéricas y las sociedades urbanas a finales de la Edad Media / Alexandra Beauchamp (ed. lit.), 2019, ISBN 978-84-9134-483-4, págs. 121-132, 2019
ITINERANCIA Y PASO POR LAS CIUDADES DE LA CORTE REAL PORTUGUESA EN LA BAJA EDAD MEDIA. REINADOS D... more ITINERANCIA Y PASO POR LAS CIUDADES DE LA CORTE REAL PORTUGUESA EN LA BAJA EDAD MEDIA. REINADOS DE FERNANDO I Y JUAN I (1367-1433)
Earenfight, Theresa (ed), Royal and Elite Households in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. More than Just a Castle, 2018
SILVA, Manuela Santos, 2018. “The Portuguese Household of an English Queen: Sources, Purposes, So... more SILVA, Manuela Santos, 2018. “The Portuguese Household of an English Queen: Sources, Purposes, Social Meaning” in Earenfight, Theresa (ed), Royal and Elite Households in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. More than Just a Castle, Leiden-Boston: Brill (A), pp.271-287. Part of ISBN: 9789004360761
FONTES, João Luís, ANDRADE, Maria Filomena, PIRES, Natália Albino, SOUSA, Teresa Faria de (coord.), Dom Lourenço Vicente. Percursos de um Arcebispo em tempos de mudança, Centro de Estudos Históricos da Lourinhã / Município da Lourinhã, , 2023
FONTES, João Luís, ANDRADE, Maria Filomena, PIRES, Natália Albino, SOUSA, Teresa Faria de (coord.... more FONTES, João Luís, ANDRADE, Maria Filomena, PIRES, Natália Albino, SOUSA, Teresa Faria de (coord.), Dom Lourenço Vicente. Percursos de um Arcebispo em tempos de mudança, Centro de Estudos Históricos da Lourinhã / Município da Lourinhã, 2023.
João Luís FONTES, Maria Filomena ANDRADE, Natália Albino PIRES, Teresa Faria de SOUSA, Dom Lourenço Vicente. Percursos em torno de um Arcebispo em tempos de mudança, 2023
in FRANÇA, Susani S. L.; FRANÇA, Jean M. C.; GONÇALVES, Rafael Afonso (orgs), Viver e conviver n... more in FRANÇA, Susani S. L.; FRANÇA, Jean M. C.; GONÇALVES, Rafael Afonso (orgs), Viver e conviver nas duas margens do Atlântico (Séculos XIII-XIX), São Carlos: EDUFSCAR, 393-412.
Woodacre, Elena; Dean, Lucinda H. S.; Jones, Chris; Martin, Russel E.; Rohr, Zita Eva (eds), The Routledge History of Monarchy, , The Routledge History of Monarchy, Reino Unido: Routledge, 70-88., 2019
SILVA, Manuela Santos. 2019. "Regal power and the royal family in a thirteenth-century Iberian le... more SILVA, Manuela Santos. 2019. "Regal power and the royal family in a thirteenth-century Iberian legislative programme". In Woodacre, Elena; Dean, Lucinda H. S.; Jones, Chris; Martin, Russel E.; Rohr, Zita Eva (eds), The Routledge History of Monarchy, Reino Unido: Routledge (A), 70-88.
Acoger, abastecer y financiar la corte: las relaciones entre las Cortes Ibéricas y las sociedades urbanas a finales de la Edad Media / Alexandra Beauchamp (ed. lit.), 2019, ISBN 978-84-9134-483-4, págs. 121-132, 2019
ITINERANCIA Y PASO POR LAS CIUDADES DE LA CORTE REAL PORTUGUESA EN LA BAJA EDAD MEDIA. REINADOS D... more ITINERANCIA Y PASO POR LAS CIUDADES DE LA CORTE REAL PORTUGUESA EN LA BAJA EDAD MEDIA. REINADOS DE FERNANDO I Y JUAN I (1367-1433)
Earenfight, Theresa (ed), Royal and Elite Households in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. More than Just a Castle, 2018
SILVA, Manuela Santos, 2018. “The Portuguese Household of an English Queen: Sources, Purposes, So... more SILVA, Manuela Santos, 2018. “The Portuguese Household of an English Queen: Sources, Purposes, Social Meaning” in Earenfight, Theresa (ed), Royal and Elite Households in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. More than Just a Castle, Leiden-Boston: Brill (A), pp.271-287. Part of ISBN: 9789004360761
Com base em algumas informações que, aqui e ali, os cronistas da corte de Avis deixaram escapar a... more Com base em algumas informações que, aqui e ali, os cronistas da corte de Avis deixaram escapar acerca da influência que a rainha Filipa de Lencastre, mulher do rei português João I, exerceu sobre os seus filhos, transmitindo-lhes o orgulho na linhagem Plantageneta da qual descendiam e um certo fascínio sobre “as qualidades dos ingleses”, que todos eles parecem admirar, é já um tema batido considerar que a rainha inglesa de Portugal foi a grande educadora dos seus filhos. Não negando as evidências que apontam nessa direcção, pareceu-nos, porém, interessante, reflectir demoradamente sobre a natureza da educação de que terão sido alvo os seis filhos de D. Filipa e compará-la quer com os indícios que estes nos deixaram na idade adulta, quer com os informes que possuímos sobre a educação da rainha, enquanto jovem aristocrata em Inglaterra.
Petites villes des reines médiévales du Portugal:
identité, fiscalité, juridiction
Au Portuga... more Petites villes des reines médiévales du Portugal:
identité, fiscalité, juridiction
Au Portugal, comme à Léon et à Castille, les reines médiévales reçoivent de ses maris ou de ses beaux-parents des villes qui faisaient partie du patrimoine de la Couronne. Ces villes ne rentraient pas dans le domaine des reines, bien que la juridiction et les droits royaux leur reviennent après la concession royale.
Cette communication cherchera à analyser la relation que s’établissait entre chaque de ces villes et leur seigneur, la reine. Celle-ci exerçait en son propre nom la juridiction sur les gens, de même qui ordonnait la collecte des les rentes et les droits royaux destinés à soutenir sa cour de la reine à l’intérieur de la cour royale. Ces rentes payaient les services et la manutention de dizaines de femmes et d’hommes qui servaient la reine.
Cependant, quelques de ces villes n’ont jamais connu les dames de qui elles dépendaient. Les reines suivaient presque toujours ses maris quand ils voyageaient travers le royaume, devenant ainsi rares les évidences de leur présence en quelques-unes de ses villes, à l’exception de certaines saisons de l’année où elles y séjournaient fréquemment avec sa famille.
Les palais qu’existaient à Sintra et à Aldeia Galega da Merceana, par exemple, étaient beaucoup plus confortable que les châteaux pouvant les accueillir. Ainsi, lorsqu’elles séjournaient dans leurs villes, il ne leur manquait pas une maison correspondant à leur rang.
Pour l’administration de leurs villes, les reines pouvaient compter sur un corps de fonctionnaires habitant en ville ou qui y faisaient des randonnées d’inspection plusieurs fois l’an. Ce groupe de fonctionnaires pouvaient donc parfois rencontrer les officiers du roi qu’y œuvraient aussi au nom de leur maître, notamment pour ce qui était du recrutement militaire des vilains, quelques matières de justice, etc.
Mots clés : reines, identité, fiscalité, juridiction
In Portugal, as in León and Castile, medieval queens received from their husbands or
in-laws towns that were part of the Crown’s possessions. Th ese towns were not permanently
integrated into the queen’s household, although queens were entrusted with
the corresponding jurisdiction and royal rights from the moment of the concession.
Th is paper seeks to analyse the relationship that developed between each of these
towns and their liege, the queen. She exercised jurisdiction over the people in her
own name, and commanded the collection of rents and royal privileges destined to
support the queen’s household within the royal court. Such rents were used to pay for
the service and keeping of dozens of women and men who served the queen.
Some of these towns, however, never sheltered the ladies they were subject to.
Queens nearly always followed their husbands when these travelled through the kingdom;
evidence of their presence in some of their own towns is therefore rare, except for
certain times of the year when queens would frequently stay there with their families.
When staying in their towns, queens did not lack for accommodation suitable to
their station; the palaces that then stood in Sintra and in Aldeia Galega da Merceana,
for instance, were much more comfortable than the castles usually available for their
lodging.
For the administration of their towns, queens could rely on a body of offi cials
who either lived locally or visited the place for supervision several times a year. Th ese
offi cials could sometimes come across the king’s own, who can be found discharging
duties in the name of their lord, especially regarding some matters of justice and the
military recruitment of villeins.
Reina de Portugal entre febrero de 1387 y julio de 1415, la única en origen inglesa, Filipa de La... more Reina de Portugal entre febrero de 1387 y julio de 1415, la única en origen inglesa, Filipa de Lancáster viene siendo considerada desde hace tiempo la responsable indirecta de varios de los cambios, especialmente culturales, que tuvieron lugar en el siglo XV en la corte portuguesa. Con todo, ello se ha basado más en premisas que en la presentación de pruebas cabales que demuestren su autoría o su acción inspiradora en muchas de estas novedades. Una de las facetas menos conocidas de la reina es la espiritual, y las prácticas asociadas a ella, que podría haber transmitido a sus hijos e impuesto en la corte. El estudio de sus orígenes, de su educación y de su ejercicio del oficio de reina ha permitido comprobar algunas de las suposiciones; pero también ha llevado a poner en duda bastantes de las ideas que se le asocian. A partir de alusiones esporádicas, de los testimonios de los cronistas que narraron el reinado de su esposo y de los escritos de su hijo mayor, quien la presentó como p...
This paper will use as its main primary sources, some narratives and other pieces extracted from ... more This paper will use as its main primary sources, some narratives and other pieces extracted from Portuguese Middle Ages " Genealogical Books, aiming to introduce violent characters and situations through some case studies. The goal of our study will be not only to present a spectrum of male behaviour marked by aggression, but also to reflect what attitudes were considered normal in a man, any man, as identity behaviour of virility and which ones transcended this normality and are atypical. For this purpose, we will examine original terminology to find out how these behaviours were seen and judged by their witnesses. This is also a first attempt of using Gender History analyses " perspectives in the study of these very rich medieval sources.
Desde o momento do seu matrimónio, as rainhas de Portugalgozavam de rendas próprias que obtinham ... more Desde o momento do seu matrimónio, as rainhas de Portugalgozavam de rendas próprias que obtinham da aplicação de jurisdição sobre determinadas vilas que pertenciam ao património da coroa. Esses rendimentos sustentavam o guardaroupa da rainha e sobretudo a sua casa, isto é, o conjunto de senhoras e de oficiais que cada rainha juntava em sua volta para o seu serviço e companhia. Ao casar com a filha primogénita do duque inglês de Lancaster, João I, rei de Portugal, preocupou-se de imediato em montar uma casa à sua rainha, dando-lhe para isso meios adequados. Por mérito do rei e da rainha ou da sua administração, o seu reinado significou um período de reformas no funcionamento da casa das rainhas.
“Confrarias Medievais da região de Torres Novas. Os bens e os compromissos.”, Transcrição paleogr... more “Confrarias Medievais da região de Torres Novas. Os bens e os compromissos.”, Transcrição paleográfica de Leonor Damas Lopes, Introdução de Margarida Teodora Trindade, Câmara Municipal de Torres Novas, 2001, por Manuela Santos Silva
The Kingdom of Portugal emerged in the twelfth century as a result of the territorial and politic... more The Kingdom of Portugal emerged in the twelfth century as a result of the territorial and political development of a previous county of the Kingdom of Leon. Since then and until the last decade of the fifteenth century, there were thirteen queens-consorts in this realm. Most of them came from other kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula (table 11.1) and their marriages tended to be a result of war and peace negotiations between Portugal and a neighbor contender or ally. Some of the marriage contracts were settled in battlefields to avoid war; others were negotiated to assure an alliance against a mutual enemy. Even the union between Philippa of Lancaster (queen, 1387–1415) and Joao I of Portugal (king, 1383–1433), which might seem a singular case at first sight, fits entirely in this scenario. Philippa was the daughter of a famous character of the fourteenth-century history of England, John of Gaunt, who called himself “King of Castile and Leon,”1 and claimed the Castilian throne for himself and his wife, Constance of Castile. With this marriage, he wanted to grant the support of his Portuguese son-in-law to his pretensions while Joao I expected to enlarge the boundaries of his kingdom and to secure its autonomy.2
Porque será Isabel, persistentemente, esquecida nas obras de muitos historiadores? Não sendo por ... more Porque será Isabel, persistentemente, esquecida nas obras de muitos historiadores? Não sendo por falta de elementos que permitam opinar sobre a sua educação, sobre os seus interesses, sobre as suas competências, não se entende porque é excluída do grupo familiar a que pertencia, como se o reconhecido ambiente cultural da corte não a tivesse podido tocar! Só o predomínio de ideias pré-concebidas, acerca da impossibilidade de acesso à cultura por parte das mulheres, o pode explicar.
"Filipa de Lencastre. Uma rainha inglesa no Portugal das origens da Expansão (1360-1415)" in Fora... more "Filipa de Lencastre. Uma rainha inglesa no Portugal das origens da Expansão (1360-1415)" in Foral 2014, Alhos Vedros, maio de 2015, nº11, pp.33-39.
CFP for Renaissance Society of America 2018 (NOLA) and International Medieval Congress 2018 (Kala... more CFP for Renaissance Society of America 2018 (NOLA) and International Medieval Congress 2018 (Kalamazoo).
Uploads
Books by Manuela Santos Silva
Essays by Manuela Santos Silva
Part of ISBN: 9789004360761
Part of ISBN: 9789004360761
identité, fiscalité, juridiction
Au Portugal, comme à Léon et à Castille, les reines médiévales reçoivent de ses maris ou de ses beaux-parents des villes qui faisaient partie du patrimoine de la Couronne. Ces villes ne rentraient pas dans le domaine des reines, bien que la juridiction et les droits royaux leur reviennent après la concession royale.
Cette communication cherchera à analyser la relation que s’établissait entre chaque de ces villes et leur seigneur, la reine. Celle-ci exerçait en son propre nom la juridiction sur les gens, de même qui ordonnait la collecte des les rentes et les droits royaux destinés à soutenir sa cour de la reine à l’intérieur de la cour royale. Ces rentes payaient les services et la manutention de dizaines de femmes et d’hommes qui servaient la reine.
Cependant, quelques de ces villes n’ont jamais connu les dames de qui elles dépendaient. Les reines suivaient presque toujours ses maris quand ils voyageaient travers le royaume, devenant ainsi rares les évidences de leur présence en quelques-unes de ses villes, à l’exception de certaines saisons de l’année où elles y séjournaient fréquemment avec sa famille.
Les palais qu’existaient à Sintra et à Aldeia Galega da Merceana, par exemple, étaient beaucoup plus confortable que les châteaux pouvant les accueillir. Ainsi, lorsqu’elles séjournaient dans leurs villes, il ne leur manquait pas une maison correspondant à leur rang.
Pour l’administration de leurs villes, les reines pouvaient compter sur un corps de fonctionnaires habitant en ville ou qui y faisaient des randonnées d’inspection plusieurs fois l’an. Ce groupe de fonctionnaires pouvaient donc parfois rencontrer les officiers du roi qu’y œuvraient aussi au nom de leur maître, notamment pour ce qui était du recrutement militaire des vilains, quelques matières de justice, etc.
Mots clés : reines, identité, fiscalité, juridiction
In Portugal, as in León and Castile, medieval queens received from their husbands or
in-laws towns that were part of the Crown’s possessions. Th ese towns were not permanently
integrated into the queen’s household, although queens were entrusted with
the corresponding jurisdiction and royal rights from the moment of the concession.
Th is paper seeks to analyse the relationship that developed between each of these
towns and their liege, the queen. She exercised jurisdiction over the people in her
own name, and commanded the collection of rents and royal privileges destined to
support the queen’s household within the royal court. Such rents were used to pay for
the service and keeping of dozens of women and men who served the queen.
Some of these towns, however, never sheltered the ladies they were subject to.
Queens nearly always followed their husbands when these travelled through the kingdom;
evidence of their presence in some of their own towns is therefore rare, except for
certain times of the year when queens would frequently stay there with their families.
When staying in their towns, queens did not lack for accommodation suitable to
their station; the palaces that then stood in Sintra and in Aldeia Galega da Merceana,
for instance, were much more comfortable than the castles usually available for their
lodging.
For the administration of their towns, queens could rely on a body of offi cials
who either lived locally or visited the place for supervision several times a year. Th ese
offi cials could sometimes come across the king’s own, who can be found discharging
duties in the name of their lord, especially regarding some matters of justice and the
military recruitment of villeins.