La nobleza y el poder local aragonés en los siglos XVII y XVIII

  1. Moreno Nieves, José Antonio
Aldizkaria:
Revista de Historia Moderna
  1. Bernabé Gil, David (coord.)
  2. Pla Alberola, Primitivo J. (coord.)

ISSN: 0212-5862 1989-9823

Argitalpen urtea: 2008

Zenbakien izenburua: Élites sociales y poder territorial

Zenbakia: 26

Orrialdeak: 91-120

Mota: Artikulua

DOI: 10.14198/RHM2008.26.03 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openRUA editor

Beste argitalpen batzuk: Revista de Historia Moderna

Laburpena

The next study seeks to highlight the continuing process of the municipality to reach oligarchy in modern times, particularly in the kingdom of Aragon. This process resulted in the creation of a local elite increasingly attached to a particular way of life and not a class situation. If in a first phase, the nobility tended to find their access to local power, encouraged by the monarchy, in a second phase, the process changed. It was not the nobility, in the legal sense, which took up power, but a more diverse group of people that we can begin to class as oligarchy. This group was composed of families who not only shared a similar lifestyle: agricultural properties, long tradition of local power, but also openness to the world of letters as a new requirement admired by the monarchy. On the hand, the titled nobility and higher ancestry lost interest by local power, even in such important places at the national level as Zaragoza.