Reframing Treaties in the Late Medieval and Early Modern West
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0198958471
ISBN-13
9780198958475
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Aug 28th, 2025
Print length
496 Pages
Product Classification:
Peace studies & conflict resolutionEuropean historyEarly modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700
Ksh 22,150.00
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This volume deals with the many ways of reaching an agreement (peace, truce, alliance) through a wide geopolitical range of case studies between the 14th and the 18th centuries, and their afterlives up to the 21st century. With a multidisciplinary approach, it demonstrates the complex and multi-layered nature of the process of peacemaking.
Peace treaties were an important, dynamic, and varied element of late medieval and early modern diplomacy and international relations. But study of peace-making in the pre-modern period has often been limited to a focus on singular treaties and case studies, or presented as the historical prelude to the singular and inevitable ''universal'' international order of the modern period. Seeking to counter this one-dimensional and Eurocentric teleology, this multi-authored volume conceives of peace treaties very broadly—as a range of successful and failed agreements, settlements, truces, oaths, and other forms conflict resolution—across a wide geopolitical and constitutional range of case studies not limited to Europe, but including also the Mediterranean and Atlantic worlds. Considered in this way, they become a means to reevaluate thoroughly the premodern peace-making process and the broader flow of negotiations that shaped late medieval and early modern political interactions; not as a discrete series of treaties but as a constitutive element of politics (a ''political grammar''), both within and outside frontiers and borders, whose complexity and adaptability are reflected in the diversity of its forms and the variety of the sources that recorded it. In so doing, and across 21 multi-disciplinary chapters, contributors show pre-modern peace-making to have been a multi-layered and varied phenomenon, the understanding of which has important implications for all those working on medieval and early modern international relations, diplomacy, and the new diplomatic history.
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