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<article dtd-version="1.1" article-type="book-review">
  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">13.09.13</article-id>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>13.09.13, Isenmann, Die deutsche Stadt im Mittelalter 1150–1550 (David Nicholas)</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Nicholas</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
          <aff>Clemson University (Emeritus)</aff>
          <address>
            <email>dmnicholas39@att.net</email>
          </address>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2013">
        <year>2013</year>
      </pub-date>
      <product product-type="book">
        <person-group>
          <name>
            <surname>Isenmann, Eberhard</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
        </person-group>
        <source>Die deutsche Stadt im Mittelalter 1150–1550: Stadtgestalt, Recht, Verfassung, Stadtregiment, Kirche, Gesellschaft, Wirtschaft, </source>
        <year iso-8601-date="2012">2012</year>
        <publisher-loc>Wien</publisher-loc>
        <publisher-name>Böhlau Verlag</publisher-name>
        <page-range>Pp. 1129</page-range>
        <price>€99.00</price>
        <isbn>978-3-412-20940-7</isbn>
      </product>
      <permissions>
        <copyright-statement>Copyright 2013 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
      </permissions>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <p>
This massive compendium in the German <italic>Handbuch</italic> tradition will
become the standard reference work on its topic, summarizing the vast
literature (Isenmann's bibliography of sources and literature
encompasses ninety-nine pages). Although he uses only German evidence
and rarely provides comparison with towns in other parts of Europe, the
book is useful to urbanologists of other regions. The individual topics
are footnoted, but not densely. The bibliography is arranged by chapter
and subheading within chapter.</p>
    <p>The Introduction is a survey of ideal types of "city." Isenmann notes
that the medieval and early modern city are not as often now considered
"preindustrial" as "premodern," since "preindustrial" emphasizes only
one of the city's functions. He explains the chronological limits of
the work as because German studies of urbanization have not until
recently done much with late medieval urbanization.</p>
    <p>Isenmann follows the standard German practice of calling any place with
a charter a <italic>Stadt</italic> (town), since the German language does not
distinguish small towns from major cities except by an adjective
preceding or compounded with <italic>Stadt</italic> (as <italic>Grossstadt</italic>).
Isenmann generally uses several examples to illustrate points in the
various subject chapters. Although he provides examples from a wide
variety of places (in terms of size, economy, legal situation, social
structure, and governmental institutions) to achieve a balanced
picture, most of his information comes from places that in the context
of the time were cities.</p>
    <p>The first chapter, "The City and its Inhabitants," begins with the
physical appearance of the towns as they struck contemporary outsiders:
government, occupations of the inhabitants, ceremonies, and the legal
freedom of the citizens. A particularly interesting section deals with
how German writers of the late Middle Ages saw cities as a distinct
form, giving special attention to the jurist Nikolaus Wurm, who
emphasized the town as a community. Isenmann concludes with a
discussion of the historical importance of the medieval town and the
bourgeoisie, concentrating on the views of Marx/Engels, Weber, and
Gierke. Typologies and definitions of "town" are then discussed,
followed by demography, where he arranges the towns in order of
population size but starts with original sources that have been used by
modern scholars for extrapolations of total population figures; his
discussion of the late medieval plagues comes here. Isenmann dislikes
all models of the town that focus on a single characteristic, finding
as do most scholars that most of the criteria also apply, if in lesser
degree, to places that were not towns. Urban topography and
circumstances of foundation, and the development of specific quarters
of the cities, street layouts, the walls, defense, urban architecture,
public and private buildings (from both a functional and aesthetic
standpoint), and churches, and the social topography of economic life
follow.</p>
    <p>Chapter 2, concerning citizens, city law, and city institutions,
discusses how citizenship was acquired and the rights and obligations
that it imposed. This naturally involves a discussion of the
inhabitants who were not citizens and how some towns tried to restrict
citizenship. Isenmann follows with the great urban charters, their
families and derivation, and legal thought. A long section goes beyond
the charters to discuss lawgiving by the city councils, and families of
urban law that developed from the growing complexity of legal
procedures that grew out of the legislation and justice of the
councils. He then deals with the urban <italic>Verfassung</italic>, including
composition of the town councils, burgomasters, and administration.
Urban leagues are in this chapter, discussed mainly on the examples of
the imperial cities of the south and southwest, but he also mentions
unrest in the Hanse towns here.  He provides more detail on questions
of oligarchy and democracy, under which heading he considers the guild
regimes. Isenmann discusses the legal questions that had a bearing on
resistance to councils that was not guild-based, and whether the guilds
broadened public participation in urban government when they were able
to gain power. This chapter contains a long subsection on urban Jews.
</p>
    <p>Chapter 3, "Episcopal Cities, Free Cities, Imperial Cities, Territorial
Cities, Seigniorial Cities, and Urban Leagues," provides a clear
discussion of how these various forms of urban life differed from one
another, more in origin and identity of the town lord than in forms of
government in mature cities.</p>
    <p>Chapter 4, "City Government and Institutions, Council and Community,
Organization of the Conciliar Regime, Defense and Good Order, Justice,
Finances, and Educational and Charitable Institutions," has
considerable overlap with Chapter 2 but delves more deeply into the
details, particularly on the period after the establishment of the town
governments. It is the longest of the book. The first section deals
with how the councils were chosen and the functions that they
exercised. The nature of the urban community, the relations of the
councils with it, opposition movements and uprisings, and the lesser
administrative offices (including police and chancery, but with most
attention paid to the city attorneys) under the control of the council
are explained. This is followed by police and peacekeeping, control of
markets and economic regulations, moral oversight (prostitution,
sumptuary laws), high, middle, and low justice, criminal law, the feud
and composition, the public peace (<italic>Landfriede</italic>), the military
organization of the cities, and principles of criminal and civil law.
This chapter includes a long section on city finances: how money was
raised, tax competence, other sources of income (such as excises,
fines, and the sale of rents), and accounting procedures. A section on
education follows, starting with elementary schools and moving on to
the universities in places that had them. Isenmann gives a particularly
full and welcome discussion of historical writing in the cities, often
by persons employed as clerks by the council. The chapter concludes
with welfare and poor relief, both under communal and private auspices,
including the larger question of poverty and how the city governments
regulated begging, mainly on the examples of Augsburg and Strasbourg.
</p>
    <p>While the church role in charity and education and aspects of
church-lay interaction are discussed in Chapter 4, Chapter 5, "City and
Church," begins with the urban churches, their functions and
competence, and their relations and conflicts with the lay authorities.
The churches fulfilled functions of charity and poor relief, did jobs
for the secular government, and jurisdiction over misdeeds that now are
under lay authorities, and conflicts over this issue were sometimes
sharp in the medieval cities. Parish organization and the application
of canon law alongside urban custom are discussed. The position of the
older, "traditional" clergy and its relations within the urban
community with newer orders such as the mendicants are discussed. Lay
piety, laypeople as patrons of churches, religious brotherhoods,
heresy, and the first prosecution of heretics and witches in the cities
are provided. The chapter concludes with foundations of the Protestant
movement in the cities, extending the discussion to Luther and the
other early reformers in the cities.</p>
    <p>Chapter 6, the briefest of the book, concerns relations of the city and
its environs in terms of power relations, jurisdiction, and economy,
the property of rural lords in the cities and of burghers in the
environs, and the question of city-states and territorial policy are
treated. Central place theory and networks figure prominently in the
first section of this chapter. The section on landholding by burghers
outside the walls is tied to the extramural territorial policy of the
city regimes.</p>
    <p>Chapter 7, "Social Structure," deals with the overlapping categories of
inhabitant: rich, poor, merchant, rentier, artisan, citizens, knights
(a larger group in the early German cities than in the west), wholesale
and retail trade, and medieval social ideas, including an eight-page
section on Felix Fabri's sociology of Ulm. Isenmann then moves to a
discussion of social strata, classes, <italic>Staende</italic> (where he relies
largely but not exclusively on Weber), and social groups more
generally, including a discussion of the extent of poverty in the
cities and its links to various forms of social marginality. He
discusses social strata and how modern scholars ascertain them (most
obviously by the extent of tax liability). Begging and alms are found
again here. The Jews predictably receive separate treatment here, as in
Chapter 2. Isenmann includes the pogroms and accusations of poisoning
wells in this chapter rather than in the section on the plagues. He
discusses the urban patriciates as part of a broader consideration of
family concepts and cohesion and how wealth, landholding, ancestry, and
how "honorable" one's profession was as determinants of social rank. An
entire section is devoted to the "conciliar lineages"
(<italic>Ratsgeschlechter</italic>). Information for the patriciates is much
stronger than for the middling and lower social orders, and Isenmann's
examples are numerous enough for him to draw comparisons between some
of the most famous patriciates, such as those of Nuremberg and Cologne.
</p>
    <p>Chapter 8 discusses social forms and social groups, specifically
family, kinship and household, societies, and merchant <italic>Gilden</italic>
and craft <italic>Zuenfte</italic>.  For guild origins he uses information from
Basel, which has many foundation charters between 1267 and 1271. He
considers definitions and concepts, including the <italic>ganze Haus</italic>
notion, then moves to the family as a social form, marriage, and the
family's reflection in and occasional rivalry with such institutions as
guilds that were to a great extent family based. Isenmann argues that
the criticisms of guilds as hostile to technological innovation are
overdrawn for the Middle Ages and are based on later examples, but his
examples seem to me to show that the critics were right about the
medieval guilds. He devotes a long subsection to the journeymen and
their associations, wages and conditions of work, and the strikes and
rebellions associated with them.</p>
    <p>Chapter 9 discusses economic forms and economic life. Isenmann notes
the links between production and the guilds (including a discussion of
the cartel functions of the guilds), then discusses the various groups
of artisans and merchants. The organization of trade, fairs, and
business techniques are found here, with specific attention paid to the
<italic>Grosse Ravensburger Handelsgesellschaft</italic> and the family business
of the Fuggers. The nature of long-distance trade, its radius (using
the example of Cologne) and the Hanse trading networks receive separate
treatment. This is followed by a section on credit, payment mechanisms,
and circulation of money and payments. Debt, money exchange, and loan
techniques, including those used by Italian merchants and Jews in the
German cities, and (again) rents are discussed. Regulation of sales and
purchases, and the notion of the "just price" are found in this
chapter, along with a discussion of moneylending and the church and
usury regulations.</p>
    <p>An astonishing breadth and depth of scholarship underlines this
compendium. No scholar of medieval urbanization (not only in Germany)
can afford to disregard it. Inevitably, someone's specialty will be
neglected or get an interpretation with which a reader disagrees. Given
the complexity of the topics, some repetition is perhaps unavoidable,
but I think that Isenmann's organization could have been tightened
without sacrificing content. Since aspects of many topics are handled
in separate chapters, the separate indices for places and topics are
especially valuable. Yet Isenmann does not include separate page
references in the <italic>Ortsregister</italic> to fifty larger towns that are
mentioned frequently in the text (he does mention this on p. 1101).
Thus for example, while there is a vast amount of material on such
places as Nuremberg and Cologne, those who want material about them
will have to paginate through the entire book, while the Index suffices
for references to places such as Goslar or Dinkelsbuehl.
</p>
    <p/>
  </body>
</article>
