Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

El. knyga: Donations, Inheritance and Property in the Nordic and Western World from Late Antiquity until Today [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by , Edited by (University of Copenhagen, Denmark), Edited by
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 161,57 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 230,81 €
  • Sutaupote 30%

Donations, Inheritance and Property in the Nordic and Western World from Late Antiquity until Today presents an examination of Nordic donation and gift-giving practices in the Nordic and Western world, beginning in late Antiquity and extending through to the present day. Through chapters contributed by leading international researchers, this book explores the changing legal, social and religious frameworks that shape how donations and gifts are given.





In addition to donations to ecclesiastical, charitable and cultural institutions, this books also highlights the sociolegal challenges and the tensions that can occur as a result of transferring property, including answering key questions such as who has a right to what. It also presents, for the first time, an insight into the dynamics of donations and the interplay between individual motivations, strategic behaviour and the legal setting of inheritance law.





Offering a broad chronological and European perspective and including a wide range of illuminating case studies Donations, Inheritance and Property in the Nordic and Western World from Late Antiquity until Today is ideal for students of Nordic and European legal and social history.

List of figures and tables
vii
List of contributors
viii
Introduction 1(8)
Ole-Albert Rønning
Helle MøLler Sigh
Helle Vogt
1 Gift-giving and inheritance strategies in late Roman law and legal practice
9(19)
Caroline Humfress
2 The jurisprudence of the forced share in the ancient world: Cicero to Justinian
28(36)
Charles J. Reid Jr.
3 The jurisprudence of the forced share: the high and late Middle Ages
64(51)
Charles J. Reid Jr.
4 Inheritance in the lands of the Loire, 1050-1200: a contrast to Nordic and Roman practice
115(15)
Amy Livingstone
5 Protecting the individual, the kin and the soul: donation regulations in Danish and Norwegian medieval legislation
130(16)
Helle Vogt
6 By love and by law: choices of female donors in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Sweden
146(19)
Anu Lahtinen
7 Gender and donation culture in Iceland from 1300 to 1600
165(14)
Agnes S. Arnorsdottir
8 Luther's last will and the invention of testamentary freedom
179(34)
Mathias Schmoeckel
9 Pious donations: the act of giving in the Lutheran Church and its spatial implications
213(21)
Martin Wangsgaard Jurgensen
10 The business of charity and the charity of business: donations in the Norwegian merchant town of Bergen in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
234(17)
J&oslas;rn Øyrehagen Sunde
11 "Immortal mother and benefactor": honorable dwellings for unmarried noblewomen and the dynamics of donations among the Danish elite from 1699 to 1745
251(18)
Helle Møller Sigh
12 The age of miracles? Alms culture and charitable donations in Copenhagen, c.1770-1830
269(25)
Peter Wessel Hansen
13 How to exchange with the dead: the significance of heirlooms in contemporary Danish inheritance practices
294(15)
Bodil Selmer
14 Gifts to, from, and between spouses: present regulation in the Nordic countries
309(16)
John Asland
Index 325
Ole-Albert Rųnning is a historian and PhD candidate at the University of Oslo, Norway, studying oaths of compurgation in medieval Norwegian law and society, in a comparative perspective.





Helle Mųller Sigh is a curator at the Strandingsmuseum St. George, Thorsminde, Demark.

Helle Vogt is an associate professor at the Centre for Studies in Legal Culture at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Her previous publications include The Danish Medieval Laws: The laws of Scania, Zealand and Jutland (2016).