Between the late twelfth century and the mid fourteenth, Castile
saw a reordering of mental, spiritual, and physical space. Fresh
ideas about sin and intercession coincided with new ways of
representing the self and emerging perceptions of property as
tangible. This radical shift in values or mentalites was most
evident among certain social groups, including mercantile elites,
affluent farmers, lower nobility, clerics, and literary
figures--"middling sorts" whose outlooks and values were fast
becoming normative.
Drawing on such primary documents as wills, legal codes, land
transactions, litigation records, chronicles, and literary works,
Teofilo Ruiz documents the transformation in how medieval
Castilians thought about property and family at a time when
economic innovations and an emerging mercantile sensibility were
eroding the traditional relation between the two. He also
identifies changes in how Castilians conceived of and acted on
salvation and in the ways they related to their local communities
and an emerging nation-state.
Ruiz interprets this reordering of mental and physical
landscapes as part of what Le Goff has described as a transition
"from heaven to earth," from spiritual and religious beliefs to the
quasi-secular pursuits of merchants and scholars. Examining how
specific groups of Castilians began to itemize the physical world,
Ruiz sketches their new ideas about salvation, property, and
themselves--and places this transformation within the broader
history of cultural and social change in the West."
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