El almirantazgo y la bahía de Cádiz en la baja Edad Media: competitividad señorial, rentas alienadas y proyectos frustrados

Statistics
Share
Metadata
Show full item recordAlternative title
The admiralship and the bay of Cádiz in the late Middle Ages: lordly competivity, alienated rights and frustrated projects
Author/s
Lage Estrugo, Lorenzo
Date
2019Department
Historia, Geografía y FilosofíaSource
Suplemento RIPARIA 2 (2019, 135-163Abstract
El almirantazgo castellano es una de las instituciones más problemáticas en suelo peninsular debido a las grandes disputas por la aplicación de su jurisdicción. Durante el siglo XV, esta debilidad institucional se hace manifiesta con la consolidación del proceso de señorialización de Andalucía Occidental, epicentro de los intereses del almirantazgo. Examinando la casuística de la bahía de Cádiz puede observarse la realidad de la gestión de toda una serie de derechos que, pese al interés del almirante o sus representantes, eran frecuentemente usurpados o estorbados The Castilian Admiralship is one of the most troublesome institutions in Peninsular soil, owing to the great disputes around the application and implementation of its jurisdiction. During the 15th century, this institutional weakness was exposed as result of Andalucía Occidental becoming a tangle of different lordships, fruit of a lording process; this affected the Admiralship greatly, considering the said región was the core of its interests. Examining the Bay of Cádiz as a particular case we can, thus, observe the reality of the management of an assortment of rights that, not minding the interest of the admiral and his representatives, were frequently usurped or alienated