book cover
Download Sample PDF

H 245 x W 174 mm

216 pages

14 figures, 15 tables, 1 map (limited colour)

Published Mar 2025

Archaeopress

ISBN

Paperback: 9781803279718

Digital: 9781803279725

DOI 10.32028/9781803279718

Recommend to a librarian

Keywords
Golden Age Spain; Conversos; Social Mobility

Related titles

Conversos, Power and the Intermediate Groups in Golden Age Spain

Edited by Enrique Soria Mesa, Luis Salas Almela

Paperback
£38.00
Includes PDF

Open Access
PDF eBook
Download

Add to basket

Add to wishlist

Recent studies reveal significant social mobility in 16th-17th century Spain, challenging previous beliefs. This book explores the rise of a powerful intermediate class, the mesocracy, including Jewish converts, who advanced through long-term family strategies and professional roles, contributing to Spain's economic power.

READ MORE

Contents

List of Figures and Tables


Introduction – Enrique Soria Mesa and Luis Salas Almela


The Shifting Profiles of Privilege: Exemption, Status, and Social Categorization in Seville in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries  – José Manuel Triano Milán


Judeoconversos, intermediate groups and social ascent in Golden Age Spain: the foundes of the University of Baeza  – Enrique Soria Mesa


Hidden and reviled patricians?: Commercial mesocracy in sixteenth and seventeenth centuries southern Castile  – Rafael M. Girón Pascual


“Merchants at the Consulado of the Indies (1535-55): Origins, association, and privilege” – Luis Salas Almela


Over a century of “utmost loyalty and service” to the lords of the Alhambra. The network of clients of the Marquises of Mondéjar in Granada (16th and 17th centuries) – José María García Ríos


“Images of power and the justification of orthodoxy: Early modern private chapels in the Córdoba Cathedral” – Clara Sánchez Merino

 

Middle-class burials in early modern Córdoba: Patrimony, advance, and memory  – Gonzalo J. Herreros Moya



Chapters by José Manuel Triano Milán, Luis Salas Almela, Clara Sánchez Merino and Gonzalo Herreros Moya are translated by Prof. Ruth MacKay and chapters by Enrique Soria Mesa, Rafael Girón Pascual and José María García Ríos translated by Dr. David Govantes-Edwards. 

About the Author

Enrique Soria Mesa s professor of Modern History at the University of Cordoba, he researches topics such as the nobility, Jewish converts and genealogy in Spain. He has supervised 19 doctoral theses and is author of books such as The Last Moriscos. Permanences of the population of Islamic origin in the kingdom of Granada (seventeenth and eighteenth centuries), 2014; The Jewish Origin of Góngora, Cordoba, 2015; The reality behind the mirror. Social Ascent and Blood Cleansing in the Spain of Philip II (2016).


Luis Salas Almela studied Early Modern History in the Universidad Complutense of Madrid (Spain). After having published his first book in 2002, he went to the European University Institute (Italy), where he obtained his PhD in History and Civilization (October, 2006) with a work devoted to the study of the most powerful Castilian noble house, that of the dukes of Medina Sidonia in the Early Modern period (published as Medina Sidonia: el poder de la aristocracia, 1680-1670, Madrid, 2008). Then he went to the Centro de História de Além-Mar, in Lisbon (Portugal), where he begun a new research line about the development of the Iberian ports during the expansion of the Atlantic trade with the Indies (16th Century). A line that he continued developing in the Escuela de Estudios Hispano-Americanos (CSIC, Seville) between July 2009 and December 2011. Since January 2012 he started a Ramón y Cajal contract in the University of Córdoba andwas appointed professor in the same institution in 2021. 

undefined