Herrschaft im ländlichen Raum: Bäuerliche Untertanen, lokale Obrigkeit und expandierender Staat

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Abstract

Rulership in Rural Areas. Peasant Subjects, Local Lordship and Expanding State. The 18th century brought a fundamental change in the relationship between subjects, landlordship and the state. Although the sovereign had intervened in the relationship between subjects and landlords, in the first decades of the century the manorial lordship was essentially still a largely autonomous sphere. With the reforms beginning in the mid-18th century, state power began to integrate rural areas into its sphere of power. The new county offices as regional authorities brought the state closer to the population and were also an essential factor in gathering information about rural areas. The central authorities attempted to push back the influence of the landlords in local government by reorganizing the landlord property structure and the distribution of powers. Finally, the state increasingly interposed itself between subjects and landlords through reforms in the social system and in the judiciary, but without actually eliminating landlordism as a central element of rural order.
Original languageGerman
Title of host publicationNiederösterreich im 18. Jahrhundert
Subtitle of host publicationBand 1: Land, Politik und Wirtschaft
EditorsTobias Hämmerle, Josef Löffler, Elisabeth Rosner, Martin Scheutz
Place of PublicationSt. Pölten
PublisherNiederösterreichisches Institut für Landeskunde
Pages413-458
Number of pages46
ISBN (Print)978-3-903127-44-9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 601016 Austrian history
  • 601029 Social history
  • 601020 Regional history

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