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2013 | 68 | 2 | 59–73

Article title

Die Region Schlesien (1618-1740). Die sozialen Gruppierungen und ihre Bedeutung für die Identität des Landes

Authors

Title variants

EN
Silesia as a region (1618-1740). Social groups and their relevance to the identity of the region

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
The social groups of Silesian society in the 17th century included higher nobility (dukes, estate lords, foremen) and lower nobility, to which, due to ennoblements ascended many of the townspeople. Among the townsfolk in Silesian cities were such groups as merchants, guild craftsmen and people with higher education. They had civic rights. Most of city-dwellers did not have civic rights, they were the daily wage labourers, guild-less craftsmen, farmhands and servants. Village-dwelling population was divided into peasant classes, the majority of which were the lower peasants, so-called gardeners, who owned little land and livestock and in order to assure their survival needed to seek additional employ (as village craftsmen, workers on farms or estates). A place in the hierarchy was assured not by an initial economic capital, but rather by symbolic capital. The group that influenced Silesian regional identity the most were educated townspeople, whose roots were in humanism.

Keywords

Contributors

author
  • Historisches seminar, Universität Hamburg, Von-Melle-Park 6, D-20146 Hamburg, Raum 1359

References

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Publication order reference

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YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-e85790e6-af28-40eb-841b-2a5bb561cbdf
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