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E-raamat: Order, Materiality, and Urban Space in the Early Modern Kingdom of Sweden

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Our corporeality and immersion in the material world make us inherently spatial beings, and the fact that we all share everyday experiences in the global physical environment means that community is also spatial by nature. This book explores the relationship between the seventeenth-century townspeople of Turku, Sweden, and their urban surroundings. Riitta Laitinen offers a novel account of civil and social order in this early modern town, highlighting the central importance of materiality and spatiality and breaking down the dichotomy of public versus private life that has dominated traditional studies of the time period.
Acknowledgements 9(1)
A Note on Usage 10(1)
Glossary 11(2)
Introduction 13(18)
Examining the Town and the Home: Spatial Rules, Spatial Practices and Court Sources
15(6)
Spatiality and Materiality
21(5)
The
Chapters
26(5)
Part I Setting the Stage: The Kingdom of Sweden and its Towns
The Swedish Empire and the Province of Finland
31(2)
The Swedish Urban System
33(4)
The Guild System
37(2)
Turku and Its People
39(2)
The Laws and the Judicial System
41(8)
Part II Coming, Going and Staying: The Town and the Community
The Town and Its Space
49(2)
1 Ordering Everyday Mobility
51(36)
Marking and Crossing Boundaries
51(6)
Stopping at the Toll Gate
57(5)
The Extent and the Centre of the Town
62(7)
Regulating Burgher Mobility with Detention in Town
69(4)
Townspeople on the Move
73(7)
Controlling Incoming Strangers
80(7)
2 Undesirable Vagrants -- Exclusion or Inclusion?
87(34)
`Time-thieves' and Beggars
87(9)
Inspecting, Banishing and Housing Vagrants
96(11)
Loose or Settled: Sailors and Soldiers and the Town
107(6)
Ordering Women in the Margins
113(8)
3 Banishment and Lawbreakers
121(28)
Banishment, Law and Crime
121(4)
Spatial Exclusion and Rehabilitation of Thieves
125(7)
Getting Rid of Miscreants?
132(7)
The Banished and the Town
139(4)
Community That Banishes
143(6)
Part III Living Together: Urban Home, Urban Space
Space and Urban Home
149(2)
1 Organizing Urban Dwelling
151(40)
Urban Turku Space: Small Houses and Central Yards
151(10)
Household and Holding House
161(12)
Tenancy and Control over Space
173(3)
The Order and Disorder of Lodging
176(9)
The Servants' Place in Town
185(6)
2 Spatial Rules of the Urban Homes
191(48)
Closed and Porous Boundaries
191(13)
Violent Invasion of a Home
204(10)
Public, Private, and the Protected Home
214(7)
Open Homes and Intimacy
221(6)
Entering and Exiting: Male Sociability and Transactions
227(12)
Conclusions
239(6)
The Town
239(3)
Home
242(3)
Bibliography 245(18)
Index 263
Riitta Laitinen is a research fellow in the Department of Cultural History at the University of Turku.