This volume aims to investigate the complex theme of social mobility in
medieval Italy both by comparing Italian research to contemporary
international studies in various European contexts, and by analysing a
broad range of themes and specific case studies. Medieval social
mobility as a European phenomenon, in fact, still awaits a systematic
analysis, and has seldom been investigated iuxta propria principia in
social, political and economic history. The essays in the book deal with
a number of crucial problems: how is social mobility investigated in
European and Mediterranean contexts? How did classic mobility channels
such as the Church, officialdom, trade, the law, the lordship or
diplomacy contribute to shaping the many variables at play in late
medieval societies, and to changing - and challenging - inequality? How
did movements and changes in social spaces become visible, and what were
their markers? What were the dynamics at the heart of the processes of
social mobility in the many territorial contexts of the Italian
peninsula?