ABSTRACT

The overall purpose of the studies collected together in this volume is to explain the shaping of Hispanic historiography in the Early Modern period by examining the continuities and discursive complicities between the writing, criticism, theory and censorship of history. This book sheds light on the so-far neglected circulation of ideas and practices between these four areas, and highlights the constitutive nature of a wide spectrum of forms of censorship from repression to criticism in shaping the interests, principles, methods and problems of Early Modern Hispanic historiography. Examining the various fronts that converge in this disciplining discourse of history helps expand and improve our understanding of the relations between historiography and civil and ecclesiastic literary censorship, and the implications of the ideological control of historical writing and theory. In many respects their hypotheses, results and conclusions can be extrapolated to Western historiography in the Early Modern period. This book will be of interest to historians of both historiography and Hispanic censorship in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and in general to scholars of historical, literary and political culture in the Early Modern age.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Disciplining history in early modern Spain

chapter 1|13 pages

Patriotic historiography

Annius of Viterbo in Antonio de Nebrija

chapter 2|26 pages

Readers as censors

Translations, inhibitions, and manipulations of some history books in the mid-sixteenth century

chapter 3|37 pages

Unbanning Habsburg imperial history

The Antwerp Index (1571) and the expurgatory policies of the Hispanic monarchy 1

chapter 4|20 pages

Early modern collaborative scholarship and censorship

Contextualizing the expurgation of Jacques-Auguste de Thou’s Historiae in the 1612 Spanish inquisitorial Index 1

chapter 5|18 pages

The royal chronicler – historian or counsellor?

The case of Antonio de Herrera y Tordesillas

chapter 7|34 pages

Censure and censorship, rhetoric and probabilism

History on the threshold of the Enlightenment