ABSTRACT

This book is devoted to the inhabitants of the Spanish–Portuguese borderlands during the early modern period.

It seeks to challenge a predominant historiography focused on the study of borderlands societies, relying exclusively on the antagonistic topics of subversion and the construction of boundaries. It states that by focusing just on one concept or another there is a restrictive understanding tending to condition the agency of local communities by external narratives. Thus, if traditionally border people were reduced by some scholars to actors of a struggle against a supposedly imposed border; in a more modern perspective, their behaviors have been also framed in bottom-up processes of consolidation of spaces of sovereignty in a no less limiting vision. Faced with both approaches, the objective of this work is not to deny them but, first and foremost, to situate the experiences of border populations outside of logics that I understand as originally alien to themselves, and to highlight their own subjectivity. Finally, it also demonstrates that most of the practices developed by border people were fundamentally aimed at defending their local communities.

It will be useful for both audiences interested in early modern Iberia or border studies from a bottom-up perspective.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part I|77 pages

Communities between two communities

chapter 2|19 pages

The unrepresented

chapter 3|17 pages

Refuge and destruction

chapter 4|15 pages

Contraband, modus vivendi

part II|76 pages

War and the politics of daily life

chapter 5|15 pages

On local truces

chapter 6|28 pages

A grand yet local peace

chapter 7|17 pages

‘A wolflike urge’

part III|72 pages

At peace along the Raya

chapter 9|17 pages

Restored sovereignties

chapter 10|16 pages

At the back of the world

chapter 11|12 pages

Innumerable unresolved conflicts

chapter 12|17 pages

The return of Mars

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion