ABSTRACT

This sixth volume in the European Festival Studies series stems from a joint conference (Venice, 2013) between the Society for European Festivals Research and the European Science Foundation’s PALATIUM project. Drawing on up-to-date scholarship, a Europe-wide group of early-career and experienced academics provides a unique account of spectacular occasions of state which influenced the political, social and cultural lives of contemporary societies. International pan-European turbulence associated with post-Reformation religious conflict supplies the context within which the book explores how the period’s rulers and élite families competed for power – in a forecast of today’s divided world.

part |18 pages

Introduction

chapter |16 pages

The power of ceremony

part I|122 pages

Performing diplomacy

chapter 1|20 pages

The identity of the state

A new approach to festivals in the early modern Holy Roman Empire

chapter 5|16 pages

Valladolid 1605

A theatre for the peace

chapter 6|12 pages

The shield of ceremony

Civic ritual and royal entries in wartime

chapter 7|20 pages

Les Réjouissances de la Paix, 20–23 March 1660

The allegorical transformation of Lyon into a city of peace for the celebration of the Pyrenees Peace Treaty

part 2|108 pages

Space and occasional performance

chapter 8|24 pages

Space for dancing

Accommodating performer and spectator in Renaissance France

chapter 10|20 pages

Con grandissima maraviglia

The role of theatrical spaces in the festivals of seventeenth-century Milan

chapter 11|13 pages

Palazzo eguale alle Reggie più superbe

Schloss Eggenberg in Graz and the imperial wedding of 1673

chapter 12|18 pages

In public and in private

A study of festival in seventeenth-century Rome

part |17 pages

Epilogue

chapter |16 pages

Turning tables

From elite to egalitarian banquets in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Paris