Martial Culture in Late Medieval Towns

Martial Culture in Late Medieval Towns

Also known as: martcult

This project focus on towns as producers, organisers, and brokers of martial culture within the rapidly changing political world of late medieval Europe, examining how towns helped transform and were transformed by trend-setting military techniques and urban 'martial culture.' This martial culture developed at the intersection of legal prerogatives, political requirements, physical skills, knowledge, and the evolving societal significance of the ownership and use of weapons. The project will thus integrate a number of historiographical approaches that are usually explored separately: urban institutional, social, and political history; military history; the history of weapons and weapon use; the history of urban martial competitions; the history of knowledge production and dissemination; the history of fighting expertise, and the transformation of the urban space itself.

Author
Associate Professor of Medieval History
Universität Bern
regula.schmid@unibe.ch
Author
Senior researcher
Universität Bern
daniel.jaquet@unil.ch

Cite this Project

Citation

Martial Culture in Late Medieval Towns (2025). DaSCH. https://ark.dasch.swiss/ark:/72163/1/0850.

Data Access

Access Rights
Full Open Access
License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
(2025-12-01)

Copyright

Martial Culture in Late Medieval Towns

Contact

Associate Professor of Medieval History
Universität Bern
regula.schmid@unibe.ch

Project Timeline

Period
2018-01-09 – 2022-12-31
Status
Finished

Funding

Grants
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
Grant: 178896
Project funding
More info
Data Management Plan
Not accessible