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The rule of law and the written word in Alfonsine Castile: Demystifying a consecrated vernacular

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The rule of law and the written word in Alfonsine Castile: Demystifying a consecrated vernacular. / Rojinsky, David.
In: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, Vol. 80, No. 3, 01.01.2003, p. 287-305.

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Rojinsky D. The rule of law and the written word in Alfonsine Castile: Demystifying a consecrated vernacular. Bulletin of Hispanic Studies. 2003 Jan 1;80(3):287-305. doi: 10.3828/bhs.80.3.1

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Rojinsky, David. / The rule of law and the written word in Alfonsine Castile : Demystifying a consecrated vernacular. In: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies. 2003 ; Vol. 80, No. 3. pp. 287-305.

Bibtex

@article{dfd92909ae05473b8a2e3aff2648429e,
title = "The rule of law and the written word in Alfonsine Castile: Demystifying a consecrated vernacular",
abstract = "This study examines the correspondences between reconquest, repopulation and the acceptance of Castilian as an official written language. While recent research has focused on how the Castilian monarchy sought to invent written Castilian as a sacred script comparable to Latin, Arabic and Hebrew, or simply as a prestigilas language of culture, my reading of the Siete Partidas is more concerned with vernacular writing as a regulatory practice and vernacular writings as administrative tools sanctioned by the Crown to facilitate the socio-juridical control of repopulated spaces and peoples. Ultimately, the practical demands of territorial conquest were more critical to the acceptance of Spanish writing than any purely cultural concerns the Crown may have had.",
author = "David Rojinsky",
year = "2003",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3828/bhs.80.3.1",
language = "English",
volume = "80",
pages = "287--305",
journal = "Bulletin of Hispanic Studies",
issn = "1475-3839",
publisher = "Liverpool University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The rule of law and the written word in Alfonsine Castile

T2 - Demystifying a consecrated vernacular

AU - Rojinsky, David

PY - 2003/1/1

Y1 - 2003/1/1

N2 - This study examines the correspondences between reconquest, repopulation and the acceptance of Castilian as an official written language. While recent research has focused on how the Castilian monarchy sought to invent written Castilian as a sacred script comparable to Latin, Arabic and Hebrew, or simply as a prestigilas language of culture, my reading of the Siete Partidas is more concerned with vernacular writing as a regulatory practice and vernacular writings as administrative tools sanctioned by the Crown to facilitate the socio-juridical control of repopulated spaces and peoples. Ultimately, the practical demands of territorial conquest were more critical to the acceptance of Spanish writing than any purely cultural concerns the Crown may have had.

AB - This study examines the correspondences between reconquest, repopulation and the acceptance of Castilian as an official written language. While recent research has focused on how the Castilian monarchy sought to invent written Castilian as a sacred script comparable to Latin, Arabic and Hebrew, or simply as a prestigilas language of culture, my reading of the Siete Partidas is more concerned with vernacular writing as a regulatory practice and vernacular writings as administrative tools sanctioned by the Crown to facilitate the socio-juridical control of repopulated spaces and peoples. Ultimately, the practical demands of territorial conquest were more critical to the acceptance of Spanish writing than any purely cultural concerns the Crown may have had.

U2 - 10.3828/bhs.80.3.1

DO - 10.3828/bhs.80.3.1

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:61049173690

VL - 80

SP - 287

EP - 305

JO - Bulletin of Hispanic Studies

JF - Bulletin of Hispanic Studies

SN - 1475-3839

IS - 3

ER -