Studies on early modern woodlands typically focus on the production, conservation, or management of forests in regard to a specific socio-economic activity (i.e., shipbuilding, mining), or are centred on particular case studies in specific land tenures. This is the first volume to address the production, conservation, and management of woodlands and royal forests on the early modern Iberian Peninsula across different land tenures, forest environments, bioclimatic regions, and jurisdictional arrangements, on a wide spatial and temporal scale. Each chapter offers an innovative argument which is based on solid archival research and an up-to-date bibliography.
págs. 1-23
The Articulation of Courtly Jurisdiction at the Royal Sites: The Shaping of a Complex Patchwork
págs. 24-51
págs. 52-80
págs. 81-118
The King’s Woodlands: Managing the Forestry Resources of Military Orders in Southern Castile during the Sixteenth Century
Francisco Fernández Izquierdo, Francisco Javier Moreno Díaz del Campo
págs. 119-156
Fire Hazards, Forest Protection and Production in Portugal: The Pinewood of Leiria during the Habsburg Dynasty (1580–1640)
págs. 157-204
págs. 205-231
Woodland in the Ensenada Cadastre: Distribution, Composition and Role in the Peasant Economy
Concepción Camarero Bullón, Ángel Ignacio Aguilar Cuesta, Ana Luna San Eugenio
págs. 232-274
Empire, Timber and Wine: The Interconnected Dimensions Landscaping Forests in the 1700s
págs. 275-321
Shaping and Boosting the Economic Viability of a Royal Space for Agricultural and Livestock Production: The Royal Site of La Florida (1787–1814)
págs. 322-358
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