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IAS Book Launch: Political Culture in the Early Modern Iberian Worlds

25 February 2025, 6:00 pm–8:00 pm

Two book covers next to each other. The one on the left shows details of manuscripts, the one on the right a detail from a painting: a woman with a child on her lap opposite a man who holds a parrot on his hand that the child is fascinated by.

Join authors Mario Graña Taborelli and Adrian Masters for the launch of their books, Jurisdictional Battlefields and We, the King.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Institute of Advanced Studies

Location

IAS Common Ground
G11, ground floor, South Wing
UCL, Gower St, London
WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom

ABOUT THE BOOKS
In his book, Jurisdictional Battlefields: Political Culture, Theatricality, and Spanish Expeditions in Charcas in the Second Half of the Sixteenth Century, Mario Graña Taborelli examines three expeditions by the Spanish to the borders of Charcas, in present-day Bolivia, in the second half of the sixteenth century, challenging views that framed them as part of a gradual top-down process of centralisation driven by the Spanish monarchy to extend and consolidate its grip and build a ‘colonial state’ in the Americas, suggesting an interpretation that sees them as part of a long process of installation, expansion, and consolidation of royal jurisdiction, understood as the authority to establish law and deliver justice, in a remote area, perceived as lawless. This was done through coercion and violence, as well as negotiation and consensus, involving both the Spanish and indigenous peoples, and frequently creating overlapped jurisdictions. It was done not through centralisation and territorial control but via downscaling of politics and dispersion of power. Jurisdictional politics were decided in battlefields and courts and involved the display of rituals and imagery in a theatricalization of power, to make a distant monarch present, which paradoxically, made such absence the more evident. The book is an invitation to rethink traditional ideas about empire building and re-dimension the scope of Spain’s vast global empire. 

Jurisdictional Battlefields: Political Culture, Theatricality, and Spanish Expeditions in Charcas in the Second Half of the Sixteenth Century was published by Liverpool University Press (2024). For more information, visit the publisher's website here

Adrian Masters's We, the King: Creating Royal Legislation in the Sixteenth-Century Spanish New World challenges the traditional top-down view of the Spanish Empire, demonstrating that ordinary subjects wielded significant influence in governance and law-making. Analysing over 110,000 royal decrees from between 1492 and 1598, Masters reveals that diverse actors petitioned for even phrased legislation. The Empire was, in fact, a great dialogue. Some stood in dialogue's way - saboteurs, powerful court women, pirates, mosquitos - while others, including notaries, indigenous commoners, Afro-descendant raftsmen, and enslaved women, acted as essential instruments. This bottom-up perspective reveals, moreover, that subjects could even phrase legislation; forcing us to rethink the genesis of discriminatory categories in a crucial era of early modern racialisation. 

We, the King: Creating Royal Legislation in the Sixteenth-Century Spanish New World was published by Cambridge University Press (2023). For more information, visit the publisher's website here.

ABOUT THE EVENT
The evening will comprise presentations by the authors and a panel consisting of Alexander Samson (UCL Early Modern Exchanges), Karoline Cook (Royal Holloway) and Adolfo Polo y La Borda (University of Nottingham). 
 

About the Speakers

Mario Graña Taborelli

Visiting Research Fellow at UCL Institute of Advanced Studies

Mario Graña Taborelli is a historian of the Early Modern Iberian Worlds who works on political cultures, law and social history. 

More about Mario Graña Taborelli

Adrian Masters

Project Leader at Universität Trier

Adrian Masters is a scholar of Spanish Colonial history who studies early modern Spanish colonial law, racialization, petitioning, religion, and mobility and teaches at the University of Trier in Germany.

More about Adrian Masters