Public Works, Spatial Strategies, and Mobility in Late Medieval Ghent

Publication date

2024-09

Authors

Coomans, JannaORCID 0000-0002-1224-7866ISNI 0000000395799101
Hermenault, Léa

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

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License

cc_by

Abstract

This article argues that medieval urban authorities developed nodal spatial strategies to mitigate various risks—from accidents, floods, and military vulnerability to sickness and scarcity. Using digital methods (Geographic Information System [GIS]) to map public works during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in one large city (Ghent), it offers a fuller understanding of urban governance in dialogue with a city’s topography and environmental and sociopolitical challenges. Ghent’s authorities invested in gates, bridges, markets, thoroughfares, key buildings, and waterworks. Tracing their interventions reveals the city as an interconnected, moving system, an economy of movement. Attention concentrated on these points because several types of interests related to communal well-being converged there. The city was thus capable of absorbing shocks (war, floods) through regular maintenance and monitoring. Tracing public works that promoted mobility can therefore tell us much about power dynamics and how communities functioned in practice.

Keywords

Ghent, disasters, infrastructures, middle ages, mobilities, public health, public works, resilience, History, Sociology and Political Science, Urban Studies, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities

Citation

Coomans, J & Hermenault, L 2024, 'Public Works, Spatial Strategies, and Mobility in Late Medieval Ghent', Journal of Urban History, vol. 50, no. 5, pp. 1018-1045. https://doi.org/10.1177/00961442221124892