The PARDONS project funded by the Belgian Science Policy Office invites is organising a conference on pardoning and pardon letters in late medieval and early modern Europe. Since the work of Natalie Zemon Davis, Robert Muchembled and Claude Gauvard, historians have turned to the analysis of pardon letters to interrogate not only the workings of premodern violence, but also the everyday life, habits and cultural assumptions of those who petitioned for mercy. While large-scale quantitative surveys of legal records have long been a staple of the history of crime and justice, new methodological advances coupled with developments in the digital humanities have increasingly enabled historians to reconcile the analysis of huge swathes of archival data with the more grounded approaches characteristic of microhistory, zooming in upon regions, periods and outlier examples to establish nuanced accounts of violence in its social, political and religious contexts.
A collaborative and multi-institutional project, PARDONS is situated precisely within this trend, and over the past few years has harnessed technological advances in order to digitize, transcribe and analyse the late medieval and early modern pardon letters held in central Belgian archives. Organized by the State Archives of Belgium, the Centre d’histoire du droit et de la justice (UCLouvain) and the Early Modern Research Group (KU Leuven), with the support of the Centre de recherches en histoire du droit, des institutions et de la société (UCLouvain–Saint-Louis), this conference aims to consolidate new insights and foster dialogue between scholars working on the history of violence, crime, and royal mercy in Western Europe.
Scientific Committee
- Éric Bousmar (UCLouvain–Saint-Louis)
- Hans Cools (KU Leuven)
- Lieve De Mecheleer (State Archives of Belgium)
- Gert Gielis (State Archives of Belgium)
- Luke Giraudet (KU Leuven)
- Eddy Put (State Archives of Belgium)
- Xavier Rousseaux (UCLouvain)
- Quentin Verreycken (UCLouvain)
- Alexis Wilkin (ULB)