The areas of joint use, known as commons, have been essential for the economy of local communities. Their dismantling, survival or transformation have led to useful historiographical debates in recent years.
Archeology and anthropology have focused lately on their study, developing lines of work to examine how they are used, bring a complex view of the different property and management rights, and qualify institutionalist interpretations. All of these points of view will be discussed in these symposiums.
Programme
12 November 2020
9:30
Greeting from the authorities
10:00
Los recursos de uso comunal en la documentación escrita: la Meseta del Duero (850-1200)
Iñaki Martín Viso (Universidad de Salamanca)10:30
Arqueología de los Comunales en el País Vasco
Aitziber González, Josu Narbarte and Juan Antonio Quirós (Universidad del País Vasco)11:00
QuestionsBreak
12:00
Reglamentación y usos comunales en la Vall del Madriu-Perafita-Claror (Andorra), entre los siglos XV i XX
Abel Fortó García and Olivier Codina Vialette (Patrimoni Cultural d’Andorra)12:30
From sharing practices to marginalisation: the (almost forgetten) social dimension of European mountains (XVIII-XXI sec.)
Anna Stagno (Università Degli Studi Di Genova)13:00
QuestionsLunch
16:00
Seasonal production sites – an Iron Age predecessor for the formation of commons
Andreas Hennius (Uppsala University)16:30
All animals are equal. But some animals are more equal than others”. Crisis communalism in rural communities during the Late Medieval Agrarian Crisis in Scandinavia
Eva Svensson (Karlstad University)17:00
The biocultural heritage of the commons. Linking the past with the future in the Scandinavian inland
Karl-Johan Lindholm (Uppsala University)17:30 Questions
13 November 2020
10:00
Cattle and sheep and the political in medieval Castile
Julio Escalona (Instituto de Historia CSIC)10:30
Estratexes llocales pal caltenimientu de los comunales nel Cordal Cantábricu
Margarita Fernández Mier (Universidá d`Uviéu) and Pablo López Gómez (Universidad de Lleón)11:00 Questions
Break
12:00
La gestión comunal del agua de origen andalusí en el sur de la Península Ibérica
José María Martín Civantos (Universidad de Granada)12:30
El estudio de “los comunales”: una perspectiva antropológica, jurídica e histórica desde la montaña navarra
Lidia Montesinos (Ankulegi, Asociación vasca de Antropología)13:00
QuestionsLunch
16:00
The archaeology of commons in Caramulo mountain range (Portugal): a work in progress
Catarina Tente (Universidade de Lisboa) and António Faustino Carvalho (Universidade de Faro)16:30
Ownership and sharing of the Commons in a high altitude environment: Case studies from the Pyrenees (18th – 19th)
Christine Rendu (Université de Toulouse) and Mélanie Le Couédic (Université de Pau)17:00
Beni comuni di pianura e indagini di terreno: alcune considerazione a partire da esempi lombardi del tardo medioevo
Riccardo Rao (Università degli Studi Di Bergamo)17:30
Questions18:00
Conclusions
Carlos Tejerizo (Universidad del País Vasco)
Organizing comittee
Margarita Fernández Mier (Universidá d’Uviéu)
Santiago Castellanos García (Universidad de Lleón)
Pablo López Gómez (Universidad de Lleón)
Santiago Rodríguez Pérez (Universidá d’Uviéu)
Patricia Aparicio Alonso (Universidá d’Uviéu)
Luis Miguel Rebollar (Universidá d’Uviéu)
Elías Carballido González (Universidá d’Uviéu)
Speakers
Iñaki Martín Viso (Universidad de Salamanca)
Aitziber González (Universidad del País Vasco)
Josu Narbarte(Universidad del País Vasco)
Juan Antonio Quirós (Universidad del País Vasco)
Abel Fortó García (Patrimoni Cultural d’Andorra)
Olivier Codina Vialette (Patrimoni Cultural d’Andorra)
Anna Stagno (Università Degli Studi Di Genova)
Andreas Hennius (Uppsala University)
Eva Svensson (Karlstad University)
Karl-Johan Lindholmn (Uppsala University)
Julio Escalona (Instituto de Historia, CSIC)
Margarita Fernández Mier (Universidá d`Uviéu)
Pablo López Gómez (Universidad de Lleón)
José María Martín Civantos (Universidad de Granada)
Lidia Montesinos (Ankulegi, Asociación vasca de Antropología)
Catarina Tente (Universidade de Lisboa)
António Faustino Carvalho (Universidade de Faro)
Christine Rendu (Université de Toulouse)
Mélanie Le Couédic (Université de Pau)
Riccardo Rao (Università degli Studi Di Bergamo)
Carlos Tejerizo (Universidad del País Vasco)