Heath Dillard attempts to identify the roles and position of women in this society, on the basis of the fueros, foundation charters of the new towns. From detailed study of this type of material, Dillard demonstrates the importance of women in reconquest society.. ‘ [This] vivid and sensitive portrayal of Castilian townswomen. provides an important source for any comparative study of the social changes that urbanism engendered’. — Diane Owen Hughes, Journal of Interdisciplinary History ‘Heath Dillard demonstrates how living on the frontiers of Christian Europe influenced women’s position within urban settlements of the Reconquest. [Her] study is.
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Daughters of the Reconquest: Women in Castilian Town Society, 1100-1300 (Cambridge Iberian and Latin American Studies) by Heath Dillard (Author) 4.6 2 ratings See all formats and editions. Honor in early modern Castile has been seen as a code that determined social behavior, notably by defining women’s identities in terms of sexuality and by limiting their behavior. Examining criminal cases that feature nonelite women from Yébenes, a small town near Toledo in Castile, shows that in practice honor was a rhetoric that women used to make their way through the social relations of.