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)
Programme:
Day 1
5 June 2025 (Saint-Louis)
Coffee & Opening Remarks: 8.30-9.00
Xavier Rousseaux
Session 1. Pardons between theory and practice: 9.00-10.30
Krista Kesselring (Dalhousie University): A Crowning Mercy? The Coronation Pardon in English History
Dylan Beccaria (Université d’Aix-Marseille): ‘Une stupide bonté et une simplicité sans prudence’ – Raison d’État, dangers et limites de la grâce dans le Conseiller d’État de Philippe de Béthune (1633)
Nicolas Ruys (UCLouvain): Lettres d’état et affaires criminelles, un mariage impossible ? Etude du tractatus de literis dilatoriis, annalibus, quinquennalibus, status, & aliis, in iudiciis frequens de Pierre Rebuffe (1487-1557)
Coffee Break: 10.30-10.45
Session 2. Gendered Stories and Violence: 10.45-12.15
Elias Feys (KU Leuven & Université de Lille): A Hot-tempered, Capricious, Jealous and Compassionless wife’. Marital Conflicts and Homicide in Pardon Letters from Burgundy and the Low Countries (1450–1535)
Sara McDougall (John Jay College of Criminal Justice – CUNY): Pardonable Women: What’s gender got to do with it? – 15th century France
Elma Brenner (Wellcome Collection): Gender and mental illness in a pardon letter from fifteenth-century Normandy
Lunch: 12.15-13.00
Session 3. Peacemaking and Pardons: 13.00-14.00
Stuart Carroll (University of York): The Politics of Peace-Making in a Seventeenth-Century French Village
Diane Roussel (Université Gustave Eiffel): Faire la paix: pratiques et échecs de la composition privée dans les lettres de rémission françaises du XVIe siècle
Keynote lecture: 14.00-14.45
Walter Prevenier (Universiteit Gent): Fascination with Pardon Letters before and since Natalie Zemon Davis: the endless archival searching, the unveiling of petitioners’ and princes’ motivations
Coffee break: 14.45-15.00
Session 4. War and Justice: 15.00-16.30
Quentin Verreycken (FNRS – UCLouvain): Conflicting Loyalties: Pardon Letters and Borderland Military Violence during the French-Burgundian Wars, 1465–1482
David Fiasson (CY Cergy Paris Université): ‘Une coquinaille qui ne sont bons que a destruire le peuple.’ Pages et valets de guerre d’après le témoignage des lettres de rémission (France, première moitié du XVe s.)
Pierre Pretou: Les temporalités du pardon de la désobéissance dans le Sud-ouest du Royaume de France au XVe s., entre traitement de l’ennemi, du rebelle ou du criminel.
Coffee break: 16.30-16.45
Session 5. Pardons and Fictionalization – Chair Eddy Put: 16.45-18.15
Luke Giraudet (KU Leuven): Witnessing Violence: Collective Storytelling and the Crafting of Pardon Tales in the Habsburg Low Countries
Xavier Rousseaux (UCLouvain) & Julie Douley (UCLouvain): ‘S’est avanchié ledict bailly de laisser la voye de faict… en les gectant en prison très estroicte et rude, au fon de fosse et ceppe de fer …’ Imprisonment stories in pardon letters from the Southern Netherlands (15th-18th c.)
Antoine Fersing (Université de Strasbourg): L’exercice de la grâce, un facteur de la construction des problèmes publics durant la première modernité ? Le cas de la régulation de la consommation d’alcool en Lorraine ducale au début du XVIIe siècle: la consommation d’alcool en Lorraine
Round Table – Book Launch: V. Soen & Y. Junot eds., Pardons and Peacemaking in the Spanish Habsburg World (Habsburg Worlds 7) (Brepols, 2025): 18.15-18.45
Respondents: Gert Gielis (Belgian State Archives), Luke Giraudet (KU Leuven), Quentin Verreycken (Université Saint-Louis)
Reception: 18.45-19.15
Conference dinner for speakers: 20.00
Day 2
6 June (KU Leuven – Warmoesberg)
Visit to the Belgian State Archives (Ruisbroekstraat): 9.00-10.00
Gert Gielis (Belgian State Archives) & Lieve de Mecheleer (Belgian State Archives): Presentation of the project & showpieces
Anica Rimac (UCLouvain): Showcase of PARDONS resources
Transfer to the Warmoesberg & Coffee Break: 10.00-11.00
Session 6. Pardons and Religion: 11.00-12.30
Hans Cools (KU Leuven): A tale of unrest and uncertainty. The pardon for Jehan le Roy in 1562
Violet Soen (KU Leuven): Pardon Letters and the Storytelling of Refugees Returning to the Habsburg Low Countries during the Revolt.
Eduardo Benítez-Inglott y Ballesteros (Oxford University): Sub sigillo officii penitentiarie: The Apostolic Penitentiary, Its Pardon Letters, and the Spanish Inquisition – A Case Study
Lunch: 12.30-13.15
Session 7. The imperfect monopolization of violence over time and space I: 13.15-14.45
Rudi Beaulant (Université Marie et Louis Pasteur – Besançon): Les premières lettres de rémission de Philippe le Hardi. Réflexion sur la mise en place de l’administration du droit de grâce sous le premier duc Valois
Maurena Benteboula (Université de Lille): Il ne demandoit que paix et amour : l’utilisation des réseaux de pouvoir princiers dans l’obtention du pardon à travers l’exemple d’Antoine Grand Bâtard de Bourgogne
Emanuel Gerardin (Université de Strasbourg): La grâce des ducs de Lorraine, un instrument au service de la construction d’une justice souveraine (fin XVe-début XVIIe siècle)
Coffee break: 14.45-15.00
Session 8. The imperfect monopolization of violence over time and space II: 15.00-16.30
Mark Spindlow (University of York): Pardons and dispute settlement in England after the civil war, 1660-1700
Antoine Follain (Université de Strasbourg): La grâce, une prérogative souveraine dégradée en Lorraine après 1630
Bernard Dauven (UCLouvain): La grâce est morte? Vive la grâce! Les évolutions de la grâce à l’époque moderne dans les Pays-Bas (XVIe-XVIIIe siècles). Typologie et formulaires
Closing remarks/Conclusions: 16.30 –17.00
Poster session: Arthur Watillon, Jeremy Sidgwick, Richard Gaudier, + Arne Vinck + Dries De Buck + Xavier Gillard
More information here.
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