New Books in History

Thomas Kuehn, "Patrimony and Law in Renaissance Italy" (Cambridge UP, 2022)

Feb 7, 2026
Thomas Kuehn, Professor Emeritus and historian of law and family in Renaissance Italy, discusses how family property formed the core of social life. He traces legal theories of shared rights, archival methods in Florence and Milan, frequent inheritance conflicts, and the legal devices used to preserve or divide patrimony. The conversation also covers municipal oversight, inventories, and managing problematic heirs.
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ANECDOTE

Life As An Archive Rat

  • Kuehn describes his archival work habits: arriving when archives open and staying until closing to mine registries.
  • He contrasts early manual transcription with later digital photographing and databases that sped research.
INSIGHT

Family As A Substantial Corporate Body

  • Familia in Renaissance Italy covered property, control, and non-material goods like name and honor that passed across generations.
  • Who counted as family mattered legally because trusts and inheritance rules bound property to the "family" definition.
ANECDOTE

Pazzi-Borrome Inheritance Dispute

  • Kuehn recounts a Pazzi-era Borrome inheritance case where residency and city identity were contested.
  • Claimants argued living in Padua disqualified cousins from Florentine inheritance rights.
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