Offering a systematic analysis of texts produced at the courts of Burgundy and Austrian Habsburg over a period reaching from the 1470s until the early 1700s, this book traces the development of the idea of successful and competent political behaviour as seen through the eyes of court historians between the fifteenth and the eighteenth centuries. The official chronicles and histories studied in this work not only reveal a growing influence of secular political thinking on the evolving model of political competence, but also present in detail the close relationship between the nascent state ideology and secular political theory.
More broadly, following the development of official history-writing, Models of Political Competence highlights the importance of historiography for the research on political thinking and its relevance for our understanding of the modern state in Europe and its origins.
Maria Golubeva, Ph.D. (1999), Cambridge University, has published a number of articles and one monograph on the representation and political ideology of the Austrian Habsburgs. She is also an active education policy adviser working on policy projects in several countries.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I: Military, institutional and discursive competence as seen by Burgundian court historians, c. 1470 â c. 1500
II: Politics into fiction: Maximilianâs transformation of the Burgundian model
V: Mismanagement and Other Virtues: The construction of secular political competence in the historiography of Gottlieb Eucharius Rinck
Conclusions
Bibliography
Index of Persons
All interested in the development of state ideology in pre-modern Europe or in the development of history writing and official historiography in early modern Europe, as well as anyone interested in the history of secular political thought.