Using and producing urban political space: Nineteenth-Century Antwerp mayors and city councils and their claim to the town hall square.
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URN
item.page.journal-issn
ISSN
2567-1405
ISBN
E-ISBN
item.page.eissn
Lizenz
Erscheinungsjahr
2019
Ausgabe
Erscheinungsort
Berlin
Seite(n)
S. 16-30
Sprache
Zeitschriftentitel
Jahrgang
Erscheinungsvermerk/Umfang
Verlag
Deutsches Institut für Urbanistik
ZDB-ID
Dokumenttyp
Autor:innen
Herausgebende Institution
Im Auftrag von
Bearbeitung
Sonstige Mitarbeit
Gefördert von
Interviewer*in
Zeitbezug
Titel der Übergeordneten Veröffentlichung
Herausgeber*in
Herausgebende Institution
Reihentitel
Zählung der Reihe
Zeitschriftentitel
Moderne Stadtgeschichte : MSG
Jahrgang
Ausgabe
Nr. 1
GND-Schlagworte
Freie Schlagworte
Zeitbezug
1830
1914
1914
Geografischer Bezug
Zusammenfassung
This paper focuses on the political appropriation of the Antwerp town hall square - better known as Great Market - between 1830 and 1914. In historiography town hall squares were usually perceived as symbols of united political communities. It was as if behind the facade of the main municipal building only single-minded urban governments and city administrations operated. However, with the culture wars-tradition within nineteenth century political history in mind, this research assumes that not only between subsequent urban governments, but also within one city council opinions were divided on how to use and transform material urban spaces. With the planting of the Tree of Liberty, the restoration of the sculpture of Virgin Mary in the town hall's facade and the inauguration of the monumental Brabofountain the different nineteenth-century Antwerp city councils attempted, each in their own way, to consolidate their control over the Great Market. The subsequent Catholic and liberal urban governments introduced similar and adapted each other's material symbols. The shifts between Catholic and liberal governing periods provide an excellent framework to investigate how differently and/or similarly the subsequent urban governments integrated this specific urban landscape in their governance activities and political campaigns.