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Articles

Kinship, gender and the spiritual economy in medieval Central European Towns

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Figures & data

Figure 1. Map of Central Europe in the Late Medieval Ages.

Figure 1. Map of Central Europe in the Late Medieval Ages.

Figure 2. Stephan’s and Katharina’s children incl. in-laws (right). * Entries into monasteries are displayed as marital links in the contemporary sense of a ‘marriage to Christ’.

Figure 2. Stephan’s and Katharina’s children incl. in-laws (right). * Entries into monasteries are displayed as marital links in the contemporary sense of a ‘marriage to Christ’.

Figure 3. Ulrich Poll’s marriages.

Figure 3. Ulrich Poll’s marriages.

Figure 4. Daughters and nieces of the Meserl family in St Bernhard’s (successive polyandry).

Figure 4. Daughters and nieces of the Meserl family in St Bernhard’s (successive polyandry).

Figure 5. Katharina Meserl II’s marriages.

Figure 5. Katharina Meserl II’s marriages.

Figure 6. Jans Poll’s wives and children (successive polygyny).

Figure 6. Jans Poll’s wives and children (successive polygyny).