Seite - 268 - in The Power of Urban Water - Studies in premodern urbanism
Bild der Seite - 268 -
Text der Seite - 268 -
268 Gabriel Zeilinger
12thcenturies, filledbymercantileactivityandsettlement that isarchaeologically recorded.The
bailiwick over these manors, most prominently the exercise of high justice, was taken over
by theHohenstaufen king, later emperor, Friedrich II andhis localmen around 1212/1214. The
diplomatic traditionshows thepresenceofministerialesandotherofficialsofall of those ‘exter-
nal’ rulers at theplace in thedecadesbeforeandafter,manyofwhomwould settledown there
and form the first urban elite. In 1212 and again in 1214, theburgenses (not yet citizens by full
right) ofColmar soldparts of their commons–whichprobably includedstretchesofwater– in
order to use the revenue to enclose their churchyard. For these acts, the emerging community
ofburgenses, obviouslyheadedby followersof theHohenstaufen, firsthad to legally,politically
and socially appropriate the commons and then persuade the landlords proper to consent to
the sales–which theydid, or ratherhad to. In the following3 to4decades, Colmarwas encir-
cledwith the first comprehensivewall, grewsubstantiallyboth inpopulationandcentral func-
tions, andmaintained its role as a stronghold for theHohenstaufen kings and their partisans
in the region. It attained the statusof a royal city through this, somethingwhich itmanaged to
retain farbeyondtheendof thisdynasty–with increasingmunicipalautonomy.Unfortunately,
wedonot findmuchmentionofwater in thisearlyphase–except for theaforementionedhints
in the chronicles, and the catastrophic ones to be treated of later. There is lots of timber dealt
with in the sources, though. But this aquatic deficit in the traditionwasmended towards the
endof the 13th century.
The internalgrowthand thedevelopmentof several suburbsatColmarmadenecessary two
extensions of the city wall, one around 1250 and again around 1287. This led to all sorts of
structural re-arrangementswithin the (new)walls, too: in a charter ofMay 14th 1295, the Prior
of the Dominicans in Colmar declared that the city council had granted an extension of the
convent’sgroundsandbuildingsbeyondthe ‘old’wallandtrenchandtheconstructionofbuild-
ings for its needs.17 Yet, thiswas to bedone in awaydazwir die flusse sollen lassen fliessen in
aller der friheit, als die burger vndochdie stat bedorfent (thatwe should let the streams flow in
all freedom, as the citizens and the city need). Also, over those streams theDominicanswere
tobuild twoopenchamberswith four seats, towhichall townspeoplewouldhave freeaccess–
to take care of their (in this case ‘special’) necessities.
By the way, for the years 1292 and 1302 the Annales Colmarienses maiores – a tradition
alongside the above-mentionedDominican– find it noteworthy, that in the first-namedyear, a
‘technician invented amachine to pipe thewater through the streets’ of Strasbourg, and that,
at the latter date, the citizens of Colmarwere able to channelwater to all city quarters. In the
year 1293, as the Chronicon Colmariense records, the king (or anti-king) Adolf of Nassauwas
besieging Colmar in his fight for sole power against Albrecht of Habsburg. One of his troops’
measureswastodivert theMühlbach, themill creek,whichsupposedly ledtoablatantshortage
of flour in the townand topeoplehaving topush themillwheel –with ameagre outcome.18
Water asanenvironmental hazard for towns
Butwith that,wemoveontocover, ifonlybriefly, thehazardousaspectsofwaterandurbanisa-
tion.Having initiallyportrayed the large-scaleenvironmentaleffectsofurbanisation19 (not least
by deforestation) – which even the contemporaries were able to discern – and having intro-
duced the problems of sanitation and sewage20 with the last-mentioned episodes, the cata-
17 CAOU5, 515.
18 Pertz 1861, 165f. 219. 226 (theLatin again translated).
19 For aneco-archaeological perspective, seeSchreg, this volume.
20 SeeArndt, this volume.
The Power of Urban Water
Studies in premodern urbanism
- Titel
- The Power of Urban Water
- Untertitel
- Studies in premodern urbanism
- Autoren
- Nicola Chiarenza
- Annette Haug
- Ulrich Müller
- Verlag
- De Gruyter Open Ltd
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-11-067706-5
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 28.0 cm
- Seiten
- 280
- Kategorie
- Technik