Models of the City in the Hispanic Monarchy (16th–17th Centuries): Foundational Discourses and Urban Imagination
Quim Solias, M.A.
This project examines how cities of the Hispanic Monarchy were conceptualized through textual and visual representations between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. It argues that chronicles, city views, maps, and monumental images did not merely describe urban spaces but actively proposed normative models of what a city was and ought to be. These representations articulated the city simultaneously as “urbs” (its physical form) and “civitas” (its political and moral community), producing models that rendered urban space thinkable, comparable, and reproducible across imperial contexts. Focusing on cities such as Barcelona, Naples, Seville, Lima, and Cuzco, the project analyzes how discourses of foundation and refoundation interacted with urban imagination to shape debates on policy, authority, memory, and order within the polycentric structure of the Hispanic Monarchy.