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Field warden

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The field warden (Latin: camparius; Italian: camparo) was an urban official operating at least from the twelfth century onward across the Italian peninsula.[1] Working alongside other officials, he acted as a rural policing agent on behalf of the region’s growing cities.[2][3] As such, he is to be distinguished from the field guard or rural custodian, also commonly referred to as a camparius or camparo, who was generally employed in private service by a landlord, including rural or urban monasteries.

The field warden enforced the policies that cities developed to manage their surrounding countryside,[4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11] which became an increasingly important concern as urban populations grew from the eleventh century on.[12][13] To avoid an over-reliance on long-distance trade, many cities chose to steer hinterland production to serve their own needs, for both feeding their communities and supporting urban production and commerce.[14][15] As such, field wardens constantly patrolled the rural territories cities laid claim to, focusing attention on agricultural activities, including animal husbandry. Field wardens also ensured that rural infrastructures such as waterways, bridges, roads and fences were well maintained, so that goods, animals and human traffic met fewer obstacles.

Although in general they are poorly documented officials, field wardens in some regions, notably Piedmont, recorded their daily activities, including fines they meted out to those who violated urban ordinances pertaining to the countryside. These could be selling produce off-market, allowing animals to graze illicitly in another person’s field, theft of produce, arson and general trespassing. In their policing function field masters highly resembled those of their intramural counterpart, the road master.

A field warden (camparius) in Turin's 14th-century statutes. Archivio Storico della Città di Torino, Carte sciolte 390, Codex catena, f. 29v

Field wardens were adult men generally chosen from among a city’s different quarters for non-consecutive terms of six or twelve months. Attempts to integrate them into the podesta's entourage or create centralized offices tended to fail. They were usually salaried but could earn additional income from successful prosecution of violators and they collected fees from rural landlords for their monitoring services, whether these were actually required or not. Despite making negligible contributions to urban and ducal coffers, and running into resistance by rustics and rural landlords, field masters soon became important cogs in urban administrations throughout Italy.

References

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  1. ^ Geltner, G. (29 March 2022). "Rural Policing in the Long Trecento: An Urban Project and Its Obstruction". English Historical Review. 137 (584): 47–79. doi:10.1093/ehr/ceac017.
  2. ^ F. Cognasso, ‘Disposizioni di polizia agraria a Chieri nel secolo XIV’, Annali dell'Istituto superiore di magistero del Piemonte, 7 (1934), pp. 5-54.
  3. ^ Geltner, G. (2019). Roads to Health: Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in Later Medieval Italy. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 113–30. ISBN 9780812251357
  4. ^ M.M. Perrot, ‘Ordine pubblico, giustizia e forze dell’ordine a Pinerolo prima della rivoluzione francese’, in Riflessioni storiche sull’Istituzione della Pubblica Sicurezza in Piemonte: Centocinquantacinquesimo anniversario di constituzione dell’Amministrazione di Pubblica Sicurezza, 1848-2003, Atti del Convegno Nazionale A.N.P.S., Pinerolo (TO), 6 giugno 2003 (Turin, 2003), pp. 1-6.
  5. ^ D. Brunetti, ed., 1457. Gli Statuti del Comune di Rivoli, trans. A. Calzolari (Turin, 2004), p. 125.
  6. ^ D. Segati, ed., Gli Statuti di Pinerolo, Historiae Patriae Monumenta 20, Leges Municipales 4 (Turin, 1955), col. 190 (p. 71).
  7. ^ P. Sella, F. Guasco di Bisio and F. Gabotto, eds., Documenti Biellesi, Biblioteca della Societá Storica Subalpina 23 (Asti, 1909), Statuti 1245, 4 (p. 332).
  8. ^ U. Santini, ed., Gli Statuti di Fossano [anno 1330] (Asti, 1907) V, 1 (pp. 44-5).
  9. ^ G. Postarino, ed., Gli Statuti di Ricaldone (Bordighera, 1968), ‘Capitula  ferracie’, 113 (p. 76).
  10. ^ I.M. Sacco, ed., Statuti di Savigliano [anno 1305], Biblioteca della Societá Storica Subalpina, n.s. (Voghera, 1933), nos. 310-24 (pp. 135-40).
  11. ^ V. Crovella, ed., Statuti di Vernato e Ghiara (1328), Quaderni di Cultura Biellese 3 (Biella, 1977), nos. 48, 60, 63, 71, 77, 85, 91, inter alia (pp. 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, respectively).
  12. ^ Wickham, Chris (2015). Sleepwalking into a New World: The Emergence of Italian City Communes in the Twelfth Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691148287
  13. ^ Waley, Daniel (2010). The Italian City Republics. ISBN 978-1405859004.
  14. ^ S.R. Epstein, ‘Town and Country: Economy and Institutions in Late Medieval Italy’, Economic History Review, 46.3 (1993), pp. 453-77.
  15. ^ G. Dameron, ‘Feeding the Medieval Italian City-State: Grain, War, and Political Legitimacy in Tuscany, c. 1150-c. 1350’, Speculum, 92 (2017), pp. 976-1019.