TY - JOUR TI - Wenceslas Looks Out: Monarchy, Locality, and the Symbolism of Power in Fourteenth-Century Bavaria AU - Scales, Len PY - 2019 PB - Cambridge University Press (CUP) LA - eng AB - AbstractThis article reassesses the reputation enjoyed by Charles IV of Luxemburg, emperor and king of Bohemia (r. 1346/1347–1378), as the author of a program aimed at projecting his monarchy via visual media. Current scholarship, which stresses the centrally directed character of this program, regards it as serving clear political goals, as "propaganda" to unify Charles's far-flung territories. This article challenges that view. It contends that a straightforward political purpose is often less detectable than usually claimed, and the political "success" of Caroline image-making easily overstated. Above all, it argues for the necessity of decentering Caroline visual culture by stepping away from the familiar focus on the Prague court, to explore instead provincial viewpoints. Focusing on northeastern Bavaria, it shows that local examples of Caroline imagery are often best understood not as impositions from the "center," but rather as products of interactions between court and locality, through which local perspectives and interests also found expression. UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/s0008938919000141 DO - 10.1017/s0008938919000141 T2 - Central European history VL - 52 IS - 2 SN - 1569-1616 SN - 0008-9389 SP - 179-210 UR - https://www.pollux-fid.de/r/cr-10.1017/s0008938919000141 H1 - Pollux (Fachinformationsdienst Politikwissenschaft) ER -