florentine {netdata} | R Documentation |
This is a data set of marriage and business ties among
Renaissance Florentine families. The data is originally from
Padgett (1994) via UCINET
and stored as a network
object.
Breiger & Pattison (1986), in their discussion of local
role analysis, use a subset of data on the social relations
among Renaissance Florentine families (person aggregates)
collected by John Padgett from historical documents. The two
relations are business ties (flobusiness
- specifically, recorded
financial ties such as loans, credits and joint partnerships)
and marriage alliances (flomarriage
).
As Breiger & Pattison point out, the original data are
symmetrically coded. This is acceptable perhaps for marital
ties, but is unfortunate for the financial ties (which are
almost certainly directed). To remedy this, the financial
ties can be recoded as directed relations using some external
measure of power - for instance, a measure of wealth. Both networks
provide vertex information on (1) wealth
each family's net wealth in 1427
(in thousands of lira); (2) priorates
the number of priorates (seats on
the civic council) held between 1282- 1344; and (3) totalties
the total
number of business or marriage ties in the total dataset of
116 families (see Breiger & Pattison (1986), p 239).
Substantively, the data include families who were locked in a struggle for political control of the city of Florence in around 1430. Two factions were dominant in this struggle: one revolved around the infamous Medicis (9), the other around the powerful Strozzis (15).
data(florentine)
If the source of the data set does not specified otherwise, this data set is protected by the Creative Commons License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/.
When publishing results obtained using this data set the original authors should be cited. In addition this package should be cited as:
Mark S. Handcock, David Hunter, Carter T. Butts, Steven M. Goodreau,
and Martina Morris. 2003
statnet: An R package for the Statistical Modeling of Social Networks
http://www.csde.washington.edu/statnet.
Padgett, John F. 1994. Marriage and Elite Structure in Renaissance Florence, 1282-1500. Paper delivered to the Social Science History Association.
Wasserman, S. and Faust, K. (1994) Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England.
Breiger R. and Pattison P. (1986). Cumulated social roles: The duality of persons and their algebras, Social Networks, 8, 215-256.
flo, network, plot.network, ergm