Abstrakt:
The author analyses Peter Eschenloer’s Wrocław Chronicle from the second half of the fi fteenth
century. His interpretations are based on the theory of the relationship between power, space and
representation. The Wrocław chronicler simultaneously defended the denial of the city’s obedience
to the Bohemian king (who was in dispute with the pope) and condemned the riots provoked by the
city’s municipality. The key part of the German-language version of Eschenloer’s chronicle takes place
during a period when the town council faced a series of attacks to its authority. Eschenloer presents
the reader with a “representation of (dis)order” in the form of the breakdown and disunity of the town
and its consequences, laying groundwork that enables him to emphasize the legitimacy of the town
councillors’ actions and present the bounds of their authority as inclusive of all public space.