When addressing issues related to kinship, scholars tend to focus on the later centuries of the Middle Ages due to the paucity of sources for the period considered by GenALMA (especially the twelfth and thirteenth century). a) Thanks to the availability of an extraordinarily rich corpus of documents and extensive research, the project has enabled to reconstruct kinship patterns, orientations in the transmission and management of estates and shifts in family strategies over the long term. b) The research has also enabled to trace the developments of female patrimonial rights from as early as the mid-twelfth century highlighting how despite the drastic cutback, women could still carve for themselves a modicum of agency, and how they could prove to be central to alliances and even more so within the system of the 'alberghi'. c) Furthermore, the study of notarial documents has highlighted the importance and complexity of both dowry, which could prove to be a very flexible fund, and of non dotal assets, which could be used to implement well-pondered family strategies. d) For what concerns the management of immovables, the data collected has evidenced the importance of individual property, contrary to what historiography has so far contended, i.e. the centrality of undivided property. e) Research has also enabled to highlight the relationship between residential patterns, the development of the 'alberghi' and of other alliances and specific clienteles, shedding light on patterns of sociability in the late Middle Ages.
GenALMA, thus enhances our knowledge on mechanisms that trigger development in kinship structures, on the legal developments connected to these shifts, on the changes in the patrimonial rights of women, and on the impact that these changes had on residential strategies and therefore on the urban fabric. Especially, in assessing changes in family and in gender roles, GenALMA reflects contemporary issues and challenges which require a knowledge of the past to be properly understood and addressed in the present.