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Non-Fiction Daily
Life in The Late Middle Ages
Edited by Richard
Britnell
ISBN: 0-7509-1587-0
no price / Sutton Publ. / 1998
Nine essays,
each dealing with a different, often neglected facet of pre-Tudor
England, make up this well-rounded look at medieval society.
Editor Richard Britnell's selections illuminate the lives of
average people during the Middle Ages, whose histories are often
overshadowed by discussions on medieval warfare, royalty, or
worldwide exploration. Interlaced with period poetry and daily
reflections, the authors produce an uncommon glance at common
people.
Four of the essays are micro-studies on specific
groups of people, such as London parishoners, Yorkists, and peasants.
Each chapter is specifically crafted with the religious and secular
climate of medieval England in mind. One essay, for instance,
investigates a single family's genealogy over the span of the
15th century. Readers will also learn about the essential yet
hampered role of women through a discussion of nurses and the
evolution of their role in early hospitals. In still another
chapter, a portrait of the medieval peasant of Arden is presented.
(Re-enactors take note! the first chapter deals with dress and
the arrival of "fashion trends;" that is, dressing
not for necessity but for beauty.)
The most detailed account in the collection, however,
is an exploration of artisans and their respective guilds. The
author includes names and information about members of the tailors,
armourers, and livery guilds, to name a few. Especially revealing
is information on the formation of fraternal organizations and
communal work projectssuch as reparing city walls.
Designed with simplicity, this book is a refreshing
alternative to over-produced, pop-historical publications. A
reasonable amount of color and b/w photographs and maps efficiently
illustrate each point. Although edited with academia in mind,
this is an invaluable resource for both the scholar and student
of medieval society; in other words, those only interested in
knights and bloody sword fights need not bother.
--Sir
Miles
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Late Medieval England
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