Medieval England: A Social History 1250-1550
By (Author) P.J.P. Goldberg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hodder Arnold
14th January 2005
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
942
Paperback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 21mm
528g
To ask what life was like in the Middle Ages, how people related to one another, how people made a living, how children were brought up to become adults, or what people knew and what they thought, is to pose the most difficult questions. These are the very questions Medieval England addresses. It introduces us to the richness of the documentary (and non-documentary) evidence that survives, but at the same time alerts us to some of the enigmas that this evidence contains. All too often the medieval social past has been explored as an adjunct to high politics. This book places ordinary men and women, for whom the politics of the manor, the village or the borough were often far more real and pressing, at centre stage. It engages with questions relating to the various structures of society, be they social hierarchy, household and family, guild or confraternity, parish or manor, lay or clergy. It considers also the ways in which age, gender, and marital status shaped people's lives. Above all, in this period punctuated by the ravages of the Black Death, by profound social unrest and religious upheaval, it locates these concerns within the context of change over time.
'Over the past twenty years, Jeremy Goldberg has significantly altered our understanding of the social history of later medieval Englandhis work has been consistently characterized by its subtlety and intelligence, its deep understanding of the limitations and possibilities of the surviving sources, and its unwavering attention to the centrality of gender to late-medieval society. With this new textbook Goldberg places his ideas into the larger patterns of English social history in the centuries before and after the plague.' * Speculum *
P.J.P. Goldberg is Reader in History at the University of York, UK