Available Formats
England's Population: A History since the Domesday Survey
By (Author) Andrew Hinde
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hodder Arnold
11th September 2003
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
European history
304.60942
Paperback
256
Width 157mm, Height 232mm, Spine 14mm
Covering the entire period since the Norman conquest, this history charts the magnitude and characteristics of population change in England since the 11th century. It describes the major explanations for population change which have been proposed by historians over the years, and introduces the main historical sources which have been used to analyse the population history of England. Our knowledge of the population history of England has been transformed since the 1960s by the research of historians and demographers. The book emphasizes throughout the process by which ideas and evidence interact to create knowledge, using the full range of research tools. It assumes no prior knowledge of technical demography and the few technical terms and concepts which are used are clearly explained. Three appendices describe the main documentary sources and how they can be exploited to yield vital demographic data. The book should appeal to anyone interested in how our ancestors lived: how they were born, grew up, courted, married, had children and died. It should also be useful to students taking courses in English population history and society.
Few scholars possess the boldness to attempt a work with this scope; fewer still succeed in the attempt, as this book does. Economic History Review The book manages to be both an excellent starting point for the comparative beginner and a reason to pause and reflect for those who have long been immersed in the subject. Economic History Review
Andrew Hinde is Senior Lecturer in Population Studies at the University of Southampton, UK