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Peasant perspectives on the Medieval landscape : a study of three communities / Susan Kilby.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Hatfield, Hertfordshire : University Of Hertfordshire Press, (c)2020.Description: 1 online resource : illustrations, mapsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781912260300
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • DA185 .P437 2020
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Title Page -- Half Title -- Copyrigt -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- General Editor's preface -- Preface and acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- 1. Introduction -- Geographic scope -- Elton, Huntingdonshire -- Castor, Northamptonshire -- Lakenheath, Suffolk -- Sources -- 2. Understanding the seigneurial landscape -- From inclusive to exclusive? Seigneurial perceptions of rural settlement in the later Anglo-Saxon period -- Conspicuous display and veiled privacy: from the Norman Conquest to the Black Death -- 3. Ordering the landscape
Encountering the built environment: rural peasant dwellings -- Delineating peasant space within the medieval manor -- Off the beaten track: the hidden morphology of the rural landscape -- 4. The unseen landscape -- Understanding topographical bynames -- Knowing your place: contrasting peasant landscapes within medieval manors? -- Mapping topographical bynames: Norman Cross hundred -- Aboveton: from indicator of place to socially constructed landscape
the bigger picture -- Conclusions: personal status and topographical bynames -- 5. Naming the landscape -- Reassessing minor medieval landscape names -- Ordering field and furlong -- Distinguishing field and furlong -- The natural environment -- The supernatural environment -- Looking backward: naming the landscape -- The dynamics of landscape naming: cultural names -- 6. The remembered landscape -- Beyond taxonomy: the secret life of the fields -- 7. The economic landscape -- The rural environment as an economic resource: the demesne
Hidden peasant economies: fishing -- Hidden peasant economies: sheep farming -- Conclusions -- hidden peasant economies -- 8. Managing the landscape -- Waste not, want not: the natural world as a resource -- As common as muck: keeping the land in good heart -- Scientific fields: peasants and medieval science -- Ten men went to mow: managing medieval meadowland -- Mires, mores and meres: managing fenland resources -- A ditch in time: managing drainage and water resources -- Conclusions -- managing the landscape
Unveiling the peasant environment -- Living in rural communities -- Social status reconsidered -- Detecting peasant agency -- Memory and history in the rural landscape -- Making a living in rural England -- Peasant perspectives on the medieval landscape: concluding thoughts -- Bibliography -- Index
Subject: This compelling new study forms part of a new wave of scholarship on the medieval rural environment in which the focus moves beyond purely socio-economic concerns to incorporate the lived experience of peasants. For too long, the principal intellectual approach has been to consider both subject and evidence from a modern, rationalist perspective and to afford greater importance to the social elite. New perspectives are needed. By re-evaluating the source material from the perspective of the peasant worldview, it is possible to build a far more detailed representation of rural peasant experience. Susan Kilby seeks to reconstruct the physical and socio-cultural environment of three contrasting English villages - Lakenheath in Suffolk, Castor in Northamptonshire and Elton in Huntingdonshire - between c. 1086 and c. 1348 and to use this as the basis for determining how peasants perceived their natural surroundings.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction DA185 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1148174877

Includes bibliographies and index.

This compelling new study forms part of a new wave of scholarship on the medieval rural environment in which the focus moves beyond purely socio-economic concerns to incorporate the lived experience of peasants. For too long, the principal intellectual approach has been to consider both subject and evidence from a modern, rationalist perspective and to afford greater importance to the social elite. New perspectives are needed. By re-evaluating the source material from the perspective of the peasant worldview, it is possible to build a far more detailed representation of rural peasant experience. Susan Kilby seeks to reconstruct the physical and socio-cultural environment of three contrasting English villages - Lakenheath in Suffolk, Castor in Northamptonshire and Elton in Huntingdonshire - between c. 1086 and c. 1348 and to use this as the basis for determining how peasants perceived their natural surroundings.

Front Cover -- Title Page -- Half Title -- Copyrigt -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- General Editor's preface -- Preface and acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- 1. Introduction -- Geographic scope -- Elton, Huntingdonshire -- Castor, Northamptonshire -- Lakenheath, Suffolk -- Sources -- 2. Understanding the seigneurial landscape -- From inclusive to exclusive? Seigneurial perceptions of rural settlement in the later Anglo-Saxon period -- Conspicuous display and veiled privacy: from the Norman Conquest to the Black Death -- 3. Ordering the landscape

Organising the landscape of the medieval vill: seigneurial and peasant zones -- Encountering the built environment: rural peasant dwellings -- Delineating peasant space within the medieval manor -- Off the beaten track: the hidden morphology of the rural landscape -- 4. The unseen landscape -- Understanding topographical bynames -- Knowing your place: contrasting peasant landscapes within medieval manors? -- Mapping topographical bynames: Norman Cross hundred -- Aboveton: from indicator of place to socially constructed landscape

Mapping topographical bynames: Huntingdonshire -- the bigger picture -- Conclusions: personal status and topographical bynames -- 5. Naming the landscape -- Reassessing minor medieval landscape names -- Ordering field and furlong -- Distinguishing field and furlong -- The natural environment -- The supernatural environment -- Looking backward: naming the landscape -- The dynamics of landscape naming: cultural names -- 6. The remembered landscape -- Beyond taxonomy: the secret life of the fields -- 7. The economic landscape -- The rural environment as an economic resource: the demesne

The rural environment as an economic resource: peasant arable production -- Hidden peasant economies: fishing -- Hidden peasant economies: sheep farming -- Conclusions -- hidden peasant economies -- 8. Managing the landscape -- Waste not, want not: the natural world as a resource -- As common as muck: keeping the land in good heart -- Scientific fields: peasants and medieval science -- Ten men went to mow: managing medieval meadowland -- Mires, mores and meres: managing fenland resources -- A ditch in time: managing drainage and water resources -- Conclusions -- managing the landscape

9. Conclusion -- Unveiling the peasant environment -- Living in rural communities -- Social status reconsidered -- Detecting peasant agency -- Memory and history in the rural landscape -- Making a living in rural England -- Peasant perspectives on the medieval landscape: concluding thoughts -- Bibliography -- Index

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