The Social Topography of a Rural Community
Scenes of Labouring Life in Seventeenth Century England
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:8th Jun '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The Social Topography of a Rural Community is a micro-history of an exceptionally well-documented seventeenth-century English village: Chilvers Coton in north-eastern Warwickshire. Drawing on a rich archive of sources, including an occupational census, detailed estate maps, account books, private journals, and hundreds of deeds and wills, and employing a novel micro-spatial methodology, it reconstructs the life experience of some 780 inhabitants spread across 176 households. This offers a unique opportunity to visualize members of an English rural community as they responded to, and in turn initiated, changes in social and economic activity, making their own history on their own terms. In so doing the book brings to the fore the social, economic, and spatial lives of people who have been marginalized from conventional historical discourse, and offers an unusual level of detail relating to the spatial and demographic details of local life. Each of the substantive chapters focuses on the contributions and experiences of a particular household in the parish-the mill, the vicarage, the alehouse, the blacksmith's forge, the hovels of the labourers and coalminers, the cottages of the nail-smiths and ribbon-weavers, the farms of the yeomen and craftsmen, and the manor house of Arbury Hall itself-locating them precisely on specific sites in the landscape and the built environment; and sketching the evolving 'taskscapes' in which the inhabitants dwelled. A novel contribution to spatial history, as well as early modern material, social and economic history more generally, this study represents a highly original analysis of the significance of place, space, and flow in the history of English rural communities.
The book we have is excellent, particularly as an engaging and authoritative way for students and newcomers to the seventeenth century to immerse themselves in the experiences of daily life, to learn much of what they need to know, to see how much work is involved in mastering the subject, and hopefully to be inspired to do so by a historian whose mastery of the subject is evident on every page. * Henry French, Family and Community History vol. 26 /3 *
The Social Topography of a Rural Community provides a fine example of how to use record linkage productively. * The Local Historian *
- Winner of Winner, 2024 Joan Thirsk Memorial Prize.
ISBN: 9780192868466
Dimensions: 240mm x 161mm x 32mm
Weight: 988g
498 pages