Decline and Growth in English Towns 1400–1640
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:14th Sep '95
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£36.00(9780521552721)
A summary and analysis of the controversial debate about the decline and growth of English towns from 1400 to 1640.
Historians have long disputed whether English towns were in decline in the period 1400–1640. This book reviews the literature of the controversy, guides the reader through it, and adds new insights derived from the author's own research. This is a book both for students beginning the study of the subject and for their teachers.Although historians have always studied towns, widespread interest in urban history as a specialised historical field is relatively recent. This fashion has stimulated the development of a major controversy about the fortunes of towns in England between the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries. Some see them as prone to crisis and frequently subject to decay, while others have held that many of them prospered in these centuries. This book guides the reader through the controversy, summarises the opposing arguments, and adds new insights derived from the author's own research. Alan Dyer argues that the problem lay in the rise and decline of regional economies rather than the rise and decline of the towns which lay in those regions. An extensive bibliography with notes helps the reader to come to his or her own conclusions.
"...worthwhile text..." The Sixteenth Century Journal
ISBN: 9780521557818
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 6mm
Weight: 130g
92 pages