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27 993 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher Clarendon Press
- Date of Publication 1 June 1995
- ISBN 9780198203216
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages256 pages
- Size 235x156x14 mm
- Weight 401 g
- Language English
- Illustrations line figures, tables 0
Categories
Short description:
This classic study of a single community in early modern England has had a major influence on the interpretation of the period. The authors examine the interaction of demographic, economic, social, administrative, and cultural change on the villagers of Terling between 1525 and 1700. This revised edition has a new chapter which brings the discussion right up to date, addresses the debates occasioned by the first edition, defending, elaborating, and advancing its argument in the light of subsequent research.
MoreLong description:
This classic study of a single community in early modern England has had a major influence on the interpretation of the social dynamics of the period. It opens with a chapter establishing this small Essex parish in the national context of economic and social change in the years between 1525 and 1700. Thereafter the chapters examine the economy of Terling; its demographic history; its social structure; the relationships of the villagers with the courts of the church and state; the growth of popular literacy; the impact of the reformation, and the rise in puritanism. The overall process of change is then characterized in a powerful interpretive chapter on the changing pattern of social relationships in the parish.
This revised edition has a new chapter, 'Terling Revisited' which addresses the debate occasioned by the book, notably over kinship relations in early modern England, and the impact of puritanism on local society. In both cases a new interpretive synthesis is attempted and the argument of the first edition is defended, elaborated, and advanced in the light of subsequent research.
From reviews of the hardback: `This book is one of the best of its kind. Wrightson and Levine have produced a powerful model to which all later studies will refer.' American Historical Review