List of Plates.
List of Maps.
Preface.
Introduction.
1. The Land.
2. The People: Rural Society.
3. The People: Towns and Traders.
4. The Church.
5. Culture.
6. Government and Administration.
7. Politics.
8. England and the Wider World.
Conclusion.
Appendix 1: Selective Family Trees.
Appendix 2: Chronology.
Bibliography.
Index.
Sandra Raban is Fellow in History at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and formerly lectured at Homerton College. She is the author of Mortmain Legislation and the English Church, 1279-1500 (1982) and a number of studies on the 1279-80 hundred rolls. She is now working on an edition of the registers of the late-thirteenth- and early-fourteenth-century abbots of Peterborough.
"Economic and social history can, it must be said, be a dry
subject, particularly in a textbook such as this one, but Raban has
managed to render it absorbing, enjoyable and above all, real and
relevant ... this is a synthesis of the best kind, offering a
highly readable, well-written, lively and valuable introduction to
English society at this time." History
"This is a volume which will provide very sound bearings for both
the general reader and for the better informed, and engender the
interest to explore further." English Historical Review
"Raban, like other authors in the "A History of Medieval Britain"
series, provides the nonspecialist reader with a picture of England
between 1239 and 1327 drawn from the most recent scholarship,
including debates among scholars over conflicting interpretations."
CHOICE
"Students will find this a highly readable and informative
introduction to an important period in the history of medieval
Britain, and the bibliography will assist them in pursuing their
studies further." History: Reviews of New Books
"Raban has fulfilled her brief well in the production of a 'bottom
up' text that reflects current historiography. Teachers will be
pleased with the open-ended reviews of historiographical debates
that will serve as a springboard to class discussions ..."
Albion
"A wide-ranging overview which should prompt the reader to a deeper
examination of a many-faceted era." Canadian Journal of History
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