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The Later Medieval City 13001500 Reprint David Nicholas

  • SKU: BELL-10928994
The Later Medieval City 13001500 Reprint David Nicholas
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Later Medieval City 13001500 Reprint David Nicholas instant download after payment.

Publisher: Routledge
File Extension: PDF
File size: 9.06 MB
Author: David Nicholas
ISBN: 9780582013179, 9781315846774, 0582013178, 1315846772
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: Reprint

Product desciption

The Later Medieval City 13001500 Reprint David Nicholas by David Nicholas 9780582013179, 9781315846774, 0582013178, 1315846772 instant download after payment.

First published 1997 by Addison Wesley Longman Limited.
"The Later Medieval City, 1300-1500", the second part of David Nicholas's ambitious two-volume study of cities and city life in the Middle Ages, fully lives up to its splendid precursor, "The Growth of the Medieval City". (Like that volume it is fully self-sufficient, though many readers will want to use the two as a continuum.) This book covers a much shorter period than the first. That traced the rise of the medieval European city system from late Antiquity to the early fourteenth century; this offers a portrait of the fully developed late medieval city in all its richness and complexity.
The later medieval cities developed permanent bureaucracies providing a huge range of public services, and they were paid for by sophisticated systems of taxation and public borrowing. The survival of their fuller, richer records allow us not only to apply a more statistical approach, but also to get much closer, to the splendours and squalors of everyday city-life than was possible in the earlier volume. The book concludes with a set of vibrant chapters on women and children and religious minorities in the city, on education and culture, and on the tenor of ordinary urban existence.
Like its predecessor, this book is massively, and vividly, documented. Its approach is interdisciplinary and comparative, and its examples and case studies are drawn from across Europe: from France, England, Germany, the Low Countries, Iberia and Italy, with briefer reviews of the urban experience elsewhere from Baltic to Balkans. The result is the most wide-ranging and up-to-date study of its multifaceted subject. It is a formidable achievement.

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