This volume presents new research on key themes in the history of London and other European towns and cities, from the middle ages onwards. The essays brought together here celebrate the contribution to scholarship of Derek Keene, founding director of the Centre for Metropolitan History, and until 2008 Leverhulme Professor of Comparative Metropolitan History at the Institute of Historical Research, London. They offer new perspectives on a range of questions, with several resulting from major projects led or inspired by Professor Keene. The themes of the volume are central to the work of many urban historians today: the complex relationships between urban centres and their hinterlands; the importance of luxury goods and the transfer of new skills and technologies; the communal aspects of metropolitan life displayed in suburbs, religious groups and trans-national 'portable communities'; urban governance, considered through the lens of political relationships between institutions, cities and royal governments, and through studies of major initiatives in urban planning and infrastructure; and the effects of environmental changes that continue to shape cities today. The essays offer comparative perspectives on London's rich history, as well as studies of other cities, including Dublin, Bruges, Ghent, and Paris. These essays form a rich resource for scholars of British and European urban history, as well as for historians of London and the general reader.
Contents:
1. Feeding another city: provisioning Dublin in the later middle ages / Margaret Murphy
2. Did peasants need markets and towns? The experience of late medieval England / Christopher Dyer
3. The proliferation of markets revisited / Richard Britnell
4. ‘Tempests of weather and great abundance of water’: the flooding of the Barking marshes in the later middle ages / James A. Galloway
5. A taste for the Orient? Cosmopolitan demand for ‘exotic’ durable consumables in late medieval Bruges / Peter Stabel
6. Hartlib’s world / Rob Ilie
7. Hiding in the forest … The Gilberts’ rural scientic instrument manufactory / Anita McConnell
8. Houses and households in Cheapside, c.1500-1550 / Vanessa Harding
9. ‘The poore lost a good Frend and the parish a good Neighbour’: the lives of the poor and their supporters in London’s eastern suburb, c.1583-c.1679 / Philip Baker and Mark Merry
10. Between sea and city: portable communities in late medieval London and Bruges / Erik Spindler
11. The kindness of strangers: charitable giving in the community of the Dutch Church, Austin Friars, in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries / Catherine Wright
12. Londoners and the court of common pleas in the fifteenth century / Matthew Frank Stevens
A bibliography of the published writings of Derek Keene
Language
English
Pages
392
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Institute of Historical Research
Release
August 28, 2012
ISBN
1905165706
ISBN 13
9781905165704
London and Beyond: Essays in Honour of Derek Keene
This volume presents new research on key themes in the history of London and other European towns and cities, from the middle ages onwards. The essays brought together here celebrate the contribution to scholarship of Derek Keene, founding director of the Centre for Metropolitan History, and until 2008 Leverhulme Professor of Comparative Metropolitan History at the Institute of Historical Research, London. They offer new perspectives on a range of questions, with several resulting from major projects led or inspired by Professor Keene. The themes of the volume are central to the work of many urban historians today: the complex relationships between urban centres and their hinterlands; the importance of luxury goods and the transfer of new skills and technologies; the communal aspects of metropolitan life displayed in suburbs, religious groups and trans-national 'portable communities'; urban governance, considered through the lens of political relationships between institutions, cities and royal governments, and through studies of major initiatives in urban planning and infrastructure; and the effects of environmental changes that continue to shape cities today. The essays offer comparative perspectives on London's rich history, as well as studies of other cities, including Dublin, Bruges, Ghent, and Paris. These essays form a rich resource for scholars of British and European urban history, as well as for historians of London and the general reader.
Contents:
1. Feeding another city: provisioning Dublin in the later middle ages / Margaret Murphy
2. Did peasants need markets and towns? The experience of late medieval England / Christopher Dyer
3. The proliferation of markets revisited / Richard Britnell
4. ‘Tempests of weather and great abundance of water’: the flooding of the Barking marshes in the later middle ages / James A. Galloway
5. A taste for the Orient? Cosmopolitan demand for ‘exotic’ durable consumables in late medieval Bruges / Peter Stabel
6. Hartlib’s world / Rob Ilie
7. Hiding in the forest … The Gilberts’ rural scientic instrument manufactory / Anita McConnell
8. Houses and households in Cheapside, c.1500-1550 / Vanessa Harding
9. ‘The poore lost a good Frend and the parish a good Neighbour’: the lives of the poor and their supporters in London’s eastern suburb, c.1583-c.1679 / Philip Baker and Mark Merry
10. Between sea and city: portable communities in late medieval London and Bruges / Erik Spindler
11. The kindness of strangers: charitable giving in the community of the Dutch Church, Austin Friars, in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries / Catherine Wright
12. Londoners and the court of common pleas in the fifteenth century / Matthew Frank Stevens
A bibliography of the published writings of Derek Keene