Medieval cities were complex communities supervised and controlled by elite groups who sought to impose their conception of order upon them, a conception which included strict ideas of proper behaviour and social hierarchy as well as the prevention of criminal behaviour. How they were able to do so in the absence of coercive instruments such as a police force is an interesting problem, and there is little doubt that both royal authority and the members of the elite themselves expected that it was an achievable goal. This thesis explores a variety of strategies used by the government of late medieval London to maintain order in their city, including the mobilization of peer supervision and the craft guild system. Most significantly, I argue ...
Using records from 113 manors in Yorkshire and elsewhere, this article surveys the changing role of ...
Each society generates a historical culture, which here is understood to encompass the media through...
PhDThis project examines the conception and imaging of the city in the late sixteenth and early sev...
Research project funded in academic year 2008-09The University Archives has determined that this ite...
PhDThe available sources have, to some extent, determined the form of this thesis, which was undert...
In the late fourteenth century, London’s government, through mismanagement and negligence, experien...
Royal charters to towns—once the bedrock of medieval urban history—have received little attention in...
Interpretations of medieval cities have long been characterised by a focus upon their political inde...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
This dissertation is the first in-depth, cross-regional investigation into the history of customary ...
This thesis aims to establish, by scrutiny and discussion of the records of the coroners themselves,...
The available sources have, to some extent, determined the form of this thesis, which was undertaken...
This article explores the public ceremonies chosen to mark the restoration of Charles II in a range ...
My dissertation argues that archive keepers created a late medieval information state in Flanders ar...
Administrative reform in the 1530s amounted, in Professor Geoffrey Elton’s words, to a ‘Tudor revolu...
Using records from 113 manors in Yorkshire and elsewhere, this article surveys the changing role of ...
Each society generates a historical culture, which here is understood to encompass the media through...
PhDThis project examines the conception and imaging of the city in the late sixteenth and early sev...
Research project funded in academic year 2008-09The University Archives has determined that this ite...
PhDThe available sources have, to some extent, determined the form of this thesis, which was undert...
In the late fourteenth century, London’s government, through mismanagement and negligence, experien...
Royal charters to towns—once the bedrock of medieval urban history—have received little attention in...
Interpretations of medieval cities have long been characterised by a focus upon their political inde...
The political identity of the city of London was changing towards the end of the twelfth century. Th...
This dissertation is the first in-depth, cross-regional investigation into the history of customary ...
This thesis aims to establish, by scrutiny and discussion of the records of the coroners themselves,...
The available sources have, to some extent, determined the form of this thesis, which was undertaken...
This article explores the public ceremonies chosen to mark the restoration of Charles II in a range ...
My dissertation argues that archive keepers created a late medieval information state in Flanders ar...
Administrative reform in the 1530s amounted, in Professor Geoffrey Elton’s words, to a ‘Tudor revolu...
Using records from 113 manors in Yorkshire and elsewhere, this article surveys the changing role of ...
Each society generates a historical culture, which here is understood to encompass the media through...
PhDThis project examines the conception and imaging of the city in the late sixteenth and early sev...