The present article studies the place of the chicken within the changing environment of late-medieval England. First, it looks at the seigniorial sector of chicken farming, in terms of size of stocks, patterns of disposal and scale of consumption. It then explores the patchy data regarding the peasant sector. The study shows that overall patterns differed between the pre- and post-Black Death periods. After the pestilence, chicken husbandry started shifting from the demesne to the peasant sector of agriculture. The post-1350 changes reflect larger processes, which occurred in late-medieval society, economy and environment
In the Middle Ages geese were kept for meat, eggs and feathers. The expected age at death, the sex r...
Over the last decade the study of chicken in the archaeological context has received increased atten...
The relative abundance and mortality profiles of cattle, sheep and pigs from a series of 8th- to 11t...
The present article discusses goose farming on late medieval English demesnes. The research is based...
Although domestic fowl is often found at Italian archaeological sites at least from the 6th century ...
Cet article actuel étudie la place du poulet dans l\u27environnement changeant de l\u27Angleterre mé...
The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent m...
This paper sheds new light on aspects of Roman and Anglo-Saxon chicken (Gallus gallus) husbandry and...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of Europe between the l...
While the cereal agriculture of medieval Europe has been studied exhaustively, the pastoral resource...
The present study has only been concerned with the animal bones excavated from Emden. But what about...
This paper seeks to revisit the debate concerning the nature and timing of the British Agricultural ...
The poultry farming little interested the historians of the medieval rural economy. The article reco...
health through integrating analyses of chicken skeletal remains and eggshell from five archaeologica...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of England between the ...
In the Middle Ages geese were kept for meat, eggs and feathers. The expected age at death, the sex r...
Over the last decade the study of chicken in the archaeological context has received increased atten...
The relative abundance and mortality profiles of cattle, sheep and pigs from a series of 8th- to 11t...
The present article discusses goose farming on late medieval English demesnes. The research is based...
Although domestic fowl is often found at Italian archaeological sites at least from the 6th century ...
Cet article actuel étudie la place du poulet dans l\u27environnement changeant de l\u27Angleterre mé...
The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent m...
This paper sheds new light on aspects of Roman and Anglo-Saxon chicken (Gallus gallus) husbandry and...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of Europe between the l...
While the cereal agriculture of medieval Europe has been studied exhaustively, the pastoral resource...
The present study has only been concerned with the animal bones excavated from Emden. But what about...
This paper seeks to revisit the debate concerning the nature and timing of the British Agricultural ...
The poultry farming little interested the historians of the medieval rural economy. The article reco...
health through integrating analyses of chicken skeletal remains and eggshell from five archaeologica...
Although many historians have extensively discussed the agricultural history of England between the ...
In the Middle Ages geese were kept for meat, eggs and feathers. The expected age at death, the sex r...
Over the last decade the study of chicken in the archaeological context has received increased atten...
The relative abundance and mortality profiles of cattle, sheep and pigs from a series of 8th- to 11t...