The agricultural history of the well-documented manor of Rimpton in south-east Somerset provides an opportunity for a detailed reconstruction of one medieval demesne farm and for testing generalized models of economic development in one specific local context. Background information is provided concerning the evolution of the manorial economy through to the twelfth century. This analysis suggests that manorialization might have been a significant factor in the adoption of nucleated settlement, common-field agriculture, and certain peasant tenures and customs. Quantitative and qualitative information from the Pipe Rolls of the Bishopric of Winchester, 1208/09 to 1411/12, is used to describe the operation of the demesne farm under direct mana...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This paper examines the role of demesnes – the farms of lords, as opposed to the lands of their peas...
This thesis is a study of the estate economy of the lesser lay gentry in Kent c.1246- 1348, based on...
The land market has been recognized as an important part of the economy and society of the medieval ...
ABSTRACT: The role of agency and the framework which we use to discuss agriculture in the Later Midd...
This thesis examines the patterns of colonization, contraction and crop rotation on the arable of ei...
While the cereal agriculture of medieval Europe has been studied exhaustively, the pastoral resource...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
Research for this thesis draws on evidence from manorial surveys of 1189, 1239, 1260, 1317 and 1325 ...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The main aims of this ...
This thesis is concerned with the progressive commercialisation of rural production between 1650 and...
This thesis is an analysis of the conditions which promoted the industrialization of the countryside...
This thesis is the first comprehensive historical investigation of a farming region in Kent. The wor...
A fascinating alluvial landscape dominated by Brent Knoll, plus surviving surveys from 1189,1235,126...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This paper examines the role of demesnes – the farms of lords, as opposed to the lands of their peas...
This thesis is a study of the estate economy of the lesser lay gentry in Kent c.1246- 1348, based on...
The land market has been recognized as an important part of the economy and society of the medieval ...
ABSTRACT: The role of agency and the framework which we use to discuss agriculture in the Later Midd...
This thesis examines the patterns of colonization, contraction and crop rotation on the arable of ei...
While the cereal agriculture of medieval Europe has been studied exhaustively, the pastoral resource...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
Research for this thesis draws on evidence from manorial surveys of 1189, 1239, 1260, 1317 and 1325 ...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The main aims of this ...
This thesis is concerned with the progressive commercialisation of rural production between 1650 and...
This thesis is an analysis of the conditions which promoted the industrialization of the countryside...
This thesis is the first comprehensive historical investigation of a farming region in Kent. The wor...
A fascinating alluvial landscape dominated by Brent Knoll, plus surviving surveys from 1189,1235,126...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This thesis is a study of landholders named in Domesday Book in 1066 and 1086 in Hampshire, from the...
This paper examines the role of demesnes – the farms of lords, as opposed to the lands of their peas...