This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence for material culture in English medieval rural households. The focus of the work is on non-elite households in villages and small towns. Our aim has been to reconstruct and interpret the range of goods possessed by agriculturalists, craftsmen and traders, and labourers. Archaeological and archival evidence for 15 counties has been collected to test the following hypotheses: that the demographic losses following the Black Death of 1348-9 and subsequent epidemics led to a rise in living standards, as evident in the quantity and variety of goods possessed by households; that the rural population of medieval England had a sophisticated m...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The project was an investigat...
Archaeological excavation has provided an alternative source of evidence for the development of the ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence ...
This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence ...
This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence ...
The data in the related digital archive was collected to examine the archaeological and historical e...
The data in the related digital archive was collected to examine the archaeological and historical e...
The data in the related digital archive was collected to examine the archaeological and historical e...
This archive consists of three databases of evidence about medieval possessions and material culture...
This thesis investigates how far the 'middling sort' of people in early modem England expressed a co...
This study takes as its primary data the medieval portable fmds from eight excavated sites in the so...
The thesis explores social transformations in the settlement and economy of Anglo-Saxon England, bet...
The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent m...
The literature on consumption has grown rapidly over the past thirty years and we now have a detaile...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The project was an investigat...
Archaeological excavation has provided an alternative source of evidence for the development of the ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence ...
This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence ...
This is a Leverhulme Trust funded project which examines the archaeological and historical evidence ...
The data in the related digital archive was collected to examine the archaeological and historical e...
The data in the related digital archive was collected to examine the archaeological and historical e...
The data in the related digital archive was collected to examine the archaeological and historical e...
This archive consists of three databases of evidence about medieval possessions and material culture...
This thesis investigates how far the 'middling sort' of people in early modem England expressed a co...
This study takes as its primary data the medieval portable fmds from eight excavated sites in the so...
The thesis explores social transformations in the settlement and economy of Anglo-Saxon England, bet...
The peasant economy in north-east England, and indeed throughout the country as a whole, underwent m...
The literature on consumption has grown rapidly over the past thirty years and we now have a detaile...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The project was an investigat...
Archaeological excavation has provided an alternative source of evidence for the development of the ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...