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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      October 2019
      October 2019
      ISBN:
      9781108766487
      9781108487320
      9781108720069
      Dimensions:
      (235 x 157 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.48kg, 244 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 154 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.37kg, 244 Pages
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    Book description

    How were manorial lords in the twelfth and thirteenth century able to appropriate peasant labour? And what does this reveal about the changing attitudes and values of medieval England? Considering these questions from the perspective of the 'moral economy', the web of shared values within a society, Rosamond Faith offers a penetrating portrait of a changing world. Anglo-Saxon lords were powerful in many ways but their power did not stem directly from their ownership of land. The values of early medieval England - principally those of rank, reciprocity and worth - were shared across society. The Norman Conquest brought in new attitudes both to land and to the relationship between lords and peasants, and the Domesday Book conveyed the novel concept of 'tenure'. The new 'feudal thinking' permeated all relationships concerned with land: peasant farmers were now manorial tenants, owing labour and rent. Many people looked back to better days.

    Awards

    Winner, 2020 Joan Thirsk Memorial Prize, British Agricultural History Society

    Reviews

    ‘In the third of a sequence of magisterial and thought provoking books about early English rural society, Rosamond Faith forces us to face the problem of how lordship managed to establish itself in Anglo-Saxon England at all. Her profound and radical understanding of how peasant life works on the ground shines through at every point. Everyone who is interested in English society before 1200, or indeed later, will have to read this book.'

    Chris Wickham - University of Oxford

    ‘Representing the fruit of over five decades' work on the medieval peasantry, this book takes us closer to the lived world of the Anglo-Saxon peasantry than I would have ever thought possible. It revises traditional wisdom on a host of important subjects, from the origins of feudalism to the impact on the Norman Conquest, and will be the go-to book on early English rural society and life for many years to come.'

    Levi Roach - University of Exeter

    ‘Like her previous works, this is a dynamic contribution to the study of an often neglected but vital segment of society. Though attempting, as she does, to get into ‘the hearts and minds’ of the English peasantry is always fated to be an uphill struggle given the nature of the surviving sources … this volume will become a valuable touchstone for future scholars studying medieval social relations.’

    Stuart Pracy Source: Agricultural History Review

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