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         Medieval England Regional History:     more books (100)
  1. She Wolves: The Notorious Queens of Medieval England by Elizabeth Norton, 2010-05-01
  2. Gender and Petty Crime in Late Medieval England: The Local Courts in Kent, 1460-1560 (Gender in the Middle Ages) by Karen Jones, 2006-07-20
  3. The Secular Jurisdiction of Monasteries in Anglo-Norman and Angevin England (Studies in the History of Medieval Religion) by Kevin L. Shirley, 2004-11
  4. The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century by Ian Mortimer, 2009-01
  5. Medieval England: Rural Society and Economic Change, 1086-1348 (Society & Economic History of English) by Edward Miller, John Hatcher, 1978-06-26
  6. Venomous Tongues: Speech and Gender in Late Medieval England (The Middle Ages Series) by Sandy Bardsley, 2006-05-03
  7. Women and Religion in Medieval England
  8. Progress and Problems in Medieval England: Essays in Honour of Edward Miller
  9. Indulgences in Late Medieval England: Passports to Paradise? by R. N. Swanson, 2008-01-14
  10. Medieval England: An Aerial Survey (Cambridge Air Surveys) by M. W. Beresford, J. K. S. Joseph, 2009-07-06
  11. The Idea of the Castle in Medieval England by Abigail Wheatley, 2004-12
  12. Food & Feast in Medieval England (Food & Feasts) by Peter Hammond, 2005-07-25
  13. Medieval Domesticity: Home, Housing and Household in Medieval England
  14. The History of the Church of York, 1066-1127 (Oxford Medieval Texts) by Hugh the Chanter, 1990-07-12

61. UVic: History Courses
medieval england; 320A Crime and Criminality in medieval england; 380F Murder andMayhem in medieval Europe; history Theory and Practice For regional Studies; 490
http://web.uvic.ca/calendar2002/CDs/HIST/CTs.html
Search Calendar Search UVic.ca
GENERAL INFO

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS

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62. Research At Oxford: The Humanities And Social Sciences - History
use to anyone interested in medieval monastic or Rye, Salisbury and Exeter in england;Antwerp, Bergen be considered, to explore whether regional or national
http://www.ox.ac.uk/publicrelations/pubs/humanities/history.shtml
Go to.... Contents Foreword by the Vice-Chancellor Archaeology Area Studies Classics Continuing Education Drawing and Fine Art Educational Studies English History Humanities Computing Unit Law Medieval and Modern Languages Music Oriental Studies Social Studies
History
A Corpus of British Medieval Library Catalogues
England and the Netherlands - War and State Formation 1477-1559

A 'Living History' of the Book Trade

The New Dictionary of National Biography
A Corpus of British Medieval Library Catalogues
The dissolution of the monasteries in England in the 1530s led to the dispersal or destruction of most of the country's libraries. A few survived in place but not intact. Even libraries that were unaffected, such as the medieval colleges of Oxford and Cambridge, experienced the biggest clearing out and restocking since the ninth century. Thousands of books survived, though they represent only a small proportion and are now divorced from their library context. If we are to understand how scholars and readers worked, it is important to be able to reconstruct a sense of what medieval libraries would have contained at different points in their history. One approach was adopted successfully in the 1930s, when R A B Mynors and C R Cheney devised a plan to examine surviving books for marks of ownership. The result was published as

63. Dr NJ Higham Email Nick.J.Higham@man.ac.uk Nick Higham Is Reader
late Roman, subRoman and early medieval Britain, its of North-Western and Northernengland, and has Counties to AD 1000, Longman, regional history of england
http://www.people.man.ac.uk/~mfsssnjh/
Dr N.J. Higham Email: Nick.J.Higham@man.ac.uk Nick Higham is Reader in History. His research interests lie in the field of late Roman, sub-Roman and early medieval Britain, its Latin literary culture and the political, social and ethnic contexts of that culture. He has focused particularly on the works of Gildas and Bede and written extensively on the interface between the sub-Roman Britons and the birth of Anglo-Saxon England. He has also been actively involved in the early landscape history and archaeology of North-Western and Northern England, and has published extensively in this area. He has supervised numerous postgraduates working on various aspects of these subjects. He is currently Dean of Undergraduate Studies in the Faculty of Arts. His publications include: Books The Carvetii, Alan Sutton, Stroud, 1985, 2nd ed., 1991. 158pp. (joint author). The Northern Counties to AD 1000, Longman, Regional History of England Series, 1986, 392pp. Rome, Britain and the Anglo-Saxons, Seaby, London, 1992, 263pp.

64. The Costumer's Manifesto:  Medieval European Costume Links Page
regional Dress. medieval Costume and Fashion medieval Costumes Paper Dolls medievalCostume in england and France The 13th, 14th and 15th Centuries.
http://www.costumes.org/pages/medievalinks.htm
by Tara Maginnis, Ph.D. of The University of Alaska Fairbanks var h='thecostumer',g='general',n=''; var wd=468,ht=60; Accessories
Classes at UAF

Computers

Costumes 4 Sale
...
Weird Clothing
Search Now: Medieval European Costume Links Page This symbol indicates an internal page of the Manifesto General Medieval Costume Women's Dress Men's Dress Children's Dress ... Other Links General Medieval Costume The History of Fashion and Dress: Byzantium and Early Medieval Europe The History of Fashion and Dress: Late Medieval Europe Recommended Ancient and Medieval Costume Books
this site Medieval Costume and Fashion
Medieval Costumes Paper Dolls
Medieval Costume in England and France : The 13th, 14th and 15th Centuries
Dress in the Middle Ages
Chaucer and Costume: The Secular Pilgrims in the General Prologue
Kids Frog/Prince convertible Hat Ancient European Costume and Fashion Robes and Honor : The Medieval World of Investiture (The New Middle Ages) Medieval Tailor's Assistant: Making Common Garments 1200-1500 The Lord of the Rings - The Fellowship of the Ring (Platinum Series Extended Edition Collector's Gift Set) The Art of Making Armour Keepers of the Kingdom : The Ancient Offices of Britain Unicorn Fantasy Dagger Early Dance Part I : From the Greeks to the Renaissance
Yahoo! Groups : HistoricCostuming_MiddleAges

65. Medieval English Urban History - Colchester
history of medieval Colchester Origins and early growth Few, if any, of england's towns can lay claim to the longevity that Colchester can; certainly none in East Anglia. The site was inhabited by the seventh century B.C.
http://www.trytel.com/~tristan/towns/colchstr.html
History of medieval Colchester
MAIN MENU Origins and early growth Development of local government
Buildings and fortifications
...
Map of Colchester at the close of the Middle Ages

Origins and early growth
    Few, if any, of England's towns can lay claim to the longevity that Colchester can; certainly none in East Anglia. The site was inhabited by the seventh century B.C. and was in the first century B.C. the capital of one of the various kingdoms of which ancient Britain was composed. This settlement lay on the ridge above, and the slope stretching down to, the southern bank of the Colne River, just a few miles northwest of where the Colne emptied into the North Sea. This capital was an early target of the Roman invaders (A.D. 43) and within a few years they had converted it into Roman Britain's first colony of retired legionaries and the administrative centre of a canton; a solid wall was built to protect a rectangular-shaped area beside the river. The wall and the Roman streets influenced the layout of medieval Colchester After the Romans left Britain, the Saxons settled within the old walls (an atypical case of Saxon habitation of a Roman town), but we have no mention of the town until 917, when it is evident that it was being contested between Danes and Anglo-Saxons. Its walls continued to make it an important regional stronghold and, by the time of

66. Early Regional Societies: Project (Option)
A. DeWindt, 'Redefining the peasant community in medieval england the regional perspective',Journal LR Poos, 'Population turnover in medieval Essex the
http://www.le.ac.uk/elh/pot/proj2.html
Preliminary bibliography: migration and technical matters.
  • I. D. Whyte, Migration and Society in Britain 1550-1850 (Basingstoke, 2000).
  • P. Clark and D. Souden, eds, Migration and Society in Early Modern England (London, 1987).
  • H. Jones, Population Geography (London, 1990), pp. 178-255 (for geographical models of migration).
  • C. Pooley and J. Turnbull, Migration and Mobility in Britain since the 18th Century (London, 1999) for geographical models of migration.
  • A. DeWindt, 'Redefining the peasant community in medieval England: the regional perspective', Journal of British Studies 26 (1987), pp. 163-207.
  • L. R. Poos, 'Population turnover in medieval Essex: the evidence of some early-fourteenth-century tithing lists' in L. Bonfield, R. Smith and K. Wrightson, eds, The World We have Gained. Histories of Population and Social Structure (Oxford, 1986), pp. 1-22.
  • J. A. Raftis, 'Geographical mobility in lay subsidy rolls', Mediaeval Studies 38 (1976), pp. 385-403.
  • F. M. Davenport, 'The decay of villeinage in East Anglia', repr. in E.M. Carus-Wilson, ed., Essays in Economic History 2 (London, 1962), pp. 112-24.

67. Browsing England Society And Culture Genealogy Category
Related Categories regional Europe United Kingdom Society www.britishislesgenweb.org/england/Preview This medieval English genealogy Resources for tracing
http://www.uksprite.com/search/search/Regional/Europe/United_Kingdom/England/Soc

68. MA History
Suggested pathways and related option units medieval history andCulture. Local and regional history. regional Historical Studies.
http://www.soton.ac.uk/~history/pg/mahistory.htm
Department of History History Postgraduate Homepage Masters Research Faculty of Arts MA History Key Facts Programme length : 12 months full-time or 26 months part-time, beginning early October Entry qualification: upper second class honours degree or above Programme coordinator: Dr Kendrick Oliver (ext. 22243) Departmental postgraduate coordinators (History):
Dr Peter Gray
Dr Kendrick Oliver Annual applications deadline: 1 September How to apply: contact the Graduate Office
Application forms and instructions available on the web: http://www.soton.ac.uk/~prospect/forms Please click here for fees and funding information
Above: Lord Mountbatten and Mahatma Gandhi on the terrace of the Viceroy's House, April 1947, from the University's Special Research Collections Related Research Centres:
Centre for the Study of Britain and its Empire

Parkes Institute for Jewish/non-Jewish Relations
Wessex Medieval Centre
Programme aims: pathway
Programme structure:
Core units (taken by all students): Research skills (two units)
These units provide practical general support to the specialist units defined by country / period which you study as option units. Classes are offered on libraries and archives; on the skills required by the assessed essays and dissertation on the MA; on broader thematic and methodological questions raised by advanced historical study; and on the practical experience of historical research. They are designed to be of assistance to you during your MA year; to serve as a background for PhD study; and to develop transferable skills that will be useful in future employment.

69. OUP USA: Popular Piety In Late Medieval England
of medieval Studies An excellent regional study. American of popular religionin late medieval england is broader the arcane details of medieval piety has
http://www.oup-usa.org/isbn/019820521X.html

History, World

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Oxford Historical Monographs

Popular Piety in Late Medieval England
The Diocese of Salisbury 1250-1550
ANDREW D. BROWN, Keble College, Oxford

Andrew Brown explores lay piety in its contexts of landscape, society, and the church, and examines the many different issues and activities which were of contemporary importance, such as the religious guilds, charity, and heresy. He shows how the regional variations in social and economic structure affected parish life, and concluces with an important assessment of the reception of the Reformation in the diocese. This is the first scholarly study of the lay religion of this region, and its broad chronological range of and meticulously researched local focus offer illuminating insights into medieval piety over the centuries.
"Brown is able to accomplish as much as he does in this book not only because of the depths he is willing to plumb in the separate analyses of religious institiutions but also because of the chronological distance he is willing to travel. This is a rich book. what [the author] has accomplished here is a thoroughly interesting and compelling study of late-medieval piety in one diocese. It may well serve as a model for other local historians willing to engage in this important inquiry." Speculum-A Journal of Medieval Studies "...An excellent regional study."

70. Bigchalk: HomeworkCentral: Anglo-Saxon History (Medieval Britain (597-1485))
HIGH SCHOOL BEYOND regional Studies Countries of Bridge; Vikings and Money inEngland. REFERENCE Anglo Saxon Chronicle Online Classical medieval Library;
http://www.bigchalk.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/WOPortal.woa/Homework/High_School/Reg
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  • 71. Research Opportunities - Department Of History - The University
    medieval (Dark Age) studies, especially for Northern Europe, later medieval Englandand France Modern history, medieval history, Local and regional history
    http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/history/postgraduate/research.html

    72. The Household Chapel In Medieval England - Links
    history Studies in medievalism Studies in the history of medieval Religion SurteesSociety ThirteenthCentury england Victoria County history York Studies in
    http://www.dur.ac.uk/k.a.c.rawlinson/links.htm
    Introduction Gazetteer Bibliography Links Sponsors Projects Bibliographical Institutions ... Also...
    • ! SPECIAL ! (A Conference at Durham University, 22-24 August 2002)
    Sponsors Top
    This site, and my research in general, has been made possible by the generosity of two particular institutions: Online Projects Top
    Historians (medievalists in particular?) as an academic species have yet to fully embrace the advantages of digital and internet technologies. Some interesting projects (historical and otherwise) are listed here:

    73. Oxbow Books/David Brown Book Company
    at the role played by ecclesiastical history and new research, mostly based on detailedregional surveys in The Great Household in Late medieval england by CM
    http://www.oxbowbooks.com/browse.cfm?&CatID=395

    74. History Of The Commodity Markets
    in the form of the medieval fair, arranged b and promoters who organized regionalfairs with practices became formalized in england, specialization developed.
    http://www.futuresbroker.com/history.htm
    History of the Commodity Markets
    The fundamental principles that underlie commodity futures trading and the function of commodity exchanges are centuries old. Markets had already attained a degree of formalization in ancient Greece and Rome with a fixed time and place for trading a marketplace, common barter and currency systems, and a practice of contracting for future delivery. The Agora in Athens originated as a commercial marketplace and later became the center of Athenian political and maritime power. The Forum in Rome was initially established as a trading center. At the height of the Roman Empire, 19 such trading centers, called Fora Vendalia (sales markets), served as distribution centers for commodities that the Romans brought from the far corners of the Empire. MEDIEVAL MARKETS Despite the fall of those civilizations, the basic principles of the central marketplace survived the Dark Ages, even though the widespread flow of commerce was disrupted. During feudal times, the scope of trading contracted into scattered local markets. The practice of preannounced markets at fixed times and places reemerged in the form of the medieval fair, arranged b the first trade associations formed by merchants, craftsmen, and promoters who organized regional fairs with the aid of political authorities. Pieds Poudres , or "men of dusty feet," as they were known, traveled from town to town arranging and promoting the fairs.

    75. Department Of Historical And Cultural Studies
    in history' 'Making of the medieval World ' (Years Teaching MA in Local and Regionalhistory, option 'Jutes Saxons and Christians in SouthEast england 400-1066
    http://www.gold.ac.uk/history/paulf.htm
    Department of Historical and Cultural Studies Goldsmiths College University of London
    Paul Fouracre - Reader in History
    (Head of Dept. until 30/4/2000)
    Return to Staff Page Return to Historical and Cultural Studies Home Page Search for phone numbers, email addresses and room locations
    Associated web sites... Institute of Historical Research Royal Historical Society
    Academic qualifications B.A. Hons. Modern History, Oxford University (1975)
    Ph.D in Early Medieval History, King's College,University of London (1981)
    Post-graduate Certificate in Education, Westminster College (1983)
    Recognised Teacher of the University of London (1985)
    Professional Activities Humanities representative on Goldsmiths College research committee
    Institute of Historical Research Board member and Fellowship Committee member Co-convenor of the Early Medieval Seminar, Institute of Historical Research External examiner for Birkbeck College, London and for Birmingham University Member of The London Society for Medieval Studies (Chairman 1985-9) Lewisham Local History Council 1985-7 Fellow of the Royal Historical Society FRHistS Co-editor of the journal Early Medieval Europe Member of the scientific board of the Spanish journal Iberia Research Interests Early medieval history, France, Germany and England in the period 500-1000 A.D.

    76. Masters Degrees - History
    to other English regions and to regional and local C Rawcliffe; C HarperBill); Post-medievallandscape history (T and culture in early modern england (M Knights
    http://www.uea.ac.uk/his/teaching/postgrad/masters/
    Search: welcome admissions alumni people ...
    Masters Degrees
    Masters Degrees
    • History MA Modern History MA Modern British Social History MA Early Modern MA ... History of Medicine MA Interdisciplinary MAs (offered within the School of English and American Studies)
      MA in History
      Organiser: Steve Cherry This is an umbrella programme which offers you the widest choice in terms of different specialist units. Alongside the unit in Historiography (Autumn semester), you choose three course units from among almost any of those available within the School's MA offerings - and one of them may be from any of the other Humanities and Social Science Schools. For example, if you wish to focus upon the social history of medicine in a particular period, you might wish to combine units in 'Medieval Medicine' with 'High Medieval History' or 'Health Care and the Rise of Health Care Professions' with 'British Social Policy'. Alternatively, you may wish to combine units from the Local and Regional MA with the Social Movements and Social Change programme to obtain, for example, a long view of rural change in East Anglia. You will also prepare a 20,000 word dissertation, supported by your choice in course units.
      MA in Modern History
      Organiser: Ian Farr The MA in Modern History provides opportunities for those with interests in modern British and/or European history to
      • broaden and deepen their knowledge of the 19th and 20th centuries relate their knowledge to broader historiographical trends

    77. Rhchome
    our spring and summer conferences on late medieval Bristol and The regional HistoryCentre is based on the St Matthias at the University of the West of england.
    http://humanities.uwe.ac.uk/Regionhistory/rhchome.htm
    The Regional History Centre at the University of the West of England Latest News: Click here for directions. Don't miss our spring and summer conferences on late medieval Bristol and urban history in southwest England.
    Aims
    Structure/Organisation Background Achievements ... Future projects
    Watercolour of Bristol Harbour, N Pocock Our Aims
    The Regional History Centre aims to promote research and teaching in the history of Bristol and its region, in partnership with interested groups and individuals within the region and beyond.
    • Research , produced by members of the RHC , by postgraduate research students, and by others from outside UWE, is being disseminated to a wide audience through research seminars publications , a newsletter conferences day schools, exhibitions, IT and the local media. Teaching , which builds on this research base is delivered within an attractive and stimulating environment for the study of regional history at an advanced level.

    78. Regional Furniture Society - Membership
    interpreting the sources available for regional furniture studies of the Vernacularworkshop to england's industrial output from the medieval period to
    http://www.regionalfurnituresociety.com/nonsocevents.htm
    Regional Furniture Society Non- Society Events, Courses and Study Days of Interest. The Weald and Downland Open Air Museum are putting on a number of courses in traditional trades and rural crafts , including the following:
    • Make a Bentwood Chair Pole Lathe Turning 300 Years of Vernacular Wood Finishes The Painted House: 15th-19th Centuries.
    Full details from The Weald and Downland Open Air Museum, Singleton, Chichester, West Sussex. PO18 0EU. Tel. 01243 811363. www.wealddown.co.uk Oxford University Department for Continuing Education run many courses, including weekend schools and summer schools, as well as part time Undergraduate and Postgraduate courses. The courses in Local History and Vernacular Architecture encompass a great deal relating to understanding and interpreting the sources available for regional furniture studies, and the context into which they fall. The following is a selection of the courses available, for full information contact: OUDCE, 1 Wellington Square, Oxford, OX1 2JA, UK. e-mail ppcert@conted.ox.uk, website: www.conted.ox.ac.uk

    79. Subjects - Local And Family History, Levels Of Study. Continuing Education Progr
    Fields and People the local community in the medieval period Module 2 The and theTwentieth Century Beyond the Borders Local history outside england.
    http://www.cont-ed.cam.ac.uk/Subjects/localfamily/levels.html
    Institute of Continuing Education Continuing Education Programme
    Subjects
    Local and Family History - Levels of Study
    Local History can be studied at all levels through the Institute.
    Residential Weekends
    Local history and related courses worth 5 credits at level 1 are held throughout the year at Madingley Hall.
    In 2003 these include: The Parish Pauper, 4-6 April
    The Green Man: An Exploration in Folklore, 2-4 May

    Medieval Towns, 14-16 November

    Tracing Your Lost Ancestors, 28-20 November
    Residential Summer Schools
    Summer schools of interest to local historians in 2002: A Treasure Chest of Family History, 7-11 July
    Extension Courses
    What is a local history extension course? A local history extension course will guide you through the local history of an area, or a local theme by a series of 10 or 20 week illustrated lectures and seminars, plus field trips to relevant sites and independent reading and research. Students may submit assignments that can be awarded 10 or 20 transferable credits at level 1. Local History extension courses Courses offered in 2003 include Suffolk in the Eighteenth Century, History and Development of Suffolk Churches, Fen and Marshland History, East Anglia in the Middle Ages, Upstairs, Downstairs - The Victorian Household.

    80. History - Part-time Study 2002 - University Of Kent
    in Kentish history Diploma in medieval and Modern the study of local and regionalhistory (with particular reference to Southeast england) and to
    http://www.ukc.ac.uk/studying/part-time/subjects/history.html
    text only Search:
    Part-time only All courses All of UKC Part-time study 2002
    History
    You are here: UKC home studying part-time subjects ... BA (Hons) in History The School of History offers opportunities for part-time students to pursue a wide range of historical studies, from local to international and from pre-Roman to the twentieth century, through two programmes at certificate level 1 and two at diploma level. We also offer a part-time BA(Hons) in History towards which students can study through the interim awards of certificate and diploma. The full degree programme normally comprises eight units at certificate level, and sixteen at diploma/degree level, which you achieve in stages through the acquisition of interim awards, registering first for a certificate programme, then a diploma and finally for the degree. You may also be able to progress to diploma level from the Certificate in Combined Studies (CCS) (see page 18) if you have successfully completed at least two appropriate history modules in the CCS. You may also take modules within the full-time History programme as part of your study for part-time awards, subject to the agreement of the appropriate programme directors.

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