The later Middle Ages was an overwhelmingly rural world, with probably
three out of four households reliant upon farming for a living. Yet
conventional accounts of the period rarely do justice to the variety
of ways in which the land was managed and worked. The thirteen essays
collected in this volume draw upon the abundant documentary evidence
of the period to explore that diversity. In the process they engage
with the issue of classification - without which effective
generalisation is impossible - and offer a series of solutions to that
particularly thorny methodological challenge. Only through systematic
and objective classification is it possible to differentiate between
and map different field systems, husbandry types, and land-use
categories. That, in turn, makes it possible to consider and evaluate
the relative roles of soils and topography, institutional structures,
and commercialised market demand in shaping farm enterprise both
during the period of mounting population before the Black Death and
the long era of demographic decline that followed it. What emerges is
an agrarian world more commercialised, differentiated, and complex
than is usually appreciated, whose institutional and agronomic
contours shaped the course of agricultural development for centuries
to come.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000938388
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter