A CLEAR AND ACCESSIBLY WRITTEN GUIDE TO THE MEDIEVAL CLOTH-MAKING
TRADE IN ENGLAND.
Cloth-making became England's leading industry in the late Middle
Ages; clothiers co-ordinated its different stages, in some cases
carrying out the processes themselves, and found markets for their
finished cloth, selling to merchants, drapers and other traders. While
many clothiers were of only modest status or "jacks of all trades", a
handful of individuals amassed huge fortunes through the trade,
becoming the multi-millionaires of their day.
This book offers the first recent survey of this hugely important and
significant trade and its practitioners, examining the whole range of
clothiers across different areas of England, and exploring their
impact within the industry andin their wider communities. Alongside
the mechanics of the trade, it considers clothiers as entrepreneurs
and early capitalists, employing workers and even establishing early
factories; it also looks at their family backgrounds and their roles
as patrons of church rebuilding and charitable activities. It is
completed with extracts from clothiers' wills and a gazetteer of
places to visit, making the book invaluable to academics, students,
and local historians alike.
JOHN S. LEE is a Research Associate at the Centre for Medieval Studies
at the University of York.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781787442771
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter