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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Copyright: © Authors 2019

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14296/1019.9781912702152

Number of pages: 380

Number of illustrations: 34

Publication date: October 2019

To request a review copy of this title, please email us: uolp.reviews@sas.ac.uk

Medieval Londoners

Essays to mark the eightieth birthday of Caroline M. Barron

Elizabeth A. New (Editor), Christian Steer (Editor)

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Series: IHR Conference Series

Published in association with: Institute of Historical Research

Medieval Londoners were a diverse group, some born in the city, others drawn to the capital from across the realm and from overseas. For some, London became the sole focus of their lives, while others retained or developed networks and loyalties that spread far and wide. The rich evidence for the medieval city, including archaeological and documentary sources, means that the study of London and its inhabitants remains a vibrant field. This volume brings together archaeologists, historians, art historians and literary scholars whose essays provide glimpses of medieval Londoners in all their variety.

Medieval Londoners is offered to Caroline M. Barron, Emeritus Professor of the History of London at Royal Holloway, University of London, on the occasion of her eightieth birthday. Her remarkable career – over some fifty years – has revitalized the way in which we consider London and its people. This volume is a tribute to her scholarship and her friendship and encouragement to others. It is thanks to Caroline M. Barron that the study of medieval London remains as vibrant today as it has ever been.

Fine pieces of scholarship, based on original research. Handsomely produced, with well-chosen illustrations (it is a pleasure not to have to complain in a review about the inadequacy, or even absence, of decent maps), Medieval Londoners advances the study of the medieval capital at the same time as it acclaims the historian (Caroline M. Barron) who has done most to bring it to life.

Reviews in History

A stimulating and richly documented collection, which adds considerably to our knowledge of London between the twelfth and sixteenth century.

The Ricardian, Volume 30, 2020

Engaging reading!

Journal of British Studies

Foreword by Jo Fox

Introduction: medieval Londoners

Elizabeth A. New

LIVING IN THE CITY

1. Families in later medieval London: sex, marriage and mortality

Vanessa Harding

2. A portrait of a late medieval London pub: the Star inn, Bridge Street

Justin Colson

3. Huntington Library MS. HM 140: household reading for Londoners?

Julia Boffey

4. Palaeography and forgery: Thomas D.’s Book of the Hartshorn in Southwark

Martha Carlin

5. ‘Go to hyr neybors wher she dwelte before’: reputation and mobility at the London consistory court in the early sixteenth century

Charlotte Berry

THE LURE OF LONDON

6. Aliens, crafts and guilds in late medieval London

Matthew Davies

7. William Styfford (fl. 1437‒66): citizen and scrivener of London and notary imperial

J. L. Bolton

8. Bankers and booksellers: evidence of the late fifteenth century English book trade in the ledgers of the Bardi bank

M. T. W. Payne

9. Nicholas Alwyn, mayor of London: a man of two loyalties, London and Spalding

Anne F. Sutton

LONDONERS REMEMBERED

10. Charity and the city: London Bridge, c. 1176‒1275

John A. McEwan

11. John Reynewell and St. Botolph Billingsgate

Stephen Freeth and John Schofield

12. The testament of Joan FitzLewes: a source for the history of the abbey of Franciscan nuns without Aldgate

Julian Luxford

13. Souls of benefactors at Grey Friars church London

Christian Steer

Afterword: The transformative effect: Caroline Barron as teacher and colleague

Clive Burgess

Doctorates awarded under the supervision of Caroline M. Barron

Index
Tabula Gratulatoria

Copyright: 2019

DOI: 10.14296/1019.9781912702152

Number of pages: 380

Number of illustrations: 34

Publication date: October 2019

PDF ISBN: 9781912702152

EPUB ISBN: 9781912702176

Hardback ISBN: 9781912702145

Elizabeth A. New (Editor)

Christian Steer (Editor)

Fine pieces of scholarship, based on original research. Handsomely produced, with well-chosen illustrations (it is a pleasure not to have to complain in a review about the inadequacy, or even absence, of decent maps), Medieval Londoners advances the study of the medieval capital at the same time as it acclaims the historian (Caroline M. Barron) who has done most to bring it to life.

Reviews in History

A stimulating and richly documented collection, which adds considerably to our knowledge of London between the twelfth and sixteenth century.

The Ricardian, Volume 30, 2020

Engaging reading!

Journal of British Studies

Subject: History, Medieval History

BISAC codes: HIS015020

Thema codes: NHDJ

Keywords: Aldgate nuns, Book of the Hartshorn, Caroline Barron, Grey Friars church, London Bridge, London craftsmen, London graveyard, London guilds, Nicholas Alwyn (mayor of London), alms, archaeology, capital, documents, festschrift, ghosts, inhabitants, medieval charity, medieval cultures, medieval migration, medieval notaries, medieval pub, medieval religion, scholar

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