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A Cultural History of the Home in the Medieval Age (Cultural Histories) (Paperback)

A Cultural History of the Home in the Medieval Age (Cultural Histories) Cover Image
By Katherine L. French (Editor)
$35.95
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Description


The period covered by this volume, roughly 800-1450, was one of enormous change in the way people lived in their houses. Medieval people could call a grand castle, a humble thatched hut, or anything in between home, but houses were more than physical spaces. They changed according to technological developments, climatic needs, geological limitations and economic resources. They were also moral units that were themselves symbolic, economic, gendered, and social.

At the beginning of our period, the movement of people, goods, and ideas, and the need for defense against some of this movement had an impact on how and where people lived. The codification of laws shaped how people understood the physical integrity of their homes, the reception they should give to those who wanted to enter, and their identification with the house itself. As European economies expanded in the twelfth century, householders increasingly had access to items that changed their day-to-day lives within their houses. This volume argues that through a house and its uses, occupants created, sustained, and understood their relationship to each other and their society.

About the Author


Katherine L. French is J. Frederick Hoffman Professor of Medieval English History at the University of Michigan, USA. She is the author of The Good Women of the Parish (2008), People of the Parish (2001) and, along with Allyson Poska, Women and Gender in the Western Past in two volumes (2007).

Product Details
ISBN: 9781350412231
ISBN-10: 1350412236
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication Date: May 16th, 2024
Pages: 240
Language: English
Series: Cultural Histories