Five Parishes in Late Medieval and Tudor London

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A01=Gary G Gibbs
Allhallows London Wall
Author_Gary G Gibbs
Botolph Aldgate
Category=NHD
Chantry Priest
Cheap Cross
Christianity
Church Ale
Churchwardens
City culture
Clerk's Wage
Clerk’s Wage
Coleman Street
Early modern
early modern London society
Early Tudor Period
ecclesiastical administration
Elizabethan Parish
English Reformation
English Reformation history
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eq_history
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eq_non-fiction
Holy Trinity Aldgate
Lady Altar
late medieval Catholicism
London
London Metropolitan Archives
London Parishes
Medieval
microhistorical analysis
Microhistory
Parish Fundraising
parish governance
Parish offices
parish record case studies
Parish Records
Parish system
Parishes
parishioner relationships
Renter Warden
Rood Screen
Saint Botolph
St. Botolph Aldgate
St. Michael Cornhill
St. Peter Westcheap
St. Stephen Coleman
Tudor
Tudor Era
Tudor London
Tudor Reformations
Urban parish
urban religious communities
Vestry Minutes
Viscountess Lisle
Water Bearer
William Green
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367727499
  • Weight: 140g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Five Parishes in Late Medieval and Tudor London presents linked microhistorical studies of five London parishes, using their own parish records to reconstruct their individual operations, religious practices, and societies.

The parish was a foundational institution in Tudor London. Every layperson inhabited one and they interacted with their neighbors in a variety of parochial activities and events. Each chapter in this book explores a different parish in a different part of the city, revealing their unique cultures, societies,, and economies against the backdrop of presiding themes and developments of the age. Through detailed microhistorical analysis, patterns of collective behavior, parishioner relationships, and parish leadership are highlighted, providing a new perspective on the period. The reader is drawn into the local neighborhoods and able to trace how people living in the Tudor era experienced the tumultuous changes of their time.

This book is ideal for scholars and students of early modern history, microhistory, parish studies, the history of the English reformation, and those with an interest in administrative history of the late medieval and early modern periods.

Gary G. Gibbs is Professor of History at Roanoke College, USA, and Book Review Editor for The Sixteenth Century Journal. He has written essays on London’s parishes, Mary I, Machyn’s diary, and Arthur Golding’s translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses.

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