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Deserted Villages Revisited

Deserted Villages Revisited

Edited by Christopher Dyer and Richard Jones

 

“The issues and questions raised here ... resonate far beyond settlement studies, not least among social and environmental historians ... For its chronological depth, interdisciplinarity, wide-ranging insights and relentless questioning of prescribed knowledge, this collection is to be highly recommended.”

Nicola Whyte, Agricultural History Review

 

“This book succeeds wonderfully as an overview of current thinking ... and acute self-reflection in healthy abundance”

Journal of the Medieval Settlement Research Group

 

“Almost every paper has something challenging and exciting to say ... a valuable book for all concerned with the development of the British landscape.”

Landscape History

 

The starting point of this book was a meeting in 1948 in Leicestershire when historians and archaeologists visited newly identified sites of deserted villages. The excitement of these discoveries changed approaches to the medieval countryside. Sixty years later a new group of scholars went back to the same sites and debated their significance in the light of many advances in knowledge.

Thousands of villages and smaller settlements were deserted in England and Wales during all periods, though many of them were abandoned between 1340 and 1750. Why were they deserted? Why did some villages survive while others were abandoned? Who was responsible for their desertion? What can we learn about life in the countryside from a study of the deserted sites?

Since the 1970s these questions have been set aside while interest has shifted to the origin and planning of villages, and the regional differences which led to a 'village England' developing across the middle of the country, while everywhere else people lived in hamlets and individual farms. Now seems the right moment to return to the subject and with fresh eyes reopen the important questions which were not fully answered in the early days. In this book ten leading archaeologists, geographers and historians have come together to revisit the deserted villages and reveal much new evidence and new thinking about these fascinating sites.

 

Christopher Dyer has been Professor of Regional and Local History and Director of the Centre for English Local History at the University of Leicester since 2003.

Dr Richard Jones is a Lecturer in Landscape History at the University of Leicester. Dr Jones has previously worked for the Sussex Archaeological Society and the University of Cardiff.

Volume 3 of Explorations in Local and Regional History

ISBN 978-1-905313-79-2

February 2010, 232pp

Paperback £14.99 / US$29.95

 

Contact UH Press

01707 284654

Extract

View Table of Contents and read an extract from Deserted Villages Revisited

 

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