- Subjects
- Published
-
New York :
W. W. Norton & Company
[2019]
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Edition
- First American edition
- Item Description
- Originally published: Great Britain : Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2017.
- Physical Description
- xx, 341 pages : maps ; 25 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN
- 9781324002291
- Maps
- Introduction
- Country Life
- I.
- The Wife of Bath
- Her appearance
- The wool trade
- Matrimony
- Pilgrimages
- Jerusalem
- Rome
- Compostela
- Cologne
- Sinai
- The pilgrimage ways
- Paperwork
- Vicarious pilgrimages
- II.
- The Ploughman
- His appearance
- Agricultural methods
- The Great Pestilence
- The poll tax
- The rebellion of 1381
- III.
- The Miller
- His appearance
- The mechanism of a mill
- The peasant and the miller
- The profits of a mill
- The weather
- IV.
- The Reeve
- Medieval land tenure
- Estate accounts
- The villein
- V.
- The Franklin
- Hospitality
- His status
- Justice of the peace
- Knight of the shire
- Sheriff
- City Life
- VI.
- 'Mine Host'
- Travel in England
- Southwark
- The stews
- The wine trade
- Alehouses
- VII.
- The Merchant
- The financial world
- The wool trade
- Chaucer's job
- The Staple
- Financing the wool trade
- The foreign money market
- The Hanseatic League
- The Great Companies
- Apprentices
- Journeymen
- VIII.
- The Five Guildsmen: the Haberdasher, the Carpenter, the Weaver, the Dyer and the Tapicer
- Fraternities
- Aldermen
- IX.
- The Cook
- Kitchens
- Equipment
- Recipes
- Drink
- Bread
- Feasts
- Food colourants
- Spices
- Ingredients
- The poor
- X.
- The Doctor of Physic
- Astronomy
- The humours
- Fourteenth-century diagnostics
- Apothecaries
- Surgery
- Mental illness
- The monasteries
- Common diseases
- The royal touch
- The Great Pestilence
- Women's medicine
- XI.
- The Sergeant of the Law
- The Sergeant's practice
- The courts
- Court procedure
- Land law the common law
- Magna Carta
- Other statutes canon law
- Pardons
- XII.
- The Summoner
- His job
- His appearance
- His morals
- XIII.
- The Manciple
- The Inns of Court
- Legal education
- The Manciple's job
- Food-shopping
- His accounts
- The Religious Life
- XIV.
- The Monk
- The monastic orders
- His worldly prospects
- XV.
- The Prioress
- Her character
- Table manners
- Life in a nunnery
- XVI.
- The Friar
- The four orders
- The Franciscans
- Brother Bozon
- The Dominicans
- The Austin Friars and the Carmelites
- Chaucer's Friar
- XVII.
- The Pardoner
- His appearance
- Pardons
- Relics
- Chaucer's Pardoner
- XVIII.
- The Clerk of Oxenford
- Oxford University
- The Dominicans
- The life of an undergraduate
- The books he read
- The Great Translation movement
- Parchment and vellum
- Book production
- Writing as a profession
- Chaucer's Cleric
- Coda: the Canon and his Yeoman
- XIX.
- The Poor Parson
- The ideal
- Chantries
- Wycliffe
- The holy oil
- Pictures and legends
- The Armed Services
- XX.
- The Knight
- Chivalry
- The medieval army
- Hastiludes
- Tournaments
- Jousts
- Armour
- Le Liure de Seyntz Medicines
- Conditions in the field
- Heraldry
- The Knight's campaigns
- A just war?
- XXI.
- The Squire
- His campaigns
- His rank
- His appearance
- Clothes
- The fur trade
- Footwear and garters
- Underwear
- Music
- Other accomplishments
- Romantic love
- XXII.
- The Yeoman
- As a retainer
- Bows and arrows
- Archery
- The French War
- Crécy
- Poitiers
- Compulsory training
- The forest law
- St Christopher
- A medieval joke
- XXIII.
- The Shipman
- Medieval shipping
- Naval warfare
- Navigational skills
- The world picture
- Marco Polo
- Mandeville's Travels
- Epilogue
- Appendix A. Grosmont, Gaunt and Bolingbroke
- Appendix B. 'The Cutty Wren'
- Appendix C. One penny would buy eight red herrings or four larks...
- Notes
- Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review