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Gilds in the Medieval Countryside

Social and Religious Change in Cambridgeshire c.1350-1558

Gilds in the Medieval Countryside

Social and Religious Change in Cambridgeshire c.1350-1558

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Hardback

£65.00

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
ISBN: 9780851156170
Number of Pages: 189
Published: 20/11/1996
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm
A study of late medieval religious gilds, their form, function, and influence in the community. This study focuses on religious gilds or fraternities in both the densely settled shire and the sparsely populated fens of Cambridgeshire, from their apparent proliferation in the mid-fourteenth century to their dissolution under Edward VI in 1558, in order to examine social and religious change during the period. Gilds reflected the social hierarchies of their communities, exerting social control and fostering mutual charity in life and commemoration after death; they also made a substantial contribution to the religious and economic life of the parish. Dr Bainbridge examines lay responses to changing devotional and doctrinal patterns through the returns to the 1388-9 survey of religious gilds and surviving gild records; wills, manorial records, poll-tax returns and letters patent supply further information. Dr VIRGINIA R. BAINBRIDGE teaches at St Hilda's College, Oxford.
Ideology and historiography - modern images of medieval gilds; geography and society - patterns of gild activity; gild life and religious practice; death as a mirror of society - commemoration and the afterlife; poverty, charity and the afterlife; the contribution of the gilds to local government; epilogue - 1547 and after; appendix - table of 1389 returns and other extant gild statutues for Cambridgeshire.

Virginia R Bainbridge

Places the fraternities in context, analysing their role in social and religious life... A useful addition to the published work on gilds, and adds to the expanding historiography of pre-Reformation East Anglia. * JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF ARCHIVISTS * BR> Informative survey... fulfills a long-standing need for a detailed study of English rural gilds... an informative examination. * SPECULUM * A valuable , succinct appraisal of the [gild as] institution and an examination of its many functions... Expands our understanding of the function and place of the religious/social gild in medieval English rural society. * ALBION * The scope of this book is much wider than its modest size and title might suggest... an eloquent, readable and scholarly work. * HISTORY *