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The Foundations of Gentry Life - The Multons of Frampton and their World 1270-1370 (Hardcover)
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The Foundations of Gentry Life - The Multons of Frampton and their World 1270-1370 (Hardcover)
Series: The Past & Present Book Series
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In The Foundations of Gentry Life, Peter Coss examines the
formative years of the English gentry. In doing so, he explains
their lasting characteristics during a long history as a social
elite, including adaptability to change and openness to upward
mobility from below, chiefly from the professions.
Revolving around the rich archive left by the Multons of Frampton
in South Lincolnshire, the book explores the material culture of
the gentry, their concern with fashion and their obsession with
display. It pays close attention to the visitors to their homes,
and to the social relationships between men and women. Coss shows
that the gentry household was a literate community, within a
literate local world, and he studies closely the consumption of
literature, paying particular attention to household entertainment.
Beyond their households, then gentry could assert their
pre-eminence in the local community through involvement with the
Church and the management of their estates. Treating the
relationship between gentry and Church in both devotional and
institutional terms, Coss shows how religious practice was a means
for the gentry to assert social dominance, and they increasingly
treated the Church as a career path for their kin. Protecting their
estates was of similar importance, and legal expertise was highly
prized-it consequently provided a major means of entry into the
gentry, as well as offering further opportunities for younger sons.
Overall, Coss reveals that the cultural horizons of the gentry were
essentially local. Nevertheless there were wider dimensions, and
the book concludes with observations on how national and chivalric
concerns interacted with the rhythms of regional life.
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