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First multi-disciplinary study of the cultural and social milieu of
the post-medieval castle. The castle was an imposing architectural
landmark in late medieval and early modern England and Wales.
Castles were much more than lordly residences: they were
accommodation to guests and servants, spaces of interaction between
the powerful and the powerless, and part of larger networks of
tenants, parks, and other properties. These structures were
political, symbolic, residential, and military, and shaped the ways
in which people consumed the landscape and interacted with the
local communities around them. This volume offers the first
interdisciplinary study of the socio-cultural understanding of the
castle in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, a
period duringwhich the castle has largely been seen as in decline.
Bringing together a wide range of source material - from
architectural remains and archaeological finds to household records
and political papers - it investigates the personnel of the castle;
the use of space for politics and hospitality; the landscape; ideas
of privacy; and the creation of a visual legacy. By focusing on
such an iconic structure, the book allows us to see some of the
ways in which men and women were negotiating the space around them
on a daily basis; and just as importantly, it reveals the impact
that the local communities had on the spaces of the castle. AUDREY
M. THORSTAD teaches in the Department of History, University of
North Texas.
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