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Owners of estates and titles in the peerages of England, Scotland
and Ireland were more, rather than less, likely than ordinary
people to experience dramatic and gruesome deaths and certainly
more likely to have them recorded. This study, drawing on the pages
of 'The Complete Peerage', describes some 7,000 such deaths,
revealing when, where and how they occurred and how they were
commemorated. In the Middle Ages, war, execution, imprisonment,
plague, poison and sheer misfortune brought an end to many noble
lives. In the sixteenth century wars, executions and murders
continued to take their toll alongside 'affrays' or 'skirmishes' so
often blamed for deaths in Scotland and Ireland; and ill-health in
amazing variety. Wars at home, at sea and abroad were fatal for
many in the seventeenth century, wars overseas in the eighteenth,
but by then death from too much food or drink was much more common
and death in fashionable mansions in London's west end more usual
than in ancestral castles. In the nineteenth century came deaths in
remarkable places, sometimes very suspicious.
Classic VCH account of the famous town of Glastonbury and its
environs. The ancient religious settlement of Glastonbury, with its
many legendary associations stretching back into the Dark Ages, and
the manufacturing town of Street, the creation of the late 19th
century, are curious neighbours. They lie at the centre of the
mysteriously-named Twelve Hides Hundred, the core estate of
Glastonbury Abbey in the early Middle Ages. Around them, spreading
into the low-lying moors of the Somerset Levels, are parishes which
produced forthe abbey, after continuous improvement of drainage,
most of its economic riches - meat, milk, cheese, fruit, wool,
wine, cider, fish, stone, timber, and fuel. The suppression of
Glastonbury under unusually tragic circumstances ended the
dominance of a single lord and a coordinated economic system, and
the eventual inclosure and drainage of the moors took two more
centuries to achieve. Glastonbury, meanwhile, faced a century and
more of depression but in the 18th received a charter of
incorporation and became a centre of the stocking industry; while
the fortunes of Street also rose, both through the shoe industry
but also of the role of the Clark family in education and social
improvement. ROBERT DUNNING is County Editor, Victoria County
History of Somerset.
The life and career of Jocelin of Wells examined, with a particular
emphasis on his role in the reconstruction of the Cathedral and
Bishop's Palace. Jocelin, bishop of Wells [d. 1242], is an iconic
figure in his native city; but his career as courtier and statesman
moved far beyond the west country. From a family network which had
produced bishops over several generations, heplayed a major role in
a developing diocese and mother church, and in the growth of towns,
fairs and markets in early thirteenth-century Somerset. He had a
crucial influence on the completion of what was to become Wells
Cathedral,and on the Bishop's Palace beside it. The essays in this
volume look at Jocelin's life and career from a variety of
perspectives, with a particular focus on his involvement in the
building work to complete the Cathedral, aswell as the erection of
the earliest part of the Bishop's Palace. Architectural,
archaeological and even botanical approaches are used to explain
the curious physical nature of the Palace site, the significance of
the work still standing there from Jocelin's time, and the possible
sites of other contemporary work. A final chapter studies the
design and purpose of Robert Burnell's additions to Jocelin's work.
Contributors: Robert Dunning, NicholasVincent, Jane Sayers, Diana
Greenway, Sethina Watson, Tim Tatton-Brown, Jerry Sampson, Alex
Turner, Christopher Gerrard, Keith Wilkinson, Mark Horton, David J.
Hill, Matthew Reeve.
A collection of original essays by distinguished historians on the
works of topographical writers who described and recorded the
landscape of South-West England in the period c. 1540-1900. The
development, subject matter and contribution to knowledge of a
range of key authors is examined. For example, John Leland's
classic descriptions of South-West England will be assessed and the
works of local writers in the Tudor and Stuart era who followed an
developed his approach to the description of people and places is
examined. Amongst these, Richard Carew of Anthony produced perhaps
the finest of any of the descriptions of an English region in his
study of Cornwall, published in 1602. The authors follow the
writings of Devon, Cornwall, Somerset and Dorset topographers who
contributed to the genre over more than three centuries. The book
also includes a gazetter of collections in Devon and Cornwall where
copies of the works of local topographical writers can be found.
A Monograph In American Lectures In Physiology.
A Monograph In American Lectures In Physiology.
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