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Imagine you were transported back in time to Medieval England and
had to start a new life there. Without mobile phones, ipads,
internet and social media networks, when transport means walking
or, if you're fortunate, horse-back, how will you know where you
are or what to do? Where will you live? What is there to eat? What
shall you wear? How can you communicate when nobody speaks as you
do and what about money? Who can you go to if you fall ill or are
mugged in the street? However can you fit into and thrive in this
strange environment full of odd people who seem so different from
you? All these questions and many more are answered in this new
guide book for time-travellers: _How to Survive in Medieval
England_. A handy self-help guide with tips and suggestions to make
your visit to the Middle Ages much more fun, this lively and
engaging book will help the reader deal with the new experiences
they may encounter and the problems that might occur. Know the laws
so you don't get into trouble or show your ignorance in an
embarrassing faux pas. Enjoy interviews with the celebrities of the
day, from a business woman and a condemned felon, to a royal cook
and King Richard III himself. Have a go at preparing medieval
dishes and learn some new words to set the mood for your
time-travelling adventure. Have an exciting visit but be sure to
keep this book to hand.
Our capital city has always been a thriving and colourful place,
full of diverse and determined individuals developing trade and
finance, exchanging gossip and doing business. Abandoned by the
Romans, rebuilt by the Saxons, occupied by the Vikings and
reconstructed by the Normans, London would become the largest trade
and financial centre, dominating the world in later centuries.
London has always been a brilliant, vibrant and eclectic place -
Henry V was given a triumphal procession there after his return
from Agincourt and the Lord Mayor's river pageant was an annual
medieval spectacular. William the Conqueror built the Tower, Thomas
Becket was born in Cheapside, Wat Tyler led the peasants in revolt
across London Bridge and Chaucer's Canterbury Tales was the first
book produced on Caxton's new printing press in Westminster. But
beneath the colour and pageantry lay dirt, discomfort and disease,
the daily grind for ordinary folk. Like us, they had family
problems, work worries, health concerns and wondered about the
weather.
The medieval era is often associated with dynastic struggles,
gruesome wars and the formidable influence of the Church. But what
about the everyday experience of the royal subjects and common
people? Here, alongside the coronations, diplomatic dealings and
key battles, can be found the fabric of medieval life as it was
really lived, in its folk songs, recipes and local gossip. With a
diverse range of entries - one for each day of the year - historian
Toni Mount provides an almanac for lovers of all things medieval. A
detailed picture is gathered from original sources such as
chronicles, manor court rolls, coroners' rolls and the records of
city councils. We learn not only of the royals and nobles of
official history but also the quarrels of a miscellany of
characters, including William and Christopher of York, Nalle
Kittewritte who stole her neighbours' washing, and Margery from
Hereford who was murdered by an Oxford student. The world in which
they laboured, loved and lived is vividly reimagined, one day at a
time.
Isaac Newton and the England he knew: the people, places and events
that shaped history's greatest scientist. Across nine decades,
Isaac Newton bestrode the world of science, becoming a colossus of
experimentation, discovery and philosophy. How did a
seventeenth-century Lincolnshire farm-boy become one of the most
influential scientists of all time, his work still relevant to us
today and for our future? This fascinating new biography explores
not only Newton's world and his times but the earlier ideas that
were the foundation for his breakthroughs in science and those
people around him who influenced his work. His later career at the
Royal Mint and his heretical views on religion are considered as
extensions of his philosophy. Newton's ideas underpinned the
Enlightenment that gave birth to the modern world of science and
material progress. From school mathematics to space exploration,
from laser surgical techniques to artificial intelligence, Newton
is here in our everyday lives: the man who changed the world.
Conjuring up a time when butchers and executioners knew more about
anatomy than university-trained physicians, the phrase 'medieval
medicine' sounds horrific to those of us with modern ideas on
hygiene, instant pain relief and effective treatments. In those
days no one could allay the dread of plague or the many other
horrible diseases we have now forgotten. However, the medieval
medical profession provided patients with everything from cosmetic
procedures and dietary advice to life-saving surgeries and
post-operative antibiotics. Intriguingly, alongside such expertise,
some still believed that unicorns, dragons and elephants supplied
vital medical ingredients and that horoscopes could predict the sex
of unborn babies. This book explores the labyrinth of strange ideas
and unlikely remedies that make up the weird, wonderful and
occasionally beneficial world of medieval medicine.
Have you ever wondered what life was like for the ordinary
housewife in the Middle Ages? Or how much power a medieval lady
really had? Find out all about medieval housewives, peasant women,
grand ladies, women in trade and women in the church in this
fascinating book. More has been written about medieval women in the
last twenty years than in the two whole centuries before that.
Female authors of the medieval period have been rediscovered and
translated; queens are no longer thought of as merely decorative
brood mares for their royal husbands and have merited their own
biographies. In the past, historians have tended to look at what
women could not do. In this book we will look at the lives of
medieval women in a more positive light, finding out what rights
and opportunities they enjoyed and attempting to uncover the real
women beneath the layers of dust accumulated over the centuries.
In 1828, Shawn ?Skip? Sullivan is somewhere around fourteen
years old when the Indians attack his family's homestead and kill
both his mother and father. Warned by the barking dogs, Skip's
mother forced him to hide in the cabin's false floor. Though Skip
is unharmed, his journey is just beginning.
After burying his parents, Skip knows he can't stay at the cabin
alone forever. He remembers that there's a small settlement with a
trading post about thirty miles away, but he hasn't been there
since he was seven years old. With just a small backpack filled
with the items the Indians didn't scavenge, Skips sets off for the
nearest civilization.
He soon finds himself alone and lost in the mountains?until he
meets an old trapper called Big Jim, who teaches him how to
survive. Together, the two navigate the wilderness while fending
off attackers both human and beast. Skip comes of an age while
learning tough lessons about the world and the nature around
him.
Growing up in Ohio in the 1860s, brothers Bill and John Cole dream
of going west and becoming gunfighters. They have no intention of
following in their father's footsteps and working the land,
spending their days as farmers. At eighteen, Bill is the first to
leave and become a deputy. He cleans up the town of Amber Walls,
Texas, and is believed to be the fastest gun of his time. But
there's one faster-his brother, John, who rides into Abilene,
Kansas, on his bay mare and leaves his mark on this western town as
a deputy sheriff. He becomes known as the "left-handed gun." All
those who challenge young John Cole end up six feet under in Boot
Hill. "The Left-Handed Gun" follows the trials and fortunes of Bill
and John Cole as they tackle the challenges of the Old West. They
learn that all who take the way of the gun will sooner or later end
up on Boot Hill.
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