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The
Medieval City
Autore
Norman Pounds
Titolo
The Medieval City - Greenwood Guides to Historic Events of the
Medieval World Series
Luogo
Westport, Connecticut
Editore
Greenwood Press
Anno di edizione
2005
N. delle pagine
264
codice ISBN
0-313-32498-0
Costo di copertina $45.00

_____________________________________________________________________________
Pubblichiamo la recensione del
Dr. Keith Lilley
per gentile concessione di:
Ms. Wendy Plotkin,
H-Urban Editor in Chief
______________________________________________________________________________
H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-HistGeog@h-net.msu.edu
(June 2005)
Reviewed for H-HistGeog
by Keith Lilley,
School of Geography, Queen's University Belfast
Norman
Pounds is best known to many for his established work as
an economic historian and historical geographer of the middle
ages, but perhaps rather less familiar as an urban historian.
His past books have included _An Economic
History of Medieval Europe_ (1974) and _An
Historical Geography of Europe_ (1990). His latest book
on _The Medieval City_
is a slight departure, therefore, though in it Pounds
clearly draws on his broad knowledge of medieval
Europe, and the book ranges quite widely in its geographical
coverage of Western Europe, and
in its temporal coverage of the middle ages, from the re-emergence
of urbanism in the seventh century through to its apogee in the
fourteent and fifteenth centuries. It does a good job presenting
an overview of the medieval city.
Since a number of books on the subject of medieval urbanism have
appeared over the last few years it is difficult not to compare
Pounds's _The Medieval City_ with what they have to offer.
His particular treatment of the subject in the book is arranged
around key themes: the urban plan, urban way of life, church and
city, city government, urban trade, and health, wealth and welfare.
All good, relevant topics, and well-written chapters. Indeed,
the style of the book is suited to its main target audience of
history undergraduate students. This is helped by the addition
of a glossary as well as sample "primary documents"
seventeen in all. His thematic approach is shared by other recent
books on the subject, such as David Nicholas's
_Urban Europe 1100-1700_, John
Schofield and Alan Vince's
_Medieval Towns_, and my own _Urban
Life in the Middle Ages 1000-1450_, rather than the more
traditional chronological approach of say
Adriaan Verhulst's _Rise of Cities
in North-West Europe_. Interestingly, none of these works
are actually cited by Pounds in _The Medieval City_.
Instead, the literature he draws upon is in the main somewhat
dated, much of it coming from the 1960s
and 1970s. In itself this is not
a problem, for there is much of great value in earlier studies
of medieval urbanism, but it makes for a rather "traditional"
book overall in terms of its treatment of the topics covered.
This is especially noticeable for me in the chapters that touch
geographical aspects of medieval urbanism, for instance in the
use of central-place theory to examine the distribution pattern
of towns and cities in eastern England,
and in the distinction drawn between the "planned town"
and the "unplanned town" in chapter two on
'the urban plan," a distinction
long-known now by urban morphologists to have no real meaning.
The plans of towns used to illustrate this chapter also show their
age and are rather oversimplified. The later chapters derive more
from history than geography, and here again there are fairly conservative
treatments of, for example, city government and gilds. For an
undergraduate audience this is fine, for clear explanations are
given on what are for many students quite difficult and alien
concepts.
Overall, _The Medieval City_ is a readable introductory book.
It is a shame though that the bibliography provided will not guide
the student to more recent studies of the medieval city, and it
is a shame that the book as a whole does not engage much with
recent scholarship. The rather sparse footnotes used in each chapter
also do little to help the more discerning undergraduate. Where
the student will gain by reading this book instead rather than
its recent competitors is through its useful reproduction of extracts
from primary documents, for these perhaps more than anything else
provide an insight into the medieval city.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
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