The Gentry in England and Wales, 1500-1700

The Gentry in England and Wales, 1500-1700
Author: Felicity Heal
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 488
Release: 1994-10-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 1349236403

The book is the first full analysis of the gentry in the early modern period since G.E.Mingay The Gentry: the Rise and Fall of a Ruling Class (1976). It offers a synthesis of the recent specialist work on this key social and political group, but will also provide a distinctive approach to its subjects through the use of the texts and artefacts by which the gentry sought to fashion themselves.

Monuments and Memory in Early Modern England

Monuments and Memory in Early Modern England
Author: Peter Sherlock
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 458
Release: 2016-12-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 1351916815

Funeral monuments are fascinating and diverse cultural relics that continue to captivate visitors to English churches, yet we still know relatively little about the messages they attempt to convey across the centuries. This book is a study of the material culture of memory in sixteenth and seventeenth-century England. By interpreting the images and inscriptions on monuments to the dead, it explores how early modern people wanted to be remembered - their social vision, cultural ideals, religious beliefs and political values. Arguing that early modern English monuments were not simply formulaic statements about death and memory, Dr Sherlock instead reveals them to be deliberately crafted messages to future generations. Through careful reading of monuments he shows that much can be learned about how men and women conceived of the world around them and shifting concepts of gender, social order and the place of humans within the universe. In post-Reformation England, the dead became superior to the living, as monuments trumpeted their fame and their confidence in the resurrection. This study aims to stimulate historians to attempt to reconstruct and engage with the world view of past generations through the unique and under-utilised medium of funeral monuments. In so doing it is hoped that more light may be shed on how memory was created, controlled and contested in pre-modern society, and encourage the on-going debate about the ways in which understandings of the past shape the present and future.

The English Poetic Epitaph

The English Poetic Epitaph
Author: Joshua Scodel
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 448
Release: 1991
Genre: Death in literature
ISBN: 9780801424823

In the first major study of the genre, Joshua Scodel shows how English poets have used the poetic epitaph to express their views concerning the power and limitations of poetry as a response to human mortality.