Tide Mills of Southern England

Tide Mills of Southern England
Author: Alex Vincent
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
Total Pages: 139
Release: 2024-09-15
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1398116831

A fascinating exploration of the lost tide mills and their remains in England’s southern counties of Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Sussex and Kent.

The Domesday Geography of South-East England

The Domesday Geography of South-East England
Author: Henry Clifford Darby
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 692
Release: 1962
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521047708

The Domesday Book has long been used as a source of information about legal and economic matters, but its bearing upon the geography of medieval England has been comparatively neglected. The extraction of geographical information involves problems of interpretation, since it necessitates an analysis into elements and their subsequent reconstruction on a geographical basis. But when this has been done new materials for making a general picture of the relative prosperity of different areas are available, as well as data for the comparative study of varying geographic and economic factors. The whole work, The Domesday Geography of England, will be in six volumes. In them different experts are to be allotted large distinct districts under Professor Darby's editorship. He will himself draw together all the threads, and write the concluding chapters of each volume and the whole of the concluding volume. The book will be fully illustrated by many maps, all specially drawn under the general editor's supervision. The volumes will be separately available, though the first contains some general introductory matter relevant to the whole work.

British Water-mills

British Water-mills
Author: Leslie Syson
Publisher: [London] : B. T. Batsford
Total Pages: 178
Release: 1965
Genre: Water mills
ISBN:

Ecclesiastical Lordship, Seigneurial Power and the Commercialization of Milling in Medieval England

Ecclesiastical Lordship, Seigneurial Power and the Commercialization of Milling in Medieval England
Author: Adam Lucas
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 437
Release: 2016-04-29
Genre: History
ISBN: 1317146476

This is the first detailed study of the role of the Church in the commercialization of milling in medieval England. Focusing on the period from the late eleventh to the mid sixteenth centuries, it examines the estate management practices of more than thirty English religious houses founded by the Benedictines, Cistercians, Augustinians and other minor orders, with an emphasis on the role played by mills and milling in the establishment and development of a range of different sized episcopal and conventual foundations. Contrary to the views espoused by a number of prominent historians of technology since the 1930s, the book demonstrates that patterns of mill acquisition, innovation and exploitation were shaped not only by the size, wealth and distribution of a house’s estates, but also by environmental and demographic factors, changing cultural attitudes and legal conventions, prevailing and emergent technical traditions, the personal relations of a house with its patrons, tenants, servants and neighbours, and the entrepreneurial and administrative flair of bishops, abbots, priors and other ecclesiastical officials.