Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377

<p>This thesis is a contribution to the social history of medieval Devon and the south- west in the lifetimes of the first two Courtenay earls, Hugh II (1275-1340) and Hugh III (1303-77). The fourteenth century was an era of particular importance to the region's social evolution, in whic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burls, R
Other Authors: Davies, R
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
_version_ 1817932609875869696
author Burls, R
author2 Davies, R
author_facet Davies, R
Burls, R
author_sort Burls, R
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis is a contribution to the social history of medieval Devon and the south- west in the lifetimes of the first two Courtenay earls, Hugh II (1275-1340) and Hugh III (1303-77). The fourteenth century was an era of particular importance to the region's social evolution, in which many sectors of the non-agrarian economy - cloth production, mining fishing, ship-building, intermational commerce - attained impressive levels of growth, interrupted perhaps only moderately by the demographic crises of the middle decades. Further encouragement to economic prosperity came from the war with France, which stimulated demographic and urban communities on the south coast and provided fresh opportunities for employment and personal advancement.</p> <p>Against this backdrop of economic change, the pattern of aristocratic power in the south-western peninsula was undergoing a fundamental transformation and shift in focus. Two great Anglo-Norman honors were united in 1297 under the Courtenays, giving a single aristocratic dynasty unprecedented influence and leverage over local society. Permanently resident in the county and led by vigorous personalities, the family rapidly became ubiquitous in all sectors of public life and the region experienced a quality and intensity of lordship rarely witnessed in the previous two centuries.</p> <p>The current work supplies a deficiency in the study of the medieval south-west, but also makes a case for extending the remit of a traditional county-based study to encompass a wider cultural and economic hinterland. Particular attention is paid to the influence of the physical landscape and geography on economic and seignorial development in medieval society. The thesis is divided into two parts: the first dealing with the economic and social infrastructure, and 'setting the scene' with a long-term historical survey; the second focusing specifically on the fourteenth century and placing a discussion of local power structures in a wider 'national' context.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:28:31Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:30404220-43bf-41b7-b70a-f18624594c08
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:40:38Z
publishDate 2002
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:30404220-43bf-41b7-b70a-f18624594c082024-12-07T11:36:25ZSociety, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:30404220-43bf-41b7-b70a-f18624594c08HistoryAristocracy (Social class)DevonEnglandSocial conditionsDevon (England)EnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project2002Burls, RDavies, R<p>This thesis is a contribution to the social history of medieval Devon and the south- west in the lifetimes of the first two Courtenay earls, Hugh II (1275-1340) and Hugh III (1303-77). The fourteenth century was an era of particular importance to the region's social evolution, in which many sectors of the non-agrarian economy - cloth production, mining fishing, ship-building, intermational commerce - attained impressive levels of growth, interrupted perhaps only moderately by the demographic crises of the middle decades. Further encouragement to economic prosperity came from the war with France, which stimulated demographic and urban communities on the south coast and provided fresh opportunities for employment and personal advancement.</p> <p>Against this backdrop of economic change, the pattern of aristocratic power in the south-western peninsula was undergoing a fundamental transformation and shift in focus. Two great Anglo-Norman honors were united in 1297 under the Courtenays, giving a single aristocratic dynasty unprecedented influence and leverage over local society. Permanently resident in the county and led by vigorous personalities, the family rapidly became ubiquitous in all sectors of public life and the region experienced a quality and intensity of lordship rarely witnessed in the previous two centuries.</p> <p>The current work supplies a deficiency in the study of the medieval south-west, but also makes a case for extending the remit of a traditional county-based study to encompass a wider cultural and economic hinterland. Particular attention is paid to the influence of the physical landscape and geography on economic and seignorial development in medieval society. The thesis is divided into two parts: the first dealing with the economic and social infrastructure, and 'setting the scene' with a long-term historical survey; the second focusing specifically on the fourteenth century and placing a discussion of local power structures in a wider 'national' context.</p>
spellingShingle History
Aristocracy (Social class)
Devon
England
Social conditions
Devon (England)
Burls, R
Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377
title Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377
title_full Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377
title_fullStr Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377
title_full_unstemmed Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377
title_short Society, economy and lordship in Devon in the age of the first two Courtenay earls, c. 1297-1377
title_sort society economy and lordship in devon in the age of the first two courtenay earls c 1297 1377
topic History
Aristocracy (Social class)
Devon
England
Social conditions
Devon (England)
work_keys_str_mv AT burlsr societyeconomyandlordshipindevonintheageofthefirsttwocourtenayearlsc12971377