George Holmes
The Later Middle Ages, 12721485
English life in the thirteenth century was characterized by: a single Christian
Church owing allegiance to Rome and living on the revenues of its estates; kingship
with difficulty kept intact in the face of scheming magnates jealous of their priviledges;
a countryside divided into thousands of small estates, tilled by peasantssome
of them serfsand owned by lords with considerable power over their tenants;
armies of knights fighting on horseback; Gothic cathedrals; monasteries; castles;
town gilds. Professor Holmes describes this medieval society and its evolution, after
the Black Death, into a somewhat different kind of society in the late fifteenth
century. He argues that the population decrease as a result of the plague, beginning
in 1349, brought about fundamental transformations: village life changed, serfdom
disappeared, the great estates became less important, industry grew, and the commodities
and directions of trade changed.
Professor Holmes also examines the politics of these yearsthe relations of
the kings of England with neighboring rulers and with their own subjects. This
period includes the successful conquest of Wales by Edward I and his unsuccessful
conquest of Scotland, the series of wars with France known as the Hundred Years'
War, and the War of the Roses, which brought Henry VII, the first Tudor, to the
throne in 1485. Here also is an exploration of the heretical movement initiated
by Wycliffe in the 1370s, which began a tendency toward loosening the power of
the Church, and a study of the beginnings of parliamentary government in the later
fourteenth century, and the emergence of a strong self-sufficient monarchy.
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