The Experience of Neighbourhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

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The Experience of Neighbourhood in Medieval and Early Modern Europe contributes to nascent debates on concepts of neighbourliness and belonging, exploring the operation of the pre-modern neighbourhood in social practice. Formal administrative units, such as the manor and the parish, have been the object of much scholarly attention yet the experience and limits of neighbourhood remain understudied. Building on recent advances in the histories of emotions and material culture, this volume explores a variety of themes on residential proximity, from its social, cultural and religious implications to material and economic perspectives. Contributors also investigate the linguistic categories attached to neighbours and neighbourhood, tracing their meaning and use in a variety of settings to understand the ways that language conditioned the relationships it described. Together they contribute to a more socially and experientially grounded understanding of neighbourly experience in pre-modern Europe.

Author(s): Bronach C. Kane, Simon Sandall
Series: Studies in Medieval History and Culture
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 272
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: neighbourhood in late medieval and early modern Europe revisited
PART I: Neighbours and neighbourhoods
1 Home and ‘away’: neighbours and strangers in the urban communities of Southern Italy at the start of the thirteenth century
2 Neighbourhood and local knowledge in later medieval England
3 Senses of neighbourhood (Vicinanza) in sixteenth-century Venice
PART II: Conflict and coexistence
4 Neighbours across the religious divide: coping with difference in Henrician Kent
5 Neighbourhood strife and enmity in late medieval and early modern Tuscany: a platform for new research
6 ‘They call their neighbours cowards for not assisting them’: custom, neighbourliness and popular resistance in early modern England
7 A street of many parishes: chester neighbours, 1670–1730
PART III: Charity and support
8 Charity and neighbourly communities among the guilds of late medieval Ghent
9 ‘All to Make Mery With’: testamentary bequests to neighbours in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century York
10 Neighbourliness and poor relief in Elizabethan Hadleigh, Suffolk
PART IV: Friendship and belonging
11 Friends and neighbours in high medieval England: a hagiographical perspective
12 Neighbours, friends and communal sentiment in late medieval Zagreb
13 Friends, neighbours and strained relationships in seventeenth-century Norwich and Norfolk
14 ‘Doing neighbourhood’: practising neighbourliness in the diocese of Durham, 1624–31
Bibliography
Index