Breaks new ground as well as offering an accessible synthesis for the general reader. […] The book’s great triumph, and the thing that will make it invaluable to teachers and students of medieval society generally, is the balancing of the regional against the national. ― THE LOCAL HISTORIAN
A book that is both readable and of a high academic standard, full of insights gained by a very wide and detailed knowledge of the county’s medieval documents. This will certainly be required reading for anyone interested in the medieval economic history of eastern England for some time to come and sets a high standard for the other volumes of this series. ―
JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL ARCHAEOLOGY
This is not a book simply about Suffolk, it is one that has considerable implications for those who study social and economic history far beyond the Waveney or the Stour. Medieval Suffolk has set the scholarly bar for this series at a high level. […] The first volume in the series is a model of its kind and a fine exemplar of how to tackle this most difficult of historical genres. Mark Bailey is to be congratulated on a book that will not only widely educate and inform, but also remain the most scholarly treatment of this particular topic for many years to come. ―
CEAS NEWSLETTER
A fascinating book. ―
SUFFOLK LOCAL HISTORY NEWSLETTER
Sets a very high standard for others to follow. ―
SUFFOLK INSTITUTE OF ARCHAEOLOGY & HISTORY NEWSLETTER
Review
Mark Bailey is to be congratulated on a book that will not only widely educate and inform, but also remain the most scholarly treatment of this particular topic for many years to come.
Book Description
A book that is both readable and of a high academic standard […] This will certainly be required reading for anyone interested in the medieval economic history of eastern England for some time to come and sets a high standard for the other volumes of this series.
About the Author
MARK BAILEY was recently High Master of St Paul’s School, London, and a visiting fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. He was previously a fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, and is now the Professor of Later Medieval History at the University of East Anglia. His numerous publications include Medieval Suffolk. An economic and social history 1200-1500 (2007) and After the Black Death. Economy, society and the law in fourteenth-century England (2021).