Abstract
This article surveys a range of work on the later medieval English countryside published since 2000, and offers some predictions and suggestions about future research. It shows that the field of‘rural history’has rarely been closely defined, and indeed has tended to be treated as a broad church that can accommodate many different kinds of approach, themselves drawing on a variety of disciplinary traditions. The article identifies and discusses recent and current innovation and creativity in research within two such broad approaches, one mainly‘economic’, the other‘cultural’.It concludes by arguing for the gains that can be enjoyed through the combination of elements of the two approaches, andespecially through a renewed emphasis on the illumination of the general through an intensive focus on the local.
Cite:
Briggs C. Current trends and future directions in the rural history of later medieval England (c. 1200–c. 1500). Rural History. 2023;34(2):318-329. doi:10.1017/S0956793323000067
Access:Open access and free to download
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/rural-history/article/current-trends-and-future-directions-in-the-rural-history-of-later-medieval-england-c-1200c-1500/103DEAF2B59602DEA26BA1794B57F134