Medieval Yorkshire Towns: People, Buildings and Spaces

Front Cover
Edinburgh University Press, 1998 - Architecture - 212 pages
This beautifully illustrated book takes the reader on a tour through the medieval towns of Yorkshire. The author explores the ways in which architecture and the use of space in the medieval town were the expression of an urban culture which was evolving between the tenth and fourteenth centuries and given pronounced expression by the fifteenth century. He goes on to show that this was also the expression of authority and conflict and that this process created a separate and markedly urban architectural development which took shape in the medieval period. The reader is introduced to Yorkshire's medieval urban heritage through encounters with the nature of urban society, the symbolic and dominating presence of the church in the medieval townscape, and housing, trade and public health. In conclusion the author looks at what significance the Yorkshire medieval town holds for us today.Key Features* Introduces the reader to the architecture of Medieval Yorkshire towns* First book to explore Yorkshire's medieval urban heritage* Covers the evolution of urban culture between the tenth and fourteenth centuries* Of interest to visitors to Yorkshire's medieval towns and their residents

About the author (1998)

George Sheeran is research fellow at the Centre for Continuing Education, University of Bradford.

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