Chaucer's People

Everyday Lives in Medieval England

12 March 2019

Territory Rights — Worldwide excluding Canada and the British Commonwealth.

Liza Picard (Author)

Description

The Middle Ages re-created through the cast of pilgrims in The Canterbury Tales.

Among the surviving records of fourteenth-century England, Geoffrey Chaucer’s poetry is the most vivid. Chaucer wrote about everyday people outside the walls of the English court—men and women who spent days at the pedal of a loom, or maintaining the ledgers of an estate, or on the high seas. In Chaucer’s People, Liza Picard transforms The Canterbury Tales into a masterful guide for a gloriously detailed tour of medieval England, from the mills and farms of a manor house to the lending houses and Inns of Court in London.

In Chaucer’s People we meet again the motley crew of pilgrims on the road to Canterbury. Drawing on a range of historical records such as the Magna Carta, The Book of Margery Kempe and Cookery in English, Picard puts Chaucer’s characters into historical context and mines them for insights into what people ate, wore, read and thought in the Middle Ages. What can the Miller, “big…of brawn and eke of bones” tell us about farming in fourteenth-century England? What do we learn of medieval diets and cooking methods from the Cook? With boundless curiosity and wit, Picard re-creates the religious, political and financial institutions and customs that gave order to these lives.

Hardback

9781324002291

165 x 244 mm • 368 pages

£21.99

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Ebook

9781324002307

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