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Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550
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Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550. By Ken Farnhill. (Rochester, New York: York Medieval Press in association with The Boydell Press. 2001. Pp. ix, 237. $90.00.)
Guilds and their activities have figured prominently in the recent historiography of late medieval Catholicism in England-notably in furthering positive interpretations of the vitality of lay devotion on the eve of the Reformation and negative assessments of the impact of that cataclysm...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550
The Catholic Historical Review
; Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550. By Ken Farnhill. (Rochester, New York: York Medieval Press in association with The Boydell Press. 2001. Pp. ix, 237. $90.00.) Guilds and their activities have figured prominently in the recent historiography of late
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Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550.(Book Review)
Albion
; Ken Farnhill. Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550. York: York Medieval Press; dist. by Boydell and Brewer, Rochester, N. Y. 2001. Pp. ix, 237. $90.00. ISBN 1-903153-05-0. In this carefully researched volume on East Anglian guilds in the years before the
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Guilds and the Parish Community in Late Medieval East Anglia, c. 1470-1550.
Church History
; By Ken Franhill. York: York Medieval, 2001. ix + 237 pp. $90.00 cloth. With meticulous care and thoroughness Ken Farnhill analyzes guild activity in East Anglia, with special attention to those at Wymondham, a large parish southwest of Norwich whose population was perhaps 1,700 in 1525; Swaffham, a
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Town and country: history buffs and nature lovers especially will be charmed by England's rural East Anglia. (Destination: Europe).
Travel Agent
; The kingdom of East Anglia dissolved about 1,000 years ago, but the name lives on to this day as a region north and northeast of London. Cambridge, a world-renowned seat of higher learning, is located there. So is Sandringham, a royal residence where the queen likes to spend Christmas (it's open to
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English history thrives in East Anglia.(E)(Travel)
The Washington Times
; ... Cambridge is nonstop. The best way to see Suffolk and East Anglia is by car. The East of England Tourist Board puts out guides, maps and many kinds of useful tourist information, including many itineraries through East Anglia that cover such themes as things ...
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Radical East Anglia: Peter Clark celebrates some of the 'awkward squad' associated with eastern England.(TRAVEL TO THE PAST)
History Today
; East Anglia is different. It is not on the road to anywhere. Norwich may have once been the second city of the kingdom but East Anglia missed out on the Industrial Revolution. A culture of being different has marked its history. It provided serious resistance to both the Roman and the Norman
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Letter is the spur to breathe new life into East Anglia branch
Supply Management
; The future of East Anglia branch looks bright after 35 members met last month to discuss its future. David Gazeley, who is coordinating the relaunch, said: "We were very pleased with the enthusiasm and commitment shown by members who attended, as this really was a crunch meeting." The branch's
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Why aren't people snapping up country homes in East Anglia?
The Independent - London
; On a graph comparing regional property prices over the past decade East Anglia rises like the Matterhorn in 1988, a high peak above the national average. Now, eight years later, the region lies in the lowlands, under- performing the general trend. If you were an old-fashioned property speculator,
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East Anglia `best site to dump N-waste'
The Independent - London
; BRITAIN's nuclear waste should be dumped in East Anglia rather than near Sellafield in Cumbria, according to a study by a firm of geological consultants. Radiation doses to the public from a deep underground radioactive repository in East Anglia would be one-tenth of those likely to result from the
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When England was bewitched John Adamson is spellbound by an account of a brief but brutal outbreak of witch-hunting in 17th-century East Anglia
The Sunday Telegraph London
; THERE WERE some strange occurrences during the early 1640s on the estates of Sir Harbottle Grimston, one of Essex's leading Roundhead grandees. A woman saw a snake -- believed to be a diabolical ``imp'' - in her house and, a few days later, she and her two daughters were dead. Cattle were struck
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