Placeholder text
Alehouses and Good Fellowship in Early Modern England
0 - Default Title
Description
Bringing together social and cultural history approaches, this book draws on a wide range of source material - from legal records and diary evidence to printed drinking songs - to investigate battles over alehouse licensing and the regulation of drinking; the political views and allegiances that ordinary men and women expressed from the alebench; the meanings and values that drinking rituals and practices held for contemporaries; and the social networks and collective identities expressed through the choice of drinking companions. Focusing on an institution and a social practice at the heart of everyday life in early modern England, this book allows us to see some of the ways in which ordinary men and women responded to historical processes such as religious change and state formation, and just as importantly reveals how they shaped their own communities and collective identities. It will be essential reading for anyone interested in the social, cultural and political worlds of the ordinary men and women of seventeenth-century England.
MARK HAILWOOD is Associate Research Fellow in History at the University of Exeter.
Product details
- Binding:
- Paperback
- Number of Pages:
- 268
- Release Date:
- 2016-10-21
- Publication Date:
- 2016-10-21
- Publisher:
- Boydell Press
- Languages:
- Original: English
- ISBN10:
- 178327154X
- ISBN13:
- 9781783271542
- GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
- [email protected]
- Weight:
- 412 g
- Height:
- 15.6 cm
- Width:
- 23.4 cm
- Thickness:
- 1.5 cm
Currently sold out