Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Looking for Yersinia Pestis: Scientists, Historians and the Black Death
- Pestilence and Poetry: John Lydgate's Danse Macabre
- Pilgrimage in ‘an Age of Plague’: Seeking Canterbury's ‘hooly blisful martir’ in 1420 and 1470
- An Urban Environment: Norwich in the Fifteenth Century
- Mid-Level Officials in Fifteenth-Century Norwich
- Leprosy and Public Health in Late Medieval Rouen
- Plague Ordinances and the Management of Infectious Diseases in Northern French Towns, c.1450–c.1560
- The Renaissance Invention of Quarantine
- Coping with Epidemics in Renaissance Italy: Plague and the Great Pox
- The Historian and the Laboratory: The Black Death Disease
- Index
- CONTENTS OF PREVIOUS VOLUMES
An Urban Environment: Norwich in the Fifteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Looking for Yersinia Pestis: Scientists, Historians and the Black Death
- Pestilence and Poetry: John Lydgate's Danse Macabre
- Pilgrimage in ‘an Age of Plague’: Seeking Canterbury's ‘hooly blisful martir’ in 1420 and 1470
- An Urban Environment: Norwich in the Fifteenth Century
- Mid-Level Officials in Fifteenth-Century Norwich
- Leprosy and Public Health in Late Medieval Rouen
- Plague Ordinances and the Management of Infectious Diseases in Northern French Towns, c.1450–c.1560
- The Renaissance Invention of Quarantine
- Coping with Epidemics in Renaissance Italy: Plague and the Great Pox
- The Historian and the Laboratory: The Black Death Disease
- Index
- CONTENTS OF PREVIOUS VOLUMES
Summary
Academic interest in the medieval and later urban environment is by no means a new phenomenon and is apparent, for example, in an historical account of Norwich written by the early eighteenth-century antiquary John Kirkpatrick. The final decades of the last century, however, witnessed a renewed interest in the subject in relation to both medieval and to more modern towns. Many of the resulting studies have concentrated on a specific aspect of the urban landscape and the responses this invoked, and/or on the relationship between the environment and health. This paper, however, aims to look more generally at the state of one particular city in the fifteenth century, and to attempt to assess how it might have felt to live in Norwich at that time, together with how far the civic authorities sought to ameliorate environmental problems. All towns, of course, have their individual characteristics, both physical and social, but Norwich is an interesting case study. In the sixteenth century it was promoted as an exceptionally clean and healthy city and the governing body undertook new initiatives to clear the river and the streets.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Fifteenth Century XIISociety in an Age of Plague, pp. 79 - 100Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013