Book contents
- Frontmatter
- GENERAL PREFACE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- ABBREVIATIONS AND AUTHORITIES
- CHAPTER I THE OPEN ROAD
- CHAPTER II VILLAGE DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER III A FEW CROSS-LIGHTS
- CHAPTER IV A GLASTONBURY MANOR
- CHAPTER V THE SPORTING CHANCE
- CHAPTER VI BANS AND MONOPOLIES
- CHAPTER VII THE MANOR COURT
- CHAPTER VIII LIFE ON A MONASTIC MANOR
- CHAPTER IX FATHERLY GOVERNMENT
- CHAPTER X THE LORD'S POWER
- CHAPTER XI EARLIER REVOLTS
- CHAPTER XII MONKS AND SERFS
- CHAPTER XIII THE CHANCES OF LIBERATION
- CHAPTER XIV LEGAL BARRIERS TO ENFRANCHISEMENT
- CHAPTER XV KINDLY CONCESSIONS
- CHAPTER XVI JUSTICE
- CHAPTER XVII CLEARINGS AND ENCLOSURES
- CHAPTER XVIII CHURCH ESTIMATES OF THE PEASANT
- CHAPTER XIX RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
- CHAPTER XX TITHES AND FRICTION
- CHAPTER XXI TITHES AND FRICTION (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXII POVERTY UNADORNED
- CHAPTER XXIII LABOUR AND CONSIDERATION
- CHAPTER XXIV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR
- CHAPTER XXV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXVI THE DISSOLUTION OF THE MONASTERIES
- CHAPTER XXVII CONCLUSION
- APPENDIXES
- POSTSCRIPTS
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XVII - CLEARINGS AND ENCLOSURES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2010
- Frontmatter
- GENERAL PREFACE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- ABBREVIATIONS AND AUTHORITIES
- CHAPTER I THE OPEN ROAD
- CHAPTER II VILLAGE DEVELOPMENT
- CHAPTER III A FEW CROSS-LIGHTS
- CHAPTER IV A GLASTONBURY MANOR
- CHAPTER V THE SPORTING CHANCE
- CHAPTER VI BANS AND MONOPOLIES
- CHAPTER VII THE MANOR COURT
- CHAPTER VIII LIFE ON A MONASTIC MANOR
- CHAPTER IX FATHERLY GOVERNMENT
- CHAPTER X THE LORD'S POWER
- CHAPTER XI EARLIER REVOLTS
- CHAPTER XII MONKS AND SERFS
- CHAPTER XIII THE CHANCES OF LIBERATION
- CHAPTER XIV LEGAL BARRIERS TO ENFRANCHISEMENT
- CHAPTER XV KINDLY CONCESSIONS
- CHAPTER XVI JUSTICE
- CHAPTER XVII CLEARINGS AND ENCLOSURES
- CHAPTER XVIII CHURCH ESTIMATES OF THE PEASANT
- CHAPTER XIX RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
- CHAPTER XX TITHES AND FRICTION
- CHAPTER XXI TITHES AND FRICTION (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXII POVERTY UNADORNED
- CHAPTER XXIII LABOUR AND CONSIDERATION
- CHAPTER XXIV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR
- CHAPTER XXV THE REBELLION OF THE POOR (CONTINUED)
- CHAPTER XXVI THE DISSOLUTION OF THE MONASTERIES
- CHAPTER XXVII CONCLUSION
- APPENDIXES
- POSTSCRIPTS
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
This brings us to an extremely important part of our subject. How much did the medieval peasant owe to the Churchman, and especially to the monk, as setting him an example of honest work, creating for him an improved agriculture; and reserving for the actual labourer his fair share in the lands won from the waste?
Manual labour is insisted upon in St Benedict's Rule. The Augustinians were no less definitely pledged here than the Benedictines, since St Augustine wrote a treatise on manual work for his disciples. The reformed Benedictines and Augustinian canons, of whom the best known are Cistercians and Praemonstratensians, made the return to labour one of the pivots of their reforms. The Franciscans sometimes began even as hewers of wood and drawers of water; they did their own housework and kitchen-work, just as the early monks had done. All this, as has been constantly pointed out, was very valuable in a society which, like medieval feudalism, still retained a great deal of the barbarian's contempt for steady work. Nobody doubts that the monk, in his earlier missionary stage, worked with his own hands, adding practical experience to superior intelligence, and that this is one of his most serious contributions to civilization. But, in post-Conquest England, and in the Europe of that time, only a very small fraction of the monastic population had remained at that missionary stage, or brought themselves back to that stage.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Medieval Village , pp. 208 - 230Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1925