Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Part I Reflections on a transitional era
- Part II ‘Country-dwellers, common folk and craftsmen’
- Part III ‘The total sum of all persons’
- Part IV ‘While it is so forward between us’
- Part V ‘She came that day seeking service’
- Part VI ‘Beware of such holy men’
- 11 Authority and rebellion
- 12 Religious nonconformity and parochial activism
- 13 Literacy
- Part VII Synthesis
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time 18
13 - Literacy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Part I Reflections on a transitional era
- Part II ‘Country-dwellers, common folk and craftsmen’
- Part III ‘The total sum of all persons’
- Part IV ‘While it is so forward between us’
- Part V ‘She came that day seeking service’
- Part VI ‘Beware of such holy men’
- 11 Authority and rebellion
- 12 Religious nonconformity and parochial activism
- 13 Literacy
- Part VII Synthesis
- Bibliography
- Index
- Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time 18
Summary
One of the most central questions surrounding the medieval transmission of heretical and possibly political knowledge and opinions is the extent to which literacy had spread into the middling and lower orders of lay society by the fifteenth century. That access to written works, either directly by reading or indirectly through the intermediation of readers who transmitted the written word orally to the non-reading, was intimately bound up with Lollardy has of course long been recognised. But the quantitative dimensions of lay literacy in this era have been quite difficult to estimate, and in the absence of detailed information on this score historians have fallen back upon certain conjectures about the relationships between economic or social developments, literacy, and nonconformist opinion.
The statements of Davis may be taken as typical of arguments of this kind. Proclivities to heretical opinion, in this view, were at least partly a by-product (in economically advanced regions like Essex and East Anglia) of social changes, and specifically the presence of large numbers of clothworkers and other artisans. Such workers were geographically mobile, somewhat divorced from the old manorial regime, and, critically, more likely to have acquired at least rudimentary literacy as a practical adjunct to their occupations. ‘Literate craftsmen … had a more independent stance towards society and Church than did labourers … The textile artisan could migrate with greater freedom than the labourer, infecting other districts with heresy …’.
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- Information
- A Rural Society after the Black DeathEssex 1350–1525, pp. 280 - 288Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991