Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2009
Do you think that they, with their Battles, Famine, Black Death and Serfdom, were less enlightened than we are, with our Wars, Blockade, Influenza and Conscription? Even if they were foolish enough to believe that the earth was the centre of the universe, do we not ourselves believe that man is the fine flower of creation? If it takes a million years for a fish to become a reptile, has Man, in our few hundred, altered out of recognition?
T. H. White, The Once and Future KingThe best and the worst of urban worlds
Recent scholarship has painted a rather grim picture of life in England's cities during the sixteenth century. Indeed in the view of many historians it was an age of acute urban crisis, decades when a host of insurmountable problems left cities throughout the realm desolate and decayed: traditional urban economies deteriorated in the face of suburban competition; growing unemployment and the financial burdens of urban residence, especially high taxes, resulted in widespread depopulation; a century-long rise in prices depressed living standards and drove the majority of all townspeople below the poverty line. Summarising what is viewed by many as a consensus regarding the state of England's cities from the 1520s through the 1570s, C. Phythian-Adams concluded that ‘at no other period in national history since the coming of the Danes have English towns in general been so weak’.
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