The Cambridge Economic History of Europe from the Decline of the Roman Empire: Volume 2, Trade and Industry in the Middle AgesEdward Miller, Cynthia Postan, M. M. Postan Cambridge University Press, 28. kol 1987. - Broj stranica: 1024 The second volume of The Cambridge Economic History of Europe, first published in 1952, was a survey by an international group of specialist scholars covering trade and industry in pre-Roman, Roman and Byzantine Europe, the medieval trade of northern and southern Europe, and the histories of medieval woollen manufacture, mining and metallurgy, and building in stone. This second edition, in addition to revising most chapters and the bibliographies appended to them, also fills gaps which arose from the wartime and post-war circumstances in which the first edition was written. New chapters provide accounts of the trade and industry of eastern Europe, of medieval Europe's trade with Asia and Africa, and of medieval coinage and currency. Taken with volumes I and III of the series, this volume is designed to complete a comprehensive review of the economic history of medieval Europe as a whole. It was planned by the late Sir Michael Postan, and was largely completed under his editorship. |
Sadržaj
The Settlement and Colonization of Europe | 25 |
13 | 35 |
19 | 47 |
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Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 27
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
abbey acres agrarian agricultural Alemanni already ancient Apulia arable assarting became Byzantine Byzantine Empire Carolingian cattle Church Cistercians clearing colonization Columella common crops cultivation demesne districts doubt early East ecclesiastical economic Elbe eleventh century especially estates Europe evidence fallow farmers farming favourable feudal fields fifteenth century Flanders forest fourteenth century France Frankish Gaul German grain grants groups harvest holdings horses imperial important increased irrigation Italy labour services land landlords landowners later latifundia leases lord's lords manorial manses manure meadows medieval Mediterranean ment Middle Ages military monasteries North owners paroikoi pasture peasants period plough population probably pronoia regions rent Roman Empire rural seigneurie seignorial settled settlement sheep slaves Slavonic social soil sometimes spread survived Tacitus tenants tenth century tenure territory thirteenth century three-course tion towns transhumance twelfth century urban village villein Visigoths wheat