About This Book
The author surveys the development of English towns and villages from prehistoric pit-dwellings and earthworks through Roman, Anglo-Saxon, and Norman periods into the medieval and post‑Reformation eras, describing churches, monasteries, castles, houses, markets, fairs, schools, and civic institutions. Emphasis falls on physical traces and everyday life—architecture, industry, social customs, and local governance—and on practical suggestions for using local monuments and records to teach history through observation. Chapters offer concise topical treatments intended as a reader to awaken curiosity rather than as an examination textbook.
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