Review of periodical literature published in 2009

References (date of publication is 2009 unless otherwise stated)
- Aston, M., ‘An early medieval estate in the Isle valley of south Somerset and the early endowment of Muchelney Abbey’, Somerset Archaeology and Natural History, 152, pp. 83–103.
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Bassett, S., ‘Anglo-Saxon Warwick’, Midland History, 34, pp.
123–55.
10.1179/175638109X417332 Google Scholar
- Blackburn, M., ‘Currency under the Vikings, part 5: the Scandinavian achievement and legacy’, British Numismatic Journal, 78, pp. 43–71.
- Campbell, E. and Bowles, C. R., ‘Byzantine trade to the edge of the world: Mediterranean pottery imports to Atlantic Britain in the 6th century’, in M. Mango, ed., Byzantine trade 4th–12th centuries: the archaeology of local, regional and international exchange: papers of the thirty-eighth spring symposium of Byzantine Studies, 14, pp. 297–314.
- Cubitt, C., ‘ “As the lawbook teaches”: reeves, lawbooks and urban life in the anonymous Old English legend of the seven sleepers’, English Historical Review, 124, pp. 1021–49.
- Deveson, A. M., ‘The ceorls of Hurstbourne revisited’, Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club & Archaeological Society, 64, pp. 105–15.
- Draper, S., ‘Būrh place-names in Anglo-Saxon England’, English Place-Name Society Journal, 41, pp. 103–18.
- Edmonds, F., ‘The practicalities of communication between Northumbrian and Irish churches’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 157, pp. 129–47.
- Faith, R., ‘Forces and relations of production in early medieval England’, Journal of Agrarian Change, 9, pp. 23–41.
- Griffiths, D., ‘Sand-dunes and stray finds: evidence for pre-Viking trade?’, Proceedings of the British Academy, 157, pp. 265–80.
- Haslam, J., ‘The development of late-Saxon Christchurch, Dorset and the Burghal Hidage’, Medieval Archaeology, 53, pp. 95–118.
- Kemble, J., ‘The east and middle Saxon estates of Westminster Abbey’, Essex Archaeology and History, 3rd ser., 39, pp. 152–61.
- Metcalf, D. M., ‘Betwixt sceattas and Offa's pence: mint attributions and the chronology of a recession’, British Numismatic Journal, 78, pp. 1–42.
- Pickles, T., ‘Locating Ingetlingum and Suthgedling: Gilling West and Gilling East’, Northern History, 46, pp. 313–25.
- Roberts, B., ‘The land of Werhale: landscapes of Bede’, Archaeologia Aeliana, 5th ser., 37 (2008), pp. 127–59.
- Salter, C. J., ‘Early tin extraction in the southwest of England: a resource for Mediterranean metalworkers in late antiquity?’, in M. Mango, ed., Byzantine trade 4th–12th centuries: the archaeology of local, regional and international exchange: papers of the thirty-eighth spring symposium of Byzantine Studies, 14, pp. 315–22.
- Wormald, P., ‘Anglo-Saxon and Scots law’, Scottish Historical Review, 88, pp. 192–206.
References (date of publication is 2009 unless otherwise stated)
- Allen, M., ‘Henry I Type 14’, British Numismatic Journal, 79, pp. 72–171.
- Allen, M., ‘Monthly mint output figures for the coinage of Richard III’, Numismatic Chronicle, 169, pp. 213–15.
- Arvanigian, M., ‘A county community or the politics of the nation? Border service and baronial influence in the palatinate of Durham, 1377–1413’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 41–61.
- Bacharach, D. S., ‘Prices, price controls, and market forces in England under Edward I, c.1294–1307’, Haskins Society Journal, 20 (2008), pp. 204–20.
- Badham, S., ‘The de Cheltenham Chantry Chapel at Pucklechurch (Gloucestershire) and its associated effigies’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 162, pp. 125–45.
- Bailey, M., ‘Technology and the growth of textile manufacture in medieval Suffolk’, Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology (and History), 42, pp. 13–20.
- Bailey, M., ‘The form, function and evolution of irregular field systems in Suffolk, c.1300 to c.1550’, Agricultural History Review, 57, pp. 15–36.
- Bailey, M., ‘Villeinage in England: a regional case study, c.1250–c.1349’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 430–57.
- Barratt, N., ‘The 1213 Pipe Roll and Exchequer authority at the end of John's reign’, Thirteenth-Century England, 12, pp. 31–43.
- Baskerville, M., ‘The use of land in Buckholt, a Hampshire royal forest, from 1200–1900’, Hampshire Studies. Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society, 64, pp. 200–22.
- Beard, F., ‘The Baddesley Milford and Woodcott estates of the Hampshire Hospitallers’, Hampshire Studies. Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society, 64, pp. 122–31.
- Bell, A. R., Brooks, C., and Moore, T. K., ‘Interest in medieval accounts: examples from England, 1272–1340’, History, 94, pp. 411–33.
- Birrell, J., ‘Reading manorial custumals: lords, tenants and custom on three Staffordshire estates (1297–1341)’, Staffordshire Studies, 19 (2008), pp. 1–14.
- Boboc, A., ‘Lay performances of work and salvation in the York Cycle’, Comparative Drama, 43, pp. 247–71.
- Bollard, J. K., ‘Landscapes of The Mabinogi’, Landscapes, 10, 2, pp. 37–60.
- Boyle, A. and Rowlandson, I., ‘A kiln at Church Lane, Ticknall, South Derbyshire’, Derbyshire Archaeological Journal, 129, pp. 195–6.
- Burt, C., ‘ “The peace less kept”? The origins, revelations and impact of Edward I's “trailbaston” commissions of 1305–7’, Thirteenth-Century England, 12, pp. 123–37.
- Campbell, B. M. S., ‘Factor markets in England before the Black Death’, Continuity and Change, 24, pp. 79–106.
- Carrel, H., ‘Disputing legal privilege: civic relations with the church in late medieval England’, Journal of Medieval History, 35, pp. 279–96.
- Carter, R. W., ‘Former medieval open fields in the eastern Blackdowns’, Somerset Archaeology and Natural History, 152, pp. 153–64.
- Chapman, P., Blinkhorn, P., and Chapman, A., ‘A medieval potter's tenement at Corby Road, Stanion, Northamptonshire’, Northamptonshire Archaeology, 35 (2008), pp. 215–70.
- Dyer, C. and Aldred, D., ‘Changing landscape and society in a Cotswold village: Hazelton, Gloucestershire, to c.600’, Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, 127, pp. 233–68.
- English, J. and Brown, G., ‘An analytical survey of the earthworks near Old Shaw Farm, Alton Barnes’, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, 102, pp. 222–32.
- Fisher, M., ‘ “A thing without rights, a mere chattel of their lord”: the escape from villeinage of a Suffolk family’, Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology (and History), 42, pp. 32–7.
- Fleming, A., ‘The making of a medieval road: the Monk's Trod routeway, mid Wales’, Landscapes, 10, 1, pp. 77–100.
- Foster, M., ‘John Hurte (d.1476): a Nottingham priest and his books’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 52, pp. 109–19.
- Fox, P. A., ‘Striving to succeed in late medieval Canterbury: the life of Thomas Fokys, publican, mayor and alderman c.1460–1535’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 129, pp. 209–24.
- Galloway, J. A., ‘Storm flooding, coastal defence and land use around the Thames estuary and tidal river c.1250–1450’, Journal of Medieval History, 35, pp. 171–88.
- Gardiner, M., ‘Dales, long lands, and the medieval division of land in eastern England’, Agricultural History Review, 57, pp. 1–14.
- Goacher, D., ‘A documentary study relating to Buckland in the medieval borgh of Westree in Maidstone’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 129, pp. 394–8.
- Griffiths, R. A., ‘Town and countryside in Cardiganshire towards the end of the middle ages’, Ceredigion, 16, pp. 23–47.
- Harris, B. J., ‘The fabric of piety: aristocratic women and the care of the dead, 1450–1550’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 308–35.
- Hart, J., Alexander, M., McSloy, E. R., and Warman, S., ‘Bronze age activity and a medieval hollow-way at the A419 Commonhead Junction, Swindon’, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, 102, pp. 211–21.
- Hartland, B. and Dryburgh, P., ‘The development of the Fine Rolls’, Thirteenth-Century England, 12, pp. 193–205.
- Hogan, A., ‘The lands of Llanthony Prima and Secunda in Ireland 1172–1541: the settlement of Meath’, Ríocht Na Mídhe [Journal of the County Meath Historical Society], 20, pp. 117–42.
- Hovius, M., ‘A fleet of Fastolfs: the descendancy of Alexander Fastolf, burgess of Great Yarmouth’, Foundations: Newsletter of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 3, pp. 83–107.
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Impey, E., ‘A house for fish or men? The structure, function and significance of the Fish House at Meare, Somerset’, English Heritage Historical Review, 4, pp.
22–35.
10.1179/175201609799838492 Google Scholar
- Ingham, R., ‘Mixing languages on the manor’, Medium Aevum, 78, pp. 80–97.
- Johnson, L., ‘Attitudes towards spousal violence in medieval Wales’, Welsh History Review, 24, 4, pp. 81–115.
- Jones, M., ‘Master Vacarius, civil lawyer, canon of Southwell and parson of Norwell, Nottinghamshire’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 53, pp. 1–20.
- Le Pard, G., ‘Medieval sea marks around the Dorset coast’, Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society, 130, pp. 265–8.
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Leech, D., ‘Stability and change at the end of the middle ages: Coventry, 1450–1525’, Midland History, 34, pp.
1–21.
10.1179/175638109X406596 Google Scholar
- Linnard, W., ‘Hunting honey in the Vale of Neath’, Morgannwg. The Journal of Glamorgan History, 53, pp. 31–9.
- McSheffrey, S. and Pope, J., ‘Ravishment, legal narratives, and chivalric culture in fifteenth-century England’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 818–36.
- Meadows, I., ‘A riverside timber revetment at 130 Bridge St, Peterborough’, Northamptonshire Archaeology, 35 (2008), pp. 163–72.
- Newfield, T. P., ‘A cattle panzootic in early fourteenth-century Europe’, Agricultural History Review, 57, pp. 155–90.
- Ormrod, W. M., ‘The origins of tunnage and poundage: Parliament and the estate of merchants in the fourteenth century’, Parliamentary History, 28, pp. 209–27.
- Parfitt, K. and Sweetinburgh, S., ‘Further investigation of Anglo-Saxon and medieval Eastry’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 129, pp. 313–32.
- Pexton, F. and McCann, J., ‘A columbarium at Collingbourne Ducis church’, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, 102, pp. 233–7.
- Pidgeon, L. J., ‘A family “made by maryage”: Sir Richard Wydevile and Jacquetta, Duchess of Bedford’, Northamptonshire Past and Present, 62, pp. 19–30.
- Powell, A. B., Chandler, J., Godden, D., Mepham, L., Stevens, C., and Knight, S., ‘Late Saxon and medieval occupation near Salisbury Street, Amesbury’, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, 102, pp. 188–201.
- Powell, K., ‘Excavation of a medieval site at West Wick, Weston-super-Mare’, Somerset Archaeology and Natural History, 152, pp. 165–88.
- Railton, M., ‘Archaeological investigation of the remains of a medieval vaccary at Gatesgarth Farm, Buttermere’, Transactions of the Cumberland and Westmorland Antiquarian and Archaeological Society, 3rd ser., 9, pp. 57–67.
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Rawcliffe, C., ‘A marginal occupation? The medieval laundress and her work’, Gender and History, 21, pp.
147–69.
10.1111/j.1468-0424.2009.01539.x Google Scholar
- Ridgard, J., ‘Mettingham, Suffolk: the building of a religious college with particular reference to the acquisition and production of books for its library’, Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology (and History), 42, pp. 21–31.
- Roberts, E., ‘An early-medieval barn at Bishops Waltham? New light on the “palace stables” ’, Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society, 64, pp. 116–21.
- Rogers, A., ‘William Browne's title deeds and late medieval Stamford’, Archives, 34, pp. 1–7.
- Rogers, A., ‘Stamford and the Wars of the Roses’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 53, pp. 73–108.
- Sayer, D., ‘Medieval waterways and hydraulic economics: monasteries, towns and the East Anglian fen’, World Archaeology, 41, pp. 134–50.
- Scrase, T., ‘The bishop and the guild: the Wells Cathedral crisis of 1341–3’, Somerset Archaeology and Natural History, 151 (2008), pp. 117–25.
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Slavin, P., ‘Chicken husbandry in late-medieval eastern England: c.1250–1400’, Anthropozoologica, 44, pp.
35–56.
10.5252/az2009n2a2 Google Scholar
- Smith, G. R., ‘The extent of Anglesey, 1284’, Anglesey Antiquarian Society and Field Club Transactions, pp. 70–118.
- Smith, L. B., ‘A contribution to the history of galanas in late-medieval Wales’, Studia Celtica, 43, pp. 87–94.
- Smith, N., ‘The medieval park at Erringden: creation and extent in the fourteenth century’, Transactions of the Halifax Antiquarian Society, 17, pp. 32–57.
- Sparrow, P., ‘The Old Slaughterhouse, Stour Street, Manningtree’, Essex Archaeology and History, 39 (2008), pp. 136–51.
- Stewart, S., ‘A year in the life of a royal justice. Gilbert de Preston's itinerary, July 1264–June 1265’, Thirteenth-Century England, 12, pp. 155–65.
- Stone, P. and Lally, M., ‘Medieval and post-medieval quarrying, tanning and domestic activity at 96 North Street, Barking. TQ 4405 8432’, Essex Archaeology and History, 39 (2008), pp. 207–10.
- Summerson, H., ‘Peacekeepers and lawbreakers in London, 1276–1321’, Thirteenth-Century England, 12, pp. 107–21.
- Sutton, A. F., ‘London mercers from Suffolk c.1200–1570: benefactors, pirates and merchant adventurers (part 1)’, Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology (and History), 42, pp. 1–12.
- Sutton, A. F., ‘The merchant adventurers of England: the place of the adventurers of York and the north in the later middle ages’, Northern History, 46, pp. 219–29.
- Taylor, C., ‘A morphological analysis of Ickleton, Cambridgeshire: an admission of defeat’, Proceedings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, 98, pp. 91–104.
- Trett, B., ‘A topographical survey of medieval Newport’, Monmouthshire Antiquary, 25–6, pp. 53–84.
- Whitworth, A., ‘Wiltshire dovecotes and pigeonhouses’, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, 102, pp. 238–44.
- Wiliam, D. W., ‘Llanfechell yn yr Oesoedd Canol’, Anglesey Antiquarian Society and Field Club Transactions, pp. 51–69.
- Williams, D. H., ‘Llanthony Prima Priory’, Monmouthshire Antiquary, 25–6, pp. 13–50.
- Young, D. E. Y., ‘Iron age, medieval and recent activity at Whitegate Farm, Bleadon, North Somerset’, Somerset Archaeology and Natural History, 151 (2008), pp. 31–81.
References (date of publication is 2009 unless otherwise stated)
- Allen, D. W., ‘A theory of the pre-modern British aristocracy’, Explorations in Economic History, 46, pp. 299–313.
- Allen, R. C., ‘Agricultural productivity and rural incomes in England and the Yangtze Delta, c.1620–c.1820’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 525–50.
- Allison, B., ‘ “Cutting one's coat according to one's cloth”: the clothes of an unremarkable woman in the seventeenth century’, Oxoniensia, 124, pp. 35–51.
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Bettey, J., ‘ “Ancient custom time out of mind”: copyhold tenure in the west country in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries’, Antiquaries Journal, 89, pp.
307–22.
10.1017/S0003581509000055 Google Scholar
- Bonzol, J., ‘The medical diagnosis of demonic possession in an early modern English community’, Parergon, 26, pp. 115–40.
- Bryson, A., ‘Edward VI's “speciall men”: Crown and locality in mid Tudor England’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 229–51.
- Burgess, D. R., ‘Piracy and the public sphere: the Henry Every trials and the battle for meaning in seventeenth-century print culture’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 887–913.
- Cambers, A., ‘Demonic possession, literacy and “superstition” in early modern England’, Past and Present, 202, pp. 3–35.
- Capp, B., ‘Bigamous marriage in early modern England’, Historical Journal, 52, pp. 537–56.
- Chamberland, C., ‘Honor, brotherhood, and the corporate ethos of London's Barber-Surgeons' Company, 1570–1640’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 64, pp. 300–32.
- Clarke, B., ‘Clothing the family of an MP in the 1690s: an analysis of the day book of Edward Clarke of Chipley, Somerset’, Costume, 43, pp. 38–54.
- Collinson, P., ‘The politics of religion and the religion of politics in Elizabethan England’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 74–92.
- Dimmock, S., ‘The origins of Welsh apprentices in sixteenth-century Bristol’, Welsh History Review, 24, pp. 116–40.
- Dorey, M., ‘Controlling consumption: regulating meat consumption as a preventative to plague in seventeenth-century London’, Urban History, 36, pp. 24–41.
- Ellis, M., ‘Was Sir Thomas Wyatt able to draw on a culture of rebellion in Kent in 1554?’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 129, pp. 77–102.
- Ezzy, D., Easthope, G., and Morgan, V., ‘Ritual dynamics: mayor making in early modern Norwich’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 22, pp. 396–419.
- Falvey, H., ‘Voices and faces in the rioting crowd: identifying seventeenth-century enclosure rioters’, Local Historian, 39, pp. 137–51.
- Fisher, L. and Zell, M., ‘The demise of the Kent broadcloth industry in the seventeenth century: England's first de-industrialization’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 129, pp. 239–56.
- Fox, A., ‘Sir William Petty, Ireland, and the making of a political economist, 1653–87’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 388–404.
- Goldberg, D., ‘The Massachusetts paper money of 1690’, Journal of Economic History, 69, pp. 1092–106.
- Goodacre, J., ‘The debts of James VI of Scotland’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 926–52.
- Graham, A., ‘Finance, localism, and military representation in the army of the Earl of Essex (June–December 1642)’, Historical Journal, 54, pp. 879–98.
- Halliday, K., ‘New light on “the commotion time” of 1549: the Oxfordshire rising’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 655–76.
- Herbert, A. E., ‘Gender and the spa: space, sociability and self at British health spas, 1640–1714’, Journal of Social History, 43, pp. 361–83.
- Hindson, B., ‘Attitudes towards menstruation and menstrual blood in Elizabethan England’, Journal of Social History, 43, pp. 89–114.
- Horowitz, M., ‘Policy and prosecution in the reign of Henry VII’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 412–58.
- Horowitz, M., ‘Henry Tudor's treasure’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 560–79.
- Jacobsen, H., ‘Luxury consumption, cultural politics, and the career of the earl of Arlington, 1660–1685’, Historical Journal, 52, pp. 295–317.
- Kitson, P., ‘Religious change and the timing of baptism in England, 1538–1750’, Historical Journal, 52, pp. 269–94.
- Langhold, O., ‘Martin Luther's doctrine on trade and price in its literary context’, Journal of Political Economy, 41, pp. 89–107.
- Lee, J., ‘Urban policy and urban political culture: Henry VII and his towns’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 493–510.
- Lewycky, N., ‘Cardinal Thomas Wolsey and the City of York, 1514–1529’, Northern History, 46, pp. 43–60.
- Little, P., ‘Uncovering a protectoral stud: horses and horse-breeding at the court of Oliver Cromwell, 1653–8’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 252–67.
- Marshall, P., ‘(Re)defining the English Reformation’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 564–86.
- Matthews, S., ‘Money supply and credit in rural Cheshire, c.1600–c.1680’, Continuity and Change, 24, pp. 245–74.
- McCallum, J., ‘The reformation of the ministry in Fife, 1560–1640’, History, 94, pp. 310–27.
- McDonagh, B. A. K., ‘Subverting the ground: private property and public protest in the sixteenth-century Yorkshire Wolds’, Agricultural History Review, 57, pp. 191–206.
- McGlynn, M., ‘Memory, orality, and life records: proofs of age in Tudor England’, Sixteenth Century Journal, 40, pp. 679–97.
- McGranahan, L., ‘The widow's offering: inheritance, family structure, and the charitable gifts of women’, Explorations in Economic History, 46, pp. 356–67.
- McShane, A., ‘Subjects and objects: material expressions of love and loyalty in seventeenth-century England’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 871–86.
- Merry, M. and Baker, P., ‘ “For the house her self and one servant”: family and household in late seventeenth-century London’, London Journal, 34, pp. 205–32.
- Mitchell, D. M., ‘ “My purple will be too sad for that melancholy room”: furnishings for interiors in London and Paris, 1660–1735’, Textile History, 40, pp. 3–28.
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Moore, J. S., ‘The mid-Tudor population crisis in midland England, 1548–1563’, Midland History, 34, pp.
44–57.
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- Murphy, A. L., ‘Trading options before Black-Scholes: a study of the market in late seventeenth-century London’, Economic History Review, 62, Suppl. 1, pp. 8–30.
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Nievergelt, M., ‘Francis Drake: merchant, knight and pilgrim’, Renaissance Studies, 23, pp.
53–70.
10.1111/j.1477-4658.2008.00543.x Google Scholar
- O'Rourke, K. H. and Williamson, J. G., ‘Did Vasco da Gama matter for European markets?’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 655–84.
- Postles, D., ‘Morbidity in an early-modern small town: Loughborough in the seventeenth century’, Local Population Studies, 82, pp. 30–43.
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Postles, D., ‘Religion and uncertainty in four Midland urban centres, c.1529–1546’, Midland History, 34, pp.
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- Robinson, M. J., ‘Loose and unknown persons: listing seamen in the late seventeenth century’, Mariner's Mirror, 95, pp. 392–9.
- Rönnbäck, K., ‘Integration of global commodity markets in the early modern era’, European Review of Economic History, 13, pp. 95–120.
- Schofield, J., Pearce, J., Betts, I., Dyson, T., and Egan, G., ‘Thomas Soane's buildings near Billingsgate, London, 1640–66’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 43, pp. 282–341.
- Seddon, P., ‘Landlords and tenants: the impact of the civil wars on the Clare estates in Nottinghamshire, 1642–1649’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, 113, pp. 81–91.
- Slack, P., ‘Material progress and the challenge of affluence in seventeenth-century England’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 576–603.
- Stewart, L. A. M., ‘English funding of the Scottish Armies in England and Ireland, 1640–1648’, Historical Journal, 52, pp. 573–93.
- Thomas, S., ‘Pews: their setting, symbolism and significance’, Local Historian, 39, pp. 267–86.
- Thomas, S. S., ‘Early modern midwifery: splitting the profession, connecting the history’, Journal of Social History, 43, pp. 115–38.
- Thornton, T., ‘Henry VIII's progress through Yorkshire in 1541 and its implications for northern identities’, Northern History, 46, pp. 231–44.
- Upton, P., ‘Thomas Fisher and the depopulation of Nether Itchington in the sixteenth century’, Local Historian, 39, pp. 3–12.
- Vallance, T., ‘The captivity of James II: gestures of loyalty and disloyalty in seventeenth century England’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 848–58.
- Wall, A., ‘The great purge of 1625: “the late Murraine amongst the Gentlemen of the pease” ’, Historical Research, 82, pp. 677–93.
- Walter, J., ‘ “The pooremans Joy and the gentlemans plague”: a Lincolnshire libel and the politics of sedition in early modern England’, Past and Present, 203, pp. 29–67.
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Walter, J., ‘Gesturing at authority: deciphering the gestural code of early modern England’, Past and Present, 203, Suppl.
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- Weisser, O., ‘Boils, pushes and wheals: reading bumps on the body in early modern England’, Social History of Medicine, 22, pp. 321–39.
- Winterbottom, A., ‘Producing and using the Historical relation of Ceylon: Robert Knox, the East India Company and the Royal Society’, British Journal for the History of Science, 42, pp. 515–38.
- Wood, A., ‘ “A lytull worde ys tresson”: loyalty, denunciation, and popular politics in Tudor England’, Journal of British Studies, 48, pp. 837–47.
- Wrigley, E. A., ‘Rickman revisited: the population growth rates of English counties in the early modern period’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 711–35.
- Young, F., ‘Catholic exorcism in early modern England: polemic, propaganda and folklore’, Recusant History, 29, pp. 487–507.
- van Zanden, J. L., ‘The skill premium and the “great divergence” ’, European Review of Economic History, 13, pp. 121–53.
References (date of publication is 2009 unless otherwise stated)
- Acheson, G. G., Hickson, C. R., Turner, J. D., and Ye, Q., ‘Rule Britannia! British stock market returns, 1825–1870’, Journal of Economic History, 69, pp. 1107–37.
- Alayrac-Fielding, V., ‘ “Frailty, thy name is China”: women, chinoiserie and the threat of low culture in eighteenth-century England’, Women's History Review, 18, pp. 659–68.
- Allen, D. W., ‘A theory of the pre-modern British aristocracy’, Explorations in Economic History, 46, pp. 299–313.
- Allen, R. C., ‘Agricultural productivity and rural incomes in England and the Yangtze Delta, c.1620–c.1820’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 525–50.
- Allen, R. C., ‘Engels' pause: technical change, capital accumulation, and inequality in the British industrial revolution’, Explorations in Economic History, 46, pp. 418–35.
- Allen, R. C., ‘The industrial revolution in miniature: the spinning jenny in Britain, France, and India’, Journal of Economic History, 69, pp. 901–27.
- Baigent, E. and Bradley, J. E., ‘The social sources of late eighteenth-century English radicalism: Bristol in the 1770s and 1780s’, English Historical Review, 124, pp. 1075–108.
- Barfoot, M., ‘The 1815 Act to regulate madhouses in Scotland: a reinterpretation’, Medical History, 53, pp. 57–76.
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Barker, H., ‘A grocer's tale: gender, family and class in early nineteenth-century Manchester’, Gender and History, 21, pp.
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- Barker, H., ‘Medical advertising and trust in late Georgian England’, Urban History, 36, pp. 379–98.
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Biddle, R., ‘Naval shipbuilding and the health of dockworkers, c.1815–1871’, Family & Community History, 12, pp.
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- Bogart, D., ‘Turnpike trusts and property income: new evidence on the effects of transport improvements and legislation in eighteenth-century England’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 128–52.
- Bogart, D. and Richardson, G., ‘Making property productive: reorganizing rights to real and equitable estates in Britain, 1660–1830’, European Review of Economic History, 13, pp. 3–30.
- Broadberry, S. and Gupta, B., ‘Lancashire, India, and shifting competitive advantage in cotton textiles, 1700–1850: the neglected role of factor prices’, Economic History Review, 62, pp. 279–305.
- Brown, M., ‘Medicine, reform and the “end” of charity in early nineteenth-century England’, English Historical Review, 124, pp. 1353–88.
- Clayton, M., ‘Changes in Old Bailey trials for the murder of newborn babies, 1674–1803’, Continuity and Change, 24, pp. 337–59.
- Corfield, P. J., ‘From poison peddlers to civic worthies: the reputation of the apothecaries in Georgian England’, Social History of Medicine, 22, pp. 1–21.
- Devereaux, S., ‘Recasting the theatre of execution: the abolition of the Tyburn ritual’, Past and Present, 202, pp. 127–74.
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