Life in a Mediæval City 
 
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Benson 
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Title: Life in a Mediæval City Illustrated by York in the XVth Century 
Author: Edwin Benson 
 
Release Date: February 24, 2006 [eBook #17848] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE IN A 
MEDIæVAL CITY*** 
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Transcriber's notes: 
All material added by the transcriber is surrounded by braces {}. 
The original has a number of inconsistent spellings and punctuation. 
Three corrections have been made for obvious typographical errors; 
they have been noted individually in the text. 
Text in italics in the original is shown between underlines. Superscript 
(three instances in this book) is marked by a caret (^). 
 
LIFE IN A MEDIÆVAL CITY 
Illustrated by York in the XVth Century 
by 
EDWIN BENSON, B.A. 
With Eight Illustrations 
 
London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge New York: The 
MacMillan Co. 1920 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER I 
INTRODUCTION 
CHAPTER II
IMPORTANT FACTORS AFFECTING THE HISTORY OF YORK 
(a) Geographical position; (b) Military value of its position; (c) 
Political importance 
CHAPTER III 
APPEARANCE 
A. General appearance 
Church, State, people; outside the city; population; area-divisions 
B. Streets 
Highways, traffic, open-spaces; Ouse Bridge 
C. Buildings 
Dwelling-houses, shops, inns; civic buildings (guildhalls); fortifications 
(castle, city walls, bars); religious buildings (Minster; St. William's 
College; St. Mary's Abbey; Friaries; St. Clement's Nunnery; Hospitals; 
Parish Churches) 
D. York as a Port 
CHAPTER IV 
LIFE 
A. Civic Life 
City government, the parishes; extra municipal rights; a royal city; 
charter; sheriffs; mayor; city councils; civic spirit; city and trade rule; 
royal government; punishments; sanctuary 
B. Parliamentary and National Life 
Leasing of royal power; Parliament; visits of Henry IV.; Wars of Roses;
Duke of Gloucester; judges of assize; royal larder 
C. Business Life 
Middle class of merchant employers; Jews and Italians; professions; 
wool trade; trade-guilds; their government; strangers; phases of guild 
life; merchants; apprentices; working hours; trades; artist craftsmen; 
markets and fairs; overseas trade; money; extracts from ordinances 
D. Religious Life 
The Church in the Middle Ages; the Church and daily life; merchants 
and religion; the Church and education; work of hospitals; priests (at 
Minster; parish churches; Archbishop); pluralism; religious orders; 
monastic life; St. Mary's Abbey; Anchorites; other types of religious 
(pardoner, palmer, pilgrim {original had "pligrim"}); Church services 
E. Education 
Higher education; grammar schools; elementary education; educational 
welfare work; instruction; the ways in which the citizen got news and 
information; vocations; literacy in fifteenth century; mediæval learning; 
Revival of Learning 
F. Entertainments 
Holidays, travelling; mediæval plays; York plays; Corpus Christi Day 
Processions; production of pageants; other forms of entertainment; 
archery 
G. Classes 
Fashions and dress; nobles; religious; townspeople; women; the 
freemen; soldiers; men in royal service; lepers; visitors (kings, lords, 
commoners; judges; sailors) serfs 
CHAPTER V
CONCLUSION 
York a city of destruction and a "storehouse of the past" 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
YORK IN THE XVTH CENTURY (From a drawing by E. Ridsdale 
Tate) 
COOKING WITH THE SPIT (From the Louttrell Psalter) 
BISHOP AND CANONS (From Richard II.'s "Book of Hours") 
KNIGHTS DOING PENANCE AT A SHRINE (From a XVth Century 
MS.) 
ADMINISTRATION OF HOLY COMMUNION WITH HOUSEL 
CLOTH (From a XIVth Century MS.) 
SEMI-CHOIR OF FRANCISCANS (From a XVth Century MS.) 
ARCHERY (From the Louttrell Psalter) 
AN ABBOT 
[Illustration: YORK IN THE XVTH CENTURY FROM A DRAWING 
BY E. RIDSDALE TATE] 
 
A MEDIÆVAL CITY 
CHAPTER I 
INTRODUCTION 
In English history the fifteenth century is the last of the centuries that 
form the Middle Ages, which were preceded by the age of racial
settlement and followed by that of the great Renaissance. Although the 
active beginnings of this new era are to be observed in the fifteenth 
century, yet this century belongs essentially to the Middle Ages. 
Perhaps the most attractive feature of the Middle Ages is that they were 
so intensely human. A naïve spirit appears in their formal literature, as 
in Chaucer's account of the Canterbury pilgrims, in their decorated 
religious manuscripts, in their thought, and very characteristically, in 
their architecture, which combines a simple naturalness with a bold and 
daring ingenuity. From columns, the constructional motive of which is 
so simple and natural, and walls pierced with windows, they erected 
systems of lofty arches and high stone-vaulted roofs, the stability of 
which depended on very skilled balancing of thrust and counter-thrust. 
To-day mediæval buildings are    
    
		
	
	
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