
Contents
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Architectural Detailing Architectural Detailing
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Furnishings and Fittings Furnishings and Fittings
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Shops of Different Kinds Shops of Different Kinds
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Evolution from Market Stalls Evolution from Market Stalls
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Chronological Comment Chronological Comment
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Shops in the Townscape Shops in the Townscape
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References cited References cited
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20 Medieval Shops
Get accessAbby Antrobus, Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service, is a senior local government archaeologist. Her PhD thesis, Urbanisation and the urban landscape: building medieval Bury St Edmunds (University of Durham, 2009), combined archaeological, historical, landscape, and architectural evidence to explore how, why, and by whose agency one pilgrimage centre developed, within the context of the phenomenon of rapid urban growth in twelfth-century Europe. She particularly specializes in the management of the archaeological resource of Suffolk’s towns—from the major port of Ipswich to small market centres—advising on the impacts of development, approaches in the field, research frameworks, and approaches to development management and heritage promotion.
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Published:05 February 2018
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Abstract
This chapter reviews the evidence for and recent current debates on the types and character of medieval shops, shophouses, stalls, selds, and undercrofts, revealing in the process some of the environs experienced by the medieval shopper and the types of structure students of towns should consider. It also draws out geographical and chronological trends in commercial building stock (1050–1550) and, in doing so, frames the street as an arena where consumer choices and the businesses and identity of sectors of urban society were made. Britain had a widespread and well-developed shopping culture by at least 1300.
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