One of the most important manuscripts surviving from thirteenth-century England, the corpus of documents known as the Hundred Rolls for Cambridge have been incomplete until the recent discovery of an additional roll.
This invaluable volume replaces the previous inaccurate transcription by the record commission of 1818 and provides new translations and additional appendices.
Shedding new light on important facets of business activity in thirteenth-century Cambridge, this volume makes a significant contribution to our knowledge of the early phases of capitalism.
This unique text will be of interest to anyone working in the fields of economic and business history, entrepreneurship, philanthropy and medieval studies.
A research monograph based on recently discovered historical documents, Compassionate Capitalism: Business and Community in Medieval England, by Casson et al, is also now available from Bristol University Press.
Innehållsförteckning
In addition to the new edition of the Hundred Rolls, the book provides new translations of the following previously unpublished documents.
Amercements in Cambridge 1176–7
The Cambridge Tallage of 1211
Amercements of the Abbot of Ramsey and William De Kantilup and Their Associates in Cambridge in 1219
Gifts (Oblata)
Summary of Information in Published Editions of the Pipe Rolls Relating to People and Places in Cambridge, 1130, 1158–1224 and 1230
Selected Excerpts From Rotuli Curiae Regis, I-XX Relating to People and Places in Cambridge
Selected Excerpts From Calendar of Fine Rolls I-III Relating to People and Places in Cambridge
Cambridge Debts: Selected Cases From the Exchequer of the Jews, 1219–81
Cambridge: Jewish Records of Debts by People Resident In or Closely Connected to Cambridge
Feets of Fines: Selected Cases Relevant to the Town of Cambridge
Cambridgeshire Subsidy Rolls and Eyres
Mayors and Bailiffs of Cambridge, 1263–1300
Ancient Places in Cambridge
Family Dynasties of Property Owners
Om författaren
Katie Phillips is an AHRC-funded Ph D student in Medieval Studies at the University of Reading.