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Contents: Environmental setting, Christopher Caseldine; traditional building materials and their influence on vernacular styles, Veronica Chesher. The deep past - before the Norman Conquest: palaeolithic - the earliest human occupation, Allan Straw; late Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic hunting-gathering communities, Alison Roberts; Neolithic settlement, land use and resources, Frances Griffith and Henrietta Quinnell; barrow and ceremonial sites in the Neolithic and earlier Bronze Age, Frances Griffith and Henrietta Quinnell; settlement c.2500 BC to c.AD 600, Frances Griffith and Henrietta Quinnell; the Bronze Age metalwork of Devon and Cornwall, Susan M. Pearce; Iron Age to Roman buildings, structures, and coin and other findspots, Frances Griffith and Henrietta Quinnell; the Roman Army in the South West, Valerie Maxfield; classical sources for the ancient South West, Malcolm Todd; early Christian Dumnonia, A.C. Thomas; place names in Devon and Cornwall, O.J. Padel; Saxon conquest and settlement Della Hooke. Themes in the history of post-medieval South-West England - population: population distribution from the Domesday Book of 1806 William Ravenhill; population distribution and growth in early modern England Jonathan Barry population change in south-west England, 1811-1911, Andrew Alexander and Gareth Shaw; population changes in the 20th century, Andrew Gilg. Themes in the history of post-medieval South-West England - political and military history: castles, fortified houses and fortified towns, 1300-1500, Robert Higham; representation and rebellion in the later middle ages, Nicholas Orme; civil wars of the 17th century, Peter Gaunt; coastal defences and garrisons, 1480-1914, Michael Duffy; defence and disruption - World Wars I and II, Mark Blacksell; antecedents of the modern administrative map - local areas and local authorities, 1801-1998, Jeffrey Stanyer; Parliamentary boundaries and political affiliations, 1918-1997, Michael Rush. Themes in the history of post-medieval South-West England - religion and religious institutions: ecclesiastical institutions in 1086 and monastic houses c.1300, Christopher Holdsworth; the Church in Devon and Cornwall from c.1300 to the Reformation, Nicholas Orme; religion and the spread of nonconformity before 1800, Jonathan Barry; religious worship in 1851, Bruce Coleman; religion and ecclesiastical practices in the 20th century, Grace Davie and Derek Hearl. Themes in the history of post-medieval South-West England - education/dissemination of knowledge/language: printing, the book trade, and newspapers, c.1500-1860, Ian Maxted; education in Cornwall in the 19th and 20th centuries, L. Burge and F.L. Harris; education in Devon in the 19th and 20th centuries, Roger Sellman; the retreat of the Cornish language, Philip Payton. (Part contents)
Roger Kain is Montefiore Professor of Geography in the University of Exeter, a Fellow of the British Academy and one of its Vice-Presidents. He has been honoured with medals and prizes from The Royal Geographical Society, The Newberry Library Chicago, the Library Association. The late William Ravenhill [1919-1945] was Reardon Smith Professor of Geography in the University of Exeter.
“Not to be missed by historians, geographers, and archaeologists
who might wish to acquire an almost perfect example of the genre .
. . Text, maps, and illustrations are at once authoritative, clear
and unambiguous . . . A key text for future studies of the
south-west.” (Journal of Historical Geography 27, 2001) “Where this
atlas wins hands down over its rivals is its massive inclusiveness
and the depths of the articles that accompany the maps. Coverage
runs from the geology of the South West and its palaeolithic
settlement patterns right up to the contemporary hot potato of
second home ownership. The general editor, Roger Kain, points out
that ‘Each author was given the opportunity to frame his or her own
contribution within broad parameters set by the editors.’ This
lightness of touch has worked in that it is quite possible to sit
down and view the atlas as a ‘good read’ in its own right . . . The
65 chapters cover everything a local historian or geographer could
reasonably want to know and many are a masterpiece of compression
and data presentation.” (The Local Historian, November 2000) “. . .
massively comprehensive and detailed, with a proliferation of
excellent colour and black and white reproductions, diagrams and
photographs, as well as some 400 specially drawn maps . . . Its
worth as a work of reference for the specialist can be judged by,
for example, the linguistic scientist being able to turn to a
chapter, complete with relevant map, on the retreat of the Cornish
language, or the social historian to a remarkably well illustrated
chapter on printing, the book trade and newspapers. This is not to
say that it is of lesser interest to more generalist readers, such
as map collectors or, indeed, anyone with more than a passing
interest in the peninsula.” (Journal of the International Map
Collectors Society, Autumn 2000) “A very fine production . . .
provides good value on the historical and geographical background
to that fascinating south-western peninsula of England.” (The
Geographical Journal March 2001, Vol. 167) “This marvellous book.”
(Mapline, Vol. 91 2000) “The enduring hold of local history on the
imagination is also manifest in Roger Kain and William Ravenhill’s
sumptuous Historical Atlas of South-West England, the product of
twelve years’ work and one of the most substantial collaborative
cartographic ventures undertaken in the United Kingdom.” (Journal
of Historical Geography) “Thanks to generous contributions from the
University of Exeter Development Fund and a series of charitable
organisations, this Atlas sells for £55, which is extraordinarily
cheap at the price and not to be missed by historians, geographers,
and archaeologists who might wish to acquire an almost perfect
example of the genre.” (Journal of Historical Geography) “… the
contributors to the Historical Atlas of South-West England have
given us a volume which is as beautiful as it is scholarly; a
handsome work to be enjoyed by student and ‘general’ reader alike.”
(Journal of Historical Geography)
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