Center: 
London
Discipline(s): 
History
Course code: 
HS 334
Terms offered: 
Summer
Credits: 
3
Language of instruction: 
English
Instructor: 
Julian Putkowski
Description: 

This tutorial course will introduce students to the history of London between 1066 and circa 1550, a period that witnessed the establishment of London as the capital of England and the largest, most prosperous town in the kingdom. This course will explore the growth and development of the city and its population via examination of contemporary documentation and secondary sources; recent archaeological research and field study visits to surviving buildings and sites. These activities will be complemented and informed by classes at the IES Abroad Centre that will explore aspects of everyday life, cultural belief, social structure and the governance of London.

Prerequisites: 

None

Learning outcomes: 

This course will enable students to: a) Demonstrate an understanding of economic, cultural and social issues and relationships that influenced the evolution of Medieval London; b) Develop a critical appreciation of the relative strength of different kinds of associated historical data; c) Exercise and enhance their research, writing and presentational skills.

Method of presentation: 

Lectures (including DVD & visual materials), seminar discussions and student presentations and field trips. These activities have been integrated into a series of twelve classes, including field study activities.

Field study: 

Guided tours of the Tower of London; Westminster Abbey; St. John’s Priory and other relevant sites.

Required work and form of assessment: 

Class participation (10%); Quiz (20%); Oral presentation (10%); Term Paper (60%)

Students will be expected to read the assigned texts and must be prepared to contribute to discussion in class. Each student will give a presentation either during one of the field study visits or in class. The subject of the presentation or another topic, agreed by prior negotiation with the lecturer, may be used for the term paper. All students will be expected to contribute constructively to the group discussion of presentations. Students will also be required to select a theme of their choice for a final term paper of 2000 words which must show evidence of wide secondary reading around the subject, and most importantly, the consultation and analysis of primary sources.

content: 

Class 1:  Course Introduction
Introduction to course: themes and sources; aims and methods; the image, growth, and development of medieval cities; London before the Norman Conquest; Visit: British Museum – medieval artefacts.

Reading: Thomas, 1 – 35; Lilley 17 – 41.

Class 2:  Early Medieval London
Outcomes of the Norman Conquest; FitzStephen’s London; social structure: the Crown, merchants, Church and citizenry; London defences and fortifications.

Reading: FitzStephen in Stow, 73; 105-7; 117-119; 129-130; 143; 383; 434; 439.

Class 3:  Merchants
Crafts & commerce; the form and function of guilds; the Mayor and Aldermen; Governance, from Commune to Capital.

Reading: Thrupp 1-27.

Class 4:  The Crown [Meet at Sundial above Tower Hill Station]
The power of the medieval monarchy: Stephen & Matilda; the Tower of London as fortress, palace, prison, armoury, mint and royal menagerie.

Reading: Handout.

Class 5:  Citizens
Households and domestic architecture; food and drink; street markets.

Reading: Either Schofield (1995): 6 – 60 or Thrupp: 130-174.

Class 6:  The Church [Meet at Westminster Abbey]
Visit Westminster Abbey, shrine of Edward the Confessor, and the memorial to Geoffrey Chaucer. The role of the church in medieval life will also be explored.

Reading: Rosser pp. 120-165.

Class 7: Later Medieval London  [Meet at Barbican Station]
Visit London Guildhall and library; St. Paul’s Cathedral and London Wall; Museum of London (Medieval Gallery); Examination of the urban environment of later medieval London.

Reading: Barron (2004) 239-264.
MIDTERM EXAM AND TERM PAPER UPDATE

Class 8:  Pestilence
Medieval medicine, aliments and illnesses.  The cause, impact, and consequences for Londoners of the
Black Death of 1348-1349.

Reading: Horrox: Rochester (70-74); John of Reading (74-75); Henry Knighton (75-80); Geoffrey Le Baker
(80-82); Meaux Abbey (67-70); Thomas Walsingham (88-90).

Class 9:  Welfare Provision [Meet at Farringdon Street Station]
Religious Orders, piety and charity; Visit to St. Bartholomew-the-Great Church & Hospital, and sites in the vicinity of Smithfield.

Reading: Handout.

Class 10:  The Peasants’ Revolt of 1381
An examination of the causes and grievances of the rebels; leadership; negotiations with the Crown, outcomes and interpretations of the Revolt. DVD: The Peasants Revolt (BBC 2004).

Reading: Dobson: Anonimalle Chronicle (155-168); Thomas Walsingham (168-181); Henry Knighton  (181-
187); Froissart (187-199); Monk of W’minster (199-204); E. Historiarum (204-208).

Class 11:  The Nobility [Meet at Farringdon Street Station]
The relationship between the Crown, aristocracy, and medieval London; chivalry, patronage and marriage. The Crusades and the Magna Carta.  Visit to the Priory of the Hospitaller Knights of St John of Jerusalem.

Reading: Handout; Chaucer: The Knight’s Tale.

Class 12:  Conflict & Change
Issues of historical periodisation; Secular values & religious belief; Wyclif and the English Protestant Reformation; ‘The stripping of the altars’ in London; Reflection: Tudor London, Stow’s Survey and the Copperplate Map.

Reading: Handout (Stow/extracts); the Copperplate Map.
COURSE REVIEW

Required readings: 

As listed per class session

Brief Biography of Instructor: 

In addition to his contributions to London’s City University’s MA in Non-fiction Writing, and the IES Abroad History of London course, Julian Putkowski specializes in teaching overseas students about UK media and politics. Julian’s post graduate teaching specialism is English & Communications, and he has worked in a range of non-academic contexts, including journalism, business development, and management of a not-for-profit youth education project. His established interest in linking British media, politics and history has most recently been reflected in “Tommyrot”, a critical essay he contributed to Sir Michael Howard’s (ed.) “A Part of History” (2008). He has two reference works about British military officers (forthcoming: Francis Boutle Publishers, 2010) and has recently completed a (co-authored) manuscript of a book about murderers.