The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490

The politics of waste in later medieval England, c. 1270-1490 investigates the concept of waste in relation to the politics and culture of England from around the start of the reign of Edward I until the very early years of the Tudor era. Drawing from a variety of sources including petitions, chance...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peake, Joseph
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77239/
_version_ 1848800976962584576
author Peake, Joseph
author_facet Peake, Joseph
author_sort Peake, Joseph
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The politics of waste in later medieval England, c. 1270-1490 investigates the concept of waste in relation to the politics and culture of England from around the start of the reign of Edward I until the very early years of the Tudor era. Drawing from a variety of sources including petitions, chancery records, manor court rolls, political and legal treatises, legislation, chronicles, and verse romances, it shows how the concept of waste was intertwined with institutional standards of equity, justice and property-holding. Whereas waste has generally been associated with a lack or loss of material value by historians of this period, this thesis argues instead that the concept was useful as a tool of political rhetoric at multiple levels of society, on account of the benefits and detriments that cases of waste could bring to different parties in the same instance. Waste lands could be seen as sought-after sites of potential settlement or resource extraction, as both manorial records and chronicles show, and yet they could also be seen as the consequence of the decline or devastation of a settled area. Similarly, to devastate a land or ‘make waste’ with regard to another’s property could often be profitable to those carrying it out, be it the recycling of a disused seigneurial tenement or the goods seized by an army from enemy territories. Waste could at times be legitimised, such as in the destruction and resource-stripping of the property of enemies and felons at the behest of the Crown, and cases where this legitimacy was challenged or questioned show how understandings of waste were constantly subject to negotiation. Waste was, therefore, a highly contested concept, with different actors at various points trying to define and deploy it to suit their own agendas.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T21:00:07Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-77239
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T21:00:07Z
publishDate 2024
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-772392024-07-20T04:40:08Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77239/ The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490 Peake, Joseph The politics of waste in later medieval England, c. 1270-1490 investigates the concept of waste in relation to the politics and culture of England from around the start of the reign of Edward I until the very early years of the Tudor era. Drawing from a variety of sources including petitions, chancery records, manor court rolls, political and legal treatises, legislation, chronicles, and verse romances, it shows how the concept of waste was intertwined with institutional standards of equity, justice and property-holding. Whereas waste has generally been associated with a lack or loss of material value by historians of this period, this thesis argues instead that the concept was useful as a tool of political rhetoric at multiple levels of society, on account of the benefits and detriments that cases of waste could bring to different parties in the same instance. Waste lands could be seen as sought-after sites of potential settlement or resource extraction, as both manorial records and chronicles show, and yet they could also be seen as the consequence of the decline or devastation of a settled area. Similarly, to devastate a land or ‘make waste’ with regard to another’s property could often be profitable to those carrying it out, be it the recycling of a disused seigneurial tenement or the goods seized by an army from enemy territories. Waste could at times be legitimised, such as in the destruction and resource-stripping of the property of enemies and felons at the behest of the Crown, and cases where this legitimacy was challenged or questioned show how understandings of waste were constantly subject to negotiation. Waste was, therefore, a highly contested concept, with different actors at various points trying to define and deploy it to suit their own agendas. 2024-07-20 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77239/1/Peake%2C%20Joseph%2C%2014341967%2C%20corrections.pdf Peake, Joseph (2024) The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Medieval England Middle Ages late-medieval waste wasteland land Britain manorial seigneurial crown peasant chronicles social history cultural history devastation making waste
spellingShingle Medieval England
Middle Ages
late-medieval
waste
wasteland
land
Britain
manorial
seigneurial
crown
peasant
chronicles
social history
cultural history
devastation
making waste
Peake, Joseph
The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490
title The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490
title_full The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490
title_fullStr The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490
title_full_unstemmed The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490
title_short The politics of waste in later medieval England, c.1270-1490
title_sort politics of waste in later medieval england, c.1270-1490
topic Medieval England
Middle Ages
late-medieval
waste
wasteland
land
Britain
manorial
seigneurial
crown
peasant
chronicles
social history
cultural history
devastation
making waste
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77239/