
C. M. Woolgar
Author of The Great Household in Late Medieval England
About the Author
C. M. Woolgar is Reader and Head of Special Collections at the University of Southampton Library.
Works by C. M. Woolgar
Household Accounts from Medieval England: Part 2: Diet Accounts (ii), Cash, Corn and Stock Accounts, Wardrobe Accounts, (1993) 6 copies
Household Accounts from Medieval England: Part 1: Introduction, Glossary, Diet Accounts (i) (Records of Social and Econo (1992) 5 copies
Testamentary records of the English and Welsh episcopate, 1200-1413 : wills, executors' accounts and inventories, and the probate process (2011) 4 copies
Archives of Jewish Care 1757-1989. Ms173 University of Southampton Library, archive lists, catalogues and guides Series: 2 (1993) 1 copy
A Guide to the Archive and Manuscript Collections of the Hartley Library MSS 201-300 Univ of Southampton Library Archive Lists, Catalogue and Guide Series 7 (2000) 1 copy, 1 review
Associated Works
Archives: The Journal of the British Records Association, Vol XVI, No 71 (1984) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Woolgar, Christopher Michael
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- head of special collections (university of southampton)
academic
historian - Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
Obsession with food is evidently part of the human condition. Today in our civilization of abundance we have cooking networks, stores devoted to the tools of food preparation, and, of course, businesses that prepare and serve food of nearly every imaginable variety. During the Middle Ages, however, that obsession had a different focus, with the relative scarcity of food and the more limited resources for preparation leading to more of a focus on questions of availability and distinctions show more based more clearly upon class.
Chris Woolgar's book is a study of of that different culture. Drawing upon a range of resources, he describes the variety of foods available for the medieval English palette and how they prepared them. As he notes at the start, food was central to the lives of people in ways that often were obscured by their ubiquity, even to the point where it was central to the common religious ritual of the mass. Their cuisine was more limited than is the case today, with grains more central to the diet and meat uncommon to all but the elite table. Yet it is a misconception to regard the diet as dull, as herbs, spices, and sweeteners often enlivened the taste of the foods available to them, often in the form of sauces and other supplements to their food preparation.
Encompassing everything from hunger to tastes Woolgar's book is an impressively broad study of its subject. By approaching the medieval English through their food he makes them accessible in a way few studies have before his, thanks to an approach that is never less than interesting in its insights and conclusions. Thanks to it we have a window into the lives of the English that shows both how different their lives were and yet how relatable they are to us today. show less
Chris Woolgar's book is a study of of that different culture. Drawing upon a range of resources, he describes the variety of foods available for the medieval English palette and how they prepared them. As he notes at the start, food was central to the lives of people in ways that often were obscured by their ubiquity, even to the point where it was central to the common religious ritual of the mass. Their cuisine was more limited than is the case today, with grains more central to the diet and meat uncommon to all but the elite table. Yet it is a misconception to regard the diet as dull, as herbs, spices, and sweeteners often enlivened the taste of the foods available to them, often in the form of sauces and other supplements to their food preparation.
Encompassing everything from hunger to tastes Woolgar's book is an impressively broad study of its subject. By approaching the medieval English through their food he makes them accessible in a way few studies have before his, thanks to an approach that is never less than interesting in its insights and conclusions. Thanks to it we have a window into the lives of the English that shows both how different their lives were and yet how relatable they are to us today. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 18
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 334
- Popularity
- #71,210
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 21








