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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">25.10.15</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>25.10.15,  Sologestoa/Albarella (eds), The Rural World in the Sixteenth Century</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Joel T. Rosenthal
                        </surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>Stony Brook University, emeritus
                    </aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>joel.rosenthal@stonybrook.edu</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2022">
                <year>2025</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Sologestoa, Idoia Grau, and Umberto Albarella, eds</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>The Rural World of the Sixteenth Century: Exploring the Archaeology of Innovation in Europe</source>
                <series>Studies in the History of Daily LIfe (AD 800-1600), 11</series>
                <year iso-8601-date="2022">2022</year>
                <publisher-loc>Turnhout</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Brepols</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. 225</page-range>
                <price>€65.00 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-2-503-59705-8 (hardback)</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2025 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p>The eight chapters in this book either assert or question the premise that the sixteenth
            century was the turning point during which the basic agricultural traditions and
            products of the European medieval world were replaced or superseded by those of the
            early modern world. The authors lean heavily toward archaeology--with a somewhat
            begrudging turn to the written sources of historical inquiry when they are extant and
            available--and the eight papers are basically field studies or detailed case studies set
            in a specific place and/or time, rather than general comments about large scale
            transition and innovation. The chapters take us over a good spread of Europe, touching
            on areas as varied as Bohemia, England, Sweden, and the Basque Country, and the wide
            distribution of the various authors’ academic bases and credentials (the authors
            identify as being based at the universities of Salento, Bari, Tubingen, Basel,
            Sheffield, Pilson, Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, Masaryk, and the Swedish Steel Production
            Association) reflects this extensive collaboration on a topic of considerable interest.
            That four of the eight papers are co-written by two or more authors likewise argues for
            the broad interest in the question of novelty and transition, particularly amidst the
            less exalted level of society and economic life.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>In their introduction the volume’s editors point to the three major themes of the papers:
            land transformation and changes in land use, changes in agricultural patterns and animal
            husbandry, and technological change. And though they are unevenly distributed, the
            volume <italic>in toto </italic>has 79 figures and, article by article, extensive
            bibliographies in many languages, with many of the items cited pointing to work carried
            out and published in this century. Many of the arguments are supported by those detailed
            figures—maps, graphs, tables, etc.—though much of the illustrative and statistical
            material is well beyond the customary reading parameters and comprehension of a social
            historian (like this reviewer). The result is a collection of detailed case studies, as
            indicated above, with a precise data base and a narrow focus.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>Ladislav Čapek looks at the changes in landholding patterns in sixteenth-century Bohemia,
            years in which a declining population and the desertion of many villages led to a
            landscape of larger estates and demesne farming and tenant labor services rather than
            individual peasant households. The decline in labor services meant a transfer to
            monetary rents as landlords, with larger holdings, grew more powerful and richer.
            Fishponds and game and hunting preserves were signs of this new landscape of deserted
            villages, all set in a rural world under scrutiny in the years between the devastation
            of the Hussite Wars of the fifteenth century and what was yet to befall the land in the
            Thirty Years War. Valentin Chevassu and five co-authors/researchers turn to a comparison
            of the landscape and its development in two mountainous areas in eastern France. The
            comparisons are between Morvan and Jura, assessing the importance of such factors as
            industrialization, deforestation (to feed industry and to clear the land), the shift to
            new crops and animal husbandry, and a growth in population. Of the two regions, Morvan
            was one of small hamlets, Jura of large villages and many new settlements, readily
            identifiable today by the presence of what were newly built churches. Overall, both
            areas were affected by the growth of Paris, with its demands for such commodities as
            wood both to build and to burn, alongside a pattern of industrialization over a wider
            area. And then, we are moved back to eastern Europe, as Jana Mazáčková and Petr Žaža
            deal with the topic of land use in the Bohemian-Moravian highlands, with a reliance on
            aerial archaeology as well as on written sources. With an interest in how much land was
            needed to feed a household, we follow a tale of “the change of natural landscape into
            economic landscape” (96).</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>Having looked at work covering changes in the use and control or ownership of the land
            itself, we then turn to some papers that deal with what was grown on the land, both
            animal and vegetable. Tamsyn Fraser tackles the difficult question of the improvement of
            livestock and its links with the enclosure movement, focusing on post-medieval
            Buckinghamshire. Relying considerably on the remains of teeth and bones—rather than on
            written sources--she argues for the possibility of larger cattle, at least among those
            allowed to live to full growth, against a mixed record for sheep (as more were shorn to
            meet an ever-growing demand for woolen cloth). But these are tentative conclusions; “we
            don’t know” looms over the findings of an inquiry that runs up against the dilemma of so
            little reliable information. A comparative essay, authored by the volume’s co-editors,
            sets the tale of England’s livestock against those of the Basque Country. They offer a
            tale of mixed findings or of an up-and-down story: Basque cattle became larger and then
            shrank down again, whereas English cattle just seemed to grow, and similar findings,
            over time, mostly apply to sheep and pigs. Sources that enable us to respond to these
            questions are few and far between and much of the argument in this paper rests on
            sophisticated statistical presentations that are really for the eye of the
            specialist.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>And then, for some balance regarding life in the fields, Anna Maria Grasso and her five
            co-authors discuss the question of whether broad beans (<italic>vicia faba</italic>)
            were becoming larger (and presumably more nutritious) over time. With attention usually
            focused on plants introduced from the New World, a good lesson is served by working to
            follow the fate and fortune of long-standing members of the European diet. Working from
            such scarce material as 152 seeds collected from five sites and discussed and classified
            by way of Welch’s ANOVA test of Equality of Means, we get data on length, width, and
            thickness of the beans. The conclusion argues for an increase in size, with selective
            breeding and a push toward biodiversity as major factors in the tale.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>From the soil and what grew upon it we turn to two studies of technological innovation.
            Riina Rammo talks about changes in the rural textile craft, with Estonia as the center
            point of the discussion. Given that the cloth industry, in its many stages, was the
            major industrial complex of the pre-modern world—comparable perhaps to the role occupied
            today by the auto industry--transition from the vertical loom to the horizontal loom was
            a matter of considerable importance. Along with technological innovation and a greater
            use of the spinning wheel came a shift toward manorial production over that of the
            isolated household (and the vertical loom). Though the actual extant database is very
            limited—very little cloth survives from the sixteenth century--the argument for a better
            weave of woolen cloth seems a reasonable one. The other paper looking at technological
            innovation touches on the “diversification of the types of iron objects” in early modern
            Sweden (222). Given that we are focused on a region with 12,000 ore mining sites and 700
            blast furnaces, new ideas and new ways of making and using metal tools and objects would
            hardly seem a surprise. Bigger, heavier, and more long-lasting agricultural plows and
            tools were developed to meet the need for more crops to feed more people.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>In short, the editors’ introduction and the eight papers that follow give us a dense
            volume of detailed case studies. They offer no generalizations, other than the common
            argument that there was significant change in the face of rural agricultural life and
            development across the agricultural landscape in sixteenth-century Europe. This
            reticence about larger matters seems appropriate for a volume in a series entitled
            “History of Daily Life” and this particular entry highlights the small and often scrappy
            nature of the sources and of the complex inter-relationship of historical materials,
            field and archaeological findings, and sophisticated statistical and graphic
            presentations that bolster the arguments. For the historian of late medieval or early
            modern Europe much of the illustrative material is difficult to follow, relaying on “log
            ratio histograms” or a “box plot showing log ratios.” Unfortunately, many of the maps
            and diagrams are too small to examine, given the book’s small format, though they stand
            as witnesses to the validity of each author’s argument. Some of the terminology seems
            needlessly complex. Some of the prose would have profited from a bit of editing.</p>
        <p> </p>
        <p>Criticisms aside: this is a volume of impressive case studies. They remind us of how even
            small and elusive bodies of data—both in written or physical form—can be woven into a
            pattern that is consonant with and enriches and amplifies more general statements of the
            topic. That the team of authors is such a wide-spread one, covering various academic
            fields of expertise to elucidate aspects of a large and general question, is testimony
            to how common problems can lead us to cross disciplines as well as those boundaries of
            time and of geography.</p>
    </body>
</article>